By Yusuf Jameel
February 29, 2012
Lately there have been
many media reports of Christians fleeing Kashmir, but such reports are
inaccurate and fail to tell the entire story.
Such stories fail to
mention that thousands of Kashmiri families relocate to various places, such as
Jammu, the winter capital of the Himalayan state, and New Delhi, ahead of peak
winter season to escape harsh weather back home. With the start of winter
vacations at schools and other educational institutions in December and
spreading from two to three months, many other people — including students and
their parents – also tag along. It is
naive to call such emigrations “forcible expulsions” as many of the people will
be returning to the Kashmir Valley as the weather improves and the winter
vacations for schools and colleges are ending.
That said, purporting
the situation as being persecuted continues to happen among some sections of
Christians, primarily evangelical Christian activists, and given the above
mentioned background could be tantamount to being a false statement. Some of
these Christian may find it difficult to work among the local Muslims after
openly being accused of luring the members of the majority Muslim community,
mainly the youth, into Christianity by offering them “riches’ – a charge that
is vehemently denied by the Christians. In such a vein, one Christian news
portal reported last week, “The church is still there, but at this point, it
seems as if Christian activity has been driven completely underground and has
been severely curtailed.”
Again, such claims do
not tell the entire story.
A Srinagar (Islamic)
Shariat court earlier this year issued a decree seeking to expel a Protestant
pastor and a Dutch Catholic missionary, along with three other evangelical
Christian activists, by finding them “guilty of luring Muslims of Kashmir,
especially boys and girls, to Christianity by exploiting their financial
conditions.” The Court decision provoked outrage within India’s religious
minority and grabbed newspaper headlines beyond the boundary walls of the
country.
Back in Kashmir, the
fatwa does not appear to be a major issue for locals – where there seems to be
a sense of indifference among the population.. Nevertheless, Christian groups
fear such diktats could encourage extremist elements to indulge in violence.
It needs to be
understood that the majority of Kashmiri Muslims are nonchalant, not because
the Christians alleged “repugnant” activity isn’t being gauged as being
‘worrisome’, but rather because of the poor standing in public of the cleric
who heads the court — not the institution inherited by him and which is working
towards restraining “excitement.” In fact, many Kashmiri Muslims are wary of
the cleric’s moves, ostensibly both because of his wispy religious pursuits and
patchy political postures, publicly termed by his critics as “impelled
aerobatics.”
Some people also
believe the cleric made his decision in an attempt to improve his image. His
detractors also accuse the cleric of attempting to seize the issue to re-launch
his son as a deputy and to claim the legacy after his return to the Valley from
the Gulf where he spent nearly two decades in comfort to escape the difficult
times the Valley was passing in the aftermath of the separatist or pro-freedom
movement that turned violent, and which India launched a tough military
campaign to suppress such movements towards the end of 1989. The criticism is,
however, rejected by the cleric’s supporters as being “uncalled-for” and even
“mischievous”. Instead, his supporters claim the ‘Shariat’ court had extensive
discussions with the leaders and representatives of various religious and
social groups besides meticulously carrying out investigations into the ‘repugnant
role’ played by the Christians prior to issuing the decree. “He took a strong
exception whereas many of those who could have turned the tide preferred to
remain silent or were apologetic and inactive,” said an activist.
Notwithstanding, some
Muslim clergy — including the ‘whistleblowers’ — and others who publicly voiced
concern over the reports of Pastor Rev. Chandermani Khanna, Presbyter
In-charge, of Anglican All Saints’ Church, Srinagar and a few others seeking to
induce local Muslim youth and bring them into the fold of Christianity by
allegedly offering them riches and were railing against what is being termed as
“irtidad” (apostasy) — appear to be disillusioned now as the issue has been
virtually hijacked by the father-son duo. Or, at least, it is being mishandled
by them.
What is more
disturbing for them is that not only has the fatwa evoked sharp reaction from
across India and abroad, but, as was put by one of them, the intent behind
their raising the alarm seems to have been misinterpreted. They say the
fundamental issue is lost in the “unwarranted” outcry that is being raised by
“vested interest” within and outside the Christian community. “Outside the
Valley, the issue being portrayed now is that of assumed persecution of
Christians; the small Christian community of Kashmir being in danger and victim
of harassment and violence by the Muslim majority than acknowledging the fact
that a few unscrupulous elements within the Christian missionaries are involved
in impelled conversions which is against the law of the land, unconstitutional
and also reportedly Biblically wrong,” said one Kashmir Muslim.
The argument is not
misplaced. A report, ‘Missionaries bring aid, controversy to Kashmir’ appeared
in The Christian Science Monitor some time ago and said that Christian
missionary groups have been flocking to the restive Kashmir, bringing medicine,
school books, and self-help programmes, but the influx of Christian evangelists
may be exacerbating a volatile situation. It also said local Christians like Pastor
Leslie Richards were increasingly agitated by the presence of the new
evangelists, who they believed were more interested in conversions than social
work.
Mr. Richards was
quoted in the Indian Express as saying that Muslims receive cash if they agree
to convert and termed these as “Biblically wrong conversions’ which were not
good for the local Christians community, who for centuries have shared cordial
relations with the local Muslims.
The report quoted Rev.
Khanna as saying “Of course, I believe that there are some black sheep in the
fold – some evangelists who use money as a lure – but I can tell you that I
have been here in Srinagar since July 2002, and I have only converted one
person – so even if there are a few others in new churches, it is hardly a case
of mass conversion.” Ironically, Rev. Khanna today stands trial as the main
accused in the case of alleged impelled conversions. Srinagar Senior Superintendent
of Police, Syed Ashiq Hussain Bukhari said in a recent newspaper interview,
“There are cases in which the missionaries helped the destitute in lieu of
their faith which is not permitted under any law.”
Local watchers say
some unscrupulous elements may have exploited the situation seemingly in an
iniquitous way, but it also is a fact that the Christian missionaries have been
working hard where the Muslim headship, the pro-freedom as well as pro-Indian
political parties, social groups and even charity organizations and numerous
NGOs have failed: lending a helping hand to the destitute including victims of
violence.
The issue of alleged
“irtidad” could have been handled differently, in a way acceptable to all by
seeking to isolate the evangelists found involved in forced or impelled
conversions from the legitimate missionaries, invoke law and constitutional
guarantees that proscribe such activity and more importantly address the issues
and problems that have provided the basis for the incidence of apostasy. In
fact, the Valley’s Chief Muslim cleric and chairman of his faction of Hurriyat
Conference (an amalgam of pro-freedom political parties) Mirwaiz Umar Farooq
had just embarked on this mission whereas Syed Ali Shah Geelani, the
octogenarian pro-freedom leader, had asked for tackling the issue “with utmost
care” after he and others watched a video showing more than half a dozen
persons including a woman-all but one local Muslim youth-being baptized by Rev.
Khanna at Srinagar’s All Saints’ Church and the pastor imploring to see the
Kashmir Valley turned into a Christian-majority place soon. This video has been
presented as main piece of evidence against the pastor, besides statements
recorded at the ‘Shariat’ court by various people including a youth on whose
mobile it was found. It is claimed the pastor confessed to his “guilt” before
the court and even apologised.
The Church “deeply
disturbed” at the fatwa issued against Pastor Khanna and others reacted saying
such decrees could encourage extremist elements to indulge in violence. “This
is totally unacceptable,” Samuel Jayakumar, a spokesperson for the National
Council of Churches in India (NCCI), said. He added, “India is a secular
country and the personal law of a community should be confined to itself.”
Shariat courts have no secular legal standing in India and the one functioning
in Srinagar has been termed as an extra-constitutional authority, with no legal
sanction.
Back in the Kashmiri
capital, the law enforcing authorities– including police which arrested Pastor
Khanna after initiating proceedings against him on charge of disturbing
communal harmony — are now more or less on caught on the back foot whereas the
state government is feeling embarrassed. However, Mufti Muhammad
Nasir-ul-Islam, son of Kashmir’s Grand Mufti Bashiruddin, who announced the
Shariat court’s decision seeking expulsion of Christian priests at a press
conference, claimed that the local administration has agreed to enforce the
“verdict.”
Mufti Jr. strongly
denied the decree was against Christian’s living or the institutions they run
in the Valley. “We’ve found that three priests and some others are involved in
the unethical activities in Valley. We carried a thorough investigation into
the case and found out later, all the three were involved in the scandal. The
records of their involvement are with the court and their expulsion from the
state is an apt judgment,” he said.
The government-backed
Shariat court headed by Mufti Sr. claims to have found the conversion took
place through alluring the youth by means of monetary benefits and that in
order to maintain the communal harmony between different faiths living in
Kashmir it had to come up with the “facts.” The court imposed a “complete ban”
on Pastor Khanna, his accomplices Ghayoor Messiah and Chanderkanta Chandra and
Dutch national, Jim Borst “for their involvement in luring Muslims of Kashmir
to Christianity by exploiting their financial conditions and promoting
immorality.”
The court has existed
in Jammu and Kashmir since the early 1960s. Mufti Bashiruddin is the judge of
the court and the appeal against this court lies in the civil court. It,
however, has no enforcing agency like police to implement its judgments.
Earlier the Srinagar
police had, while keeping in view the sensitivity of the issue, registered an
FIR under sections 153-A, 295-C and 186 of the Ranbir Penal Code, the Jammu and
Kashmir equivalent of the Indian Penal Code. The decision was taken at the
highest level to avoid possible unrest in the Valley. Unlike states like
Gujarat, Orissa and Madhya Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir does not have a law
against conversions. Section 153A pertains to “promoting enmity between
different groups… and doing acts prejudicial to maintenance of harmony.”
Section 295A has to do with “deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage
religious feelings of any class by insulting its religion or religious
beliefs.” Around same time, police detained five youth who had recently
converted to Christianity and were entering a Srinagar Church reportedly to
receive financial assistance.
However, since no
charges were filed against him, the state’s High Court on February 11 halted
proceedings in the police complaint of “promotion of religious enmity by
conversions” against Pastor Khanna. It asked the government to file its
response by March 14, and then it will set the date for the next hearing. He
can now travel because the order binding him to the Vale of Kashmir was lifted,
as well. But reports suggest the “stress” has silenced the pastor and he has
retired officially from the All Saint’s Church in Srinagar.
The issue of Christian
missionaries’ encouraging conversions in the Valley allegedly by way of
allurement surfaced a few years ago with ‘whistleblower’ Moulana Muhammad
Rehmatuallh, who runs Dar-ul-Aloom Rahimiya, the Valley’s largest seminary
located in northern town of Bandipore, who raised the issue with various
religious leaders, social activists and select journalists of the Valley and
sought their help to “nip the evil in the bud.” But he was more or less
overruled and his “disquiet” did not find any committed takers.
The contentious issue
resurfaced in October 2011 when the Moulana during a visit to a mosque in
Srinagar was introduced to a local youth who had converted to Christianity and
later repented the decision and wanted to return to Islam’s fold. The cleric
took him and during his ‘debriefing’ found a video clipping recorded on his
mobile phone that revealed more than half a dozen persons, including a woman, and all but one local Muslim
youth-being baptized by Rev. Khanna at Srinagar’s All Saints’ Church near
Sonawar. The youth reportedly told the cleric that he had agreed to convert
after the Church of which Khanna is a pastor, offered him money and also
promised other profits.
It is learnt that the
same youth was sometime back produced before Mirwaiz Umar Farooq by the
Christian pastor amidst reports purporting he and other missionaries were using
money power and offering lucrative jobs and admissions in professional
institutions outside Jammu and Kashmir in order to encourage conversions. But
at that time he had strongly denied being lured in such a way. The Mirwaiz had
a cordial relationship with Rev. Khanna and other pastors of the All Saints’
Church as he had his schooling at Srinagar’s Burn Hall School run by the
church. However, he too felt hurt as Rev. Khanna implores at the video of the
baptism ceremony to see the Kashmir Valley turned into a Christian-majority
place. Police official Mr. Bukhari and several Ulema, imams and other religious
leaders from both Sunni and Shiite Muslim sects too were shown the video and
were reported to be enraged at the development.
Mufti Bashiruddin
chose to issue a summons for Rev. Khanna and asked him to present himself
before his ‘Dar al-Fatwa’ or the Islamic Shariat court to explain his conduct.
The pastor initially denied the charge of impelled conversions. Meanwhile, the
Church issued a statement that Kashmiri youth are showing considerable interest
in their religion as it apparently offers them a road to redemption. Rev.
Khanna added, “There is no forced conversion and there is nothing which can be
called allurement. We do not offer any job or any money. We tell them ‘If you
come it is your responsibility to contribute and support the church’.”
However, when shown
the video clipping he admitted to his “guilt” and apologised before the court.
The Christian
missionaries were believed to be active in the Valley mainly on the educational
front. There are about half a dozen major schools, some of these as old as 125
years, besides a few hospitals run by the Christian missionaries in the Valley
for decades and are equally very popular among the local Muslims for these
impart comparatively better education to its young boys and girls.
Besides head Muslim
priest Mirwaiz Umar, Chief Minister Omar Abdullah, his father and Indian
federal minister Dr. Farooq Abdullah [His wife Molly Abdullah is an English
Catholic and one of his daughters is married to a South African Christian),
separatist leaders Sajad Gani Lone and even ‘father’ of the insurgency Ashfaq
Majeed Wani are alumni of these schools. Presently, the children of almost all
pro-Indian or mainstream and pro-freedom political leaders and other prominent
faces of the Kashmir Valley are enrolled at these schools.
However, the state
government in 2010 sealed two private English medium schools in the frontier
district of Kupwara following complaints that these were being used as a front
by Christian missionaries as part of their conversion plan. Also in September
2010, two Christian missionary schools in the Valley were attacked during mob
violence over the reported burning of Koran in the US.
Earlier in 2005, the
Christian missionaries were openly accused of seizing the conditions created by
the devastating earthquake for their conversion drive. In April 2011, a Dutch
missionary, Jaap Borst, was ordered to leave Kashmir after the state
authorities revoked his visa, accusing him of trying to convert local Muslims
to Christianity. Police detained some Christian missionaries also in February
2006 who were allegedly trying to convert earthquake-affected people of Uri
district in northwest Kashmir. The missionaries affiliated with the Bible
Society of India were forced to stop their work in quake-hit areas of Uri following
complaints from locals that they were luring people to Christianity by offering
monetary incentives. The missionaries had reportedly distributed gas cylinders,
water bottles, audio cassettes, and a copy of the New Testament in Urdu to
dozens of quake-hit families of the village.
In November 2006,
suspected militants shot dead a Power Development Department engineer Bashir
Ahmad Tantray of Mamoosa village in north Kashmir, a practicing Roman Catholic
since 1995, who was accused of arranging conversions in his area. His two
daughters and a son live in Mumbai.
There is no denying of
the fact that most of the Christian missionary groups funded by parent groups
in the West, including the United States, Germany, Britain, South Korea and the
Netherlands have stepped up their activity in Kashmir, the focus of their
efforts being on the rural poor and areas bordering Srinagar, a city of about
1.5 million people. Among churches and missions working in Kashmir are US-based
Assemblies of God, German Town Baptist Church, and Frontiers. Besides these,
there are two German-based missions, Call of Hope and Overseas Social Service,
and the Campus Crusade for Christ. The Good Way, a Switzerland-based mission
and two Indian missions, National Missionary Intelligencer and Cooperative
Outreach of India too have bases in the Valley.
‘History-Makers’, the
official website of the youth division of Asia Link, a Christian mission agency
connecting churches with ministry among the unreached peoples of Asia, says
that there is considerable interest among Kashmiris and response has been good
to advertisements placed in newspapers offering correspondence courses and
follow up ministries. It also says “The four million Muslims living in Kashmir
are among the most unreached and unevangelised people groups on earth. Pray for
those who have been saved. This is a huge step for them to take. Pray for grace
to persevere”
On record, the
missionaries peg the population of Christians in Kashmir Valley at around
1,000. But, Christianity Today, an Illinois-based magazine of the Evangelists,
puts the number of Kashmiri Muslims “who recently converted to Christianity” at
thousands. ‘‘There are more Christians in Kashmir than on the record. They have
faith in Jesus, but don’t come out. They are not bold about it. Their number
goes into [the] thousands in the rural areas.”
Government statistics including the 2001 Census report put the Christian
population of the Valley as 3,757 including 480 females. This contradicts the
claim of Justice Michael Saldhana, former Bombay and Karnataka High Court
judge, that ten years ago there were 40,000 Christian families in Kashmir, but
in the last 2 years, the number had come down to around 800. Justice Saldhana
had with a few other activists at a recently held press conference in Bombay or
Mumbai alleged that Christians faced “torture, persecution, en masse massacre
and violation of human rights which forced them to flee from Kashmir Valley.”
Meanwhile, Father P.
Samuel, the head of Church of North India, met Geelani in New Delhi where the
latter is camping for the past few many weeks to discuss the controversy
triggered by alleged conversions in Kashmir. “I told him the Muslims of Kashmir
are not against minorities as Islam teaches us to safeguard interests of minorities,”
he said. Geelani presented Father Samuel with a copy of English translation of
Islam’s holy book Koran. Will that help towards building the bridges and be the
beginning of an amiable chapter in the Muslim-Christian relationship in Kashmir
or ‘vested interest’ on either side will spread their net wide and succeed? The
crucial question is wide open. Also, some analysts do not rule out the
possibility of whole issue being seized for securing political gains.
Source: eurasiareview.com
URL: http://newageislam.com/interfaith-dialogue/yusuf-jameel/a-closer-look-at-claims-of-‘persecution’-of-christians-in-kashmir/d/6777