PRESENT-DAY MARTYRS IN INDIA AND PAKISTAN
FEBRUARY 2010
An
annual celebration, to take place on the last Sunday of August as a
National Day for Indian Martyrs, has been proposed by the
Commission for Ecumenism of the Bishops Conference of India. This followed
a meeting with regional secretariats held in the town of Jhansi.
A bishops representative
told Fides, the press agency of the Vatican, the proposal is expected
to establish a special day to remember all priests, religious and laity
who have sacrificed their lives for their faith in Christ
and who are the modern martyrs of India today.
In particular, the date was chosen to commemorate the Christians who died
in massacres in Orissa in late August 2009, events whose victims still
seek justice with the perpetrators likely to remain unpunished. The proposal
found unanimous agreement among all of Indias Christian denominations
and would be celebrated if it were to receive final approval
on an ecumenical level, thus receiving more strength and visibility.
The Commission noted that Christians have a common martyrology,
which includes all the martyrs of the 20th century and the present.
In a note sent to Fides, Bishop Anil Cuto of Jalandhar, President of the
Commission for Ecumenism, emphasised: Martyrdom is the highest form
of love. I consider making an effort to remember those who died in the
name of the Lord Jesus Christ. It is a memory that we want to confirm
and continue, for the benefit of future generations.
Moreover, celebrating it at the ecumenical level means strengthening
the unity among Christian churches in India. Establishing it as a celebration
would be a historic decision that we hope will come true soon. The
proposal drawn up by the Commission will now be examined by the respective
Bishops Conferences, which will decide on the feasibility of the
project.
In the meantime, more than a dozen of Indias Catholic bishops, including
the secretary-general of the episcopal conference, joined 3,000 dalit
Christian activists in a sit-in demonstration near the national parliament
in New Delhi on 18 November 2009 demanding an end to discrimination against
Christian dalits.
The word dalit literally means trampled upon.
It is the term referring to the lowest castes of traditional Indian society,
also known as untouchables. In the past dalits were forced to eke
out a living by doing the most menial of work. More recently the government
has offered free education and quota placement in government posts to
dalits in a bid to improve their socio-economic status.
However, while these programs have been available to Hindu, Sikh and Buddhist
dalits, they have not been offered to Christian dalits although
all of the dalits suffer from the same history of abuse and discrimination.
And Christians account for about two-thirds of Indias dalit population.
The National Dalit Christian Council, in a memo to federal government
leaders, has called for legislation to end the policy of discrimination
against Christian dalits. The sit-in demonstration, which lasted four
hours, was intended to call extra attention to that plea. Weare
hopeful that the government would act on this at last, said Father
A. X. J. Bosco, who travelled from the southern Andhra Pradesh to New
Delhi for the demonstration. He reported that federal ministers had given
the activists positive assurance that they would act.
Pakistan
threats
On the other hand, there are no such assurances in Pakistan where the
Daughters of the Cross nuns cancelled celebrations to close the jubilee
year marking the orders 175th anniversary because of threats from
Islamist militants.
The news agency Eglises dAsie of the Paris Foreign Missions Society
has reported that the sisters cancelled events planned for 25 November
due to threats from the Taliban and a general climate of insecurity in
Pakistan.
The Congregation of the Daughters of the Cross was founded in Liège,
Belgium, in 1833, by Mother Marie Therese (Jeanne Haze). The sisters have
worked in Pakistan since the second half of the 19th century, and currently
run eleven convents, six schools and three homes for young girls. The
sisters also run St Josephs Convent School, founded in Karachi in
1862, which educates women from the countrys elite families. There
was a bomb alert in one of our schools at the beginning of November,
Sister Parveen Dildar Jacob, the congregations first provincial
of Pakistani origin, told UCA News. Because of the growing insecurity
in the country, we have cancelled the meetings in all the cities.
The sisters have also reported that some of their girls schools
have received threatening letters that demand their closure, otherwise
they will be attacked with explosives.
Agence
France Press reported in November that Taliban militants blew up three
girls schools in Pakistans Khyber district during the month.
Since 2007, hundreds of such attacks have been carried out on girls
schools by militants seeking to enforce sharia law.
Archbishop Lawrence Saldanha of Lahore visited the sisters on 25 November
to celebrate a Mass of thanksgiving on the day the sisters would have
hosted a larger celebration. During his homily he underlined the importance
of the congregations name: The Cross has a special meaning
in Pakistan, that of sufferings and difficulties that we must face every
day in this climate of terror that reigns in the country ... Let us not
be overtaken by discouragement. While Australians have been enjoying
the Christmas and summer holiday season, spare time to pray for our fellow
Christians in India and Pakistan.
Babette Francis, National & Overseas Coordinator
of Endeavour Forum Inc., was
born in India and is a distant cousin of
Archbishop Lawrence Saldanha of Lahore,
Pakistan.
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