India: Hindu radicals arrested for attack on Pentecostal church

Christians in India protest persecution. Reuters

Seven people have been arrested in connection with an attack on a Pentecostal church in the Indian state of Chhattisgarh.

A mob believed to comprise members of the militant Hindu Bajrang Dal organisation attacked the church in Raipur during prayers, having arrived on motorbikes. According to media reports they broke chairs, fans and musical equipment.

The president of the Chhattisgarh Christian Forum, Arun Pannalal, said Bajrang Dal members had chanted "Jai Sri Ram" ("Victory to Lord Rama") and had attacked women and children.

"They alleged that people were being converted here," Pannalal said. "The police came and seized vehicles the attackers came in. They desecrated the Bible and some of the pictures that were hung on the wall."

He said it was the fourth attack on churchgoers in Chhattisghar in the last six weeks.

A local Christian told International Christian Concern (ICC): "Every day Christians are attacked. What is reported in the media is like the tip of an iceberg."

article,article,article,article Related

"The vandalizing of the church comes as the entire nation of India is debating the role of [radical Hindu nationalism] and the government in exacerbating an environment of hate and intolerance against civil society, the intelligentsia, and, above all, religious minorities such as Muslims and Christians," United Christian Forum spokesman Dr John Dayal told ICC.

A report issued in January by the Catholic Secular Forum claimed there were more than 200 major incidents of anti-Christian hate speech and persecution in India last year.

According to the report, India Christian Persecution, seven Protestant pastors and one lay person were killed in 2015. It says the total number of victims of violence, including women and children, was around 8,000, and many churches were damaged or destroyed.

The Hindu nationalist ideology espoused by the ruling BJP party and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), of which the Bajrang Dal is part, has led to hostility toward Christians in some areas. This is complicated by the appeal of Christianity to tribal and Dalit people; the RSS is opposed to conversions out of Hinduism and its offshoots have staged elaborate "ghar wapsi" conversion ceremonies for Christians and Muslims wanting to return – as they describe it – to Hinduism.

related articles
Indian Christians protest after alleged church arson attack
Indian Christians protest after alleged church arson attack

Indian Christians protest after alleged church arson attack

India: Priest and three church officials hospitalised after mob attack

India: Priest and three church officials hospitalised after mob attack

Indian Christians protest rise in attacks against evangelists
Indian Christians protest rise in attacks against evangelists

Indian Christians protest rise in attacks against evangelists

Indian Christians protest book which claims Jesus was a Hindu
Indian Christians protest book which claims Jesus was a Hindu

Indian Christians protest book which claims Jesus was a Hindu

News
Church body urges restraint in Armenian church conflict
Church body urges restraint in Armenian church conflict

Relations between the Armenian Apostolic Church and the government are currently strained.

Pastors can endorse political candidates without risking tax-exempt status, says IRS
Pastors can endorse political candidates without risking tax-exempt status, says IRS

The Internal Revenue Service agreed on Monday that pastors and other religious leaders can endorse political candidates to their congregation without threatening their tax-exempt status under a decades-old legislation called the Johnson Amendment.

Nationwide study reveals strong public support for preserving historic churches
Nationwide study reveals strong public support for preserving historic churches

A major new study by Historic England has revealed that communities across the country place significantly higher value on historic churches than on their modern counterparts—regardless of religious affiliation or church attendance.

Labour’s first year: looking back, praying forward 
Labour’s first year: looking back, praying forward 

As we take stock of the first year of this Labour administration, let’s commit to praying for good government.