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Christian massacre in India by Mar Matthias Darin Hide the kiddies... This is deplorable, disgusting and outrageously pathetic. So much for "human rights"... Where is our government on condemning this? These pictures are from one of my missionaries in India. According to the reports I've been getting, the death toll is well over 100,000 people. Hitler must be throwing a party from the bowls of hell over this.
From INO.com:
(RTTNews) - The European Union Monday pulled up the Indian Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh for his government's utter failure to prevent
what it called a "massacre" of Christians in the states of Orissa and
Karnataka -- both run by non-Congress ministries, media reports said.
The attacks on Christians was taken up strongly with Manmohan Singh by Nicolas Sarkozy, French President and head of the European Council, and Jose Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission, in a strongly-worded description of the violence during the India-EU summit at Marseille in France. Although Sarkozy said he admired Manmohan Singh's condemnation of the anti-Christian violence as a "national shame" and his promise to guarantee the religious rights of minority communities in India, the two sides clearly differed on the scale of the violence against Christians in India. In his reply, the Prime Minister said there were "some sporadic incidents" but declared the determination of the state to ensure that minority communities exercise their "constitutional right to profess and propagate" their respective faiths. From News Blaze:
Thousands of men, women, and children dragged from churches and slashed.
This has been India's reality for the last four weeks. The genocide of
the Christian minority in the country once called the world's greatest
democracy has been as much brutal as neglected by the international
community.
Hinduism is believed to be one of the most tolerant religions in the world. But stirred in nationalism and traditionalism, it could produce an explosive mixture, similar to one that has so far claimed over 100,000 Christian lives in India. Earlier the same fate befell Muslims that comprised around 13 percent of the entire population, and who were forced to flee their homes and seek refuge in neighboring Pakistan. The problem that Indian Christians are facing is even more perilous as they have nowhere to go. The 20 million people who admit to believing in Jesus Christ are on the brink of physical extermination. The massacre was triggered by the assassination of Swami Laxmanananda Saraswati on August 23. Saraswati played a leading role in a chauvinistic organization that lobbies to eradicate all foreign influence in India, including non-Hindu religions. Although Maoist rebels quickly issued a letter in which they claimed responsibility for the murder, the nationalists shifted the blame onto Christians, who comprised a third of the population of the Orissa district where Saraswati was killed. "Christians will do anything to spread Christianity and convert more and more people," read one comment published hours after the assassination. On the same day, the first Christians were butchered. The exact number of those killed is difficult to estimate as very few foreign correspondents are allowed into the affected regions. According to Union of Catholic Asian News, over 100,000 Christian men, women, and children could have been killed between August 23 and September 4. In addition, around 50,000 people were reported to have found shelter in the woods whereas some 15,000 fled to refugee camps. The number of Christians raped and mutilated is unknown. The same source claims that almost every single Christian shrine in the Orissa district was destroyed within the first days of September. "The attacks have worn off because they have nothing left to attack," said Archbishop Raphael Cheenath of Cuttack-Bhubaneswar. Christianity is seen in India as a dangerous force. Unlike Hinduism, which accepts the caste system, Christianity preaches equality of all people. The rise of nationalism coincided with the ascendancy of the conservative Indian People's Party (BJP) in the late 1990s. Between 1967 and 1996 authorities recorded only 40 anti-Christian attacks in all India, this number has risen to hundreds every year since the BJP formed a government in 1999. Although the party has been out of power for four years now, it still controls several districts, including Orissa where the genocide began. The word genocide is not an exaggeration. In fact, the train of events in India closely resembles the prelude to the massacre of 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus that shook Rwanda in 1994. There, too, the bloodshed began after an important political figure died under suspicious conditions. Soon people were dragged from their homes and burned alive in churches - the practices now repeated in India. The Rwandan genocide was also neglected by the world media which at that time was predominantly focused on civil wars in the Balkans. But as the United Nations and other human rights organizations called for an intervention in Rwanda, now they are conspicuous by their silence. The slaughter of 100,000 people in a country of over one billion citizens may easily escape one's notice. The massacre of Indian Christians in Orissa and other districts has sunk in the sea of other conflicts that recent months have abounded in: Georgia, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq - to name only the few. Words will not resurrect the lives that are already lost. But they may stop further killing.
Top tags: india, christians, christian, massacre, orissa, churches, genocide, indian, women, attacks Comments from PaulsHealthBlog.com 66.158.182.245 I've seen things like this before, and find myself wondering. Where is the international outrage. And why does an all knowing and all seeing God allow this to happen. Right now, it is not for us mere mortals to know the answer. But I still wonder why. Comments from Lea 208.106.107.167 When I first heard about the savagery in Orissa, I was so upset, I contacted my friend who works for the TV news department in India. I asked him what was this insanity that was happening? Hindu's are passive, they live and let live. I told him it seems India is getting worse since I left. His reply was, they are illiterate people and though they were born Hindu's, they are not Hindu's in the true sense of the Hindu teachings. I do not affiliate with any particular religion or philosophy. Thus my horror wasn't connected to such. I am always offended by people who feel they have the right to infringe on another person's personal rights and choices. India is one of the countries where one person can easily incite riots and violence. There were a few times while I worked in India that I felt fear during the protests of America's pending and eventual invasion of Iraq and I actually was warned by friends not to go into the city while they were in progress. Comments from Bible Teachings 66.205.156.219 It's stuff like this that really opens your eyes to the heinous condition that this world is in! I look forward to the soon coming of Jesus! For He will surely put an end to all of this; and the wicked will forever be cut off from God's people. No more will we be tormented by their evil snares. We will be free at last! Comments from ettarose 12.179.192.235 Why is God to answer for the tragedy of man against man? We are all given a choice to walk in the light of God. Not everyone will make the right choice. Innocent people will suffer because of that choice but those sinners will pay. For all eternity. We need to live as our God, no matter the religion would have us live. I continue to help those less fortunate. Comments from Mar Matthias Darin PaulsHealthBlog: Because GOD gave us free choice to do what is right. Our Father in Heaven is no different then any other parent that sees their children do wrong, such things hurt Him deeply. To step in and stop such horrible things would undermine the very purpose of why we were created. Lea: I think what make this stand out is the scale or shear numbers of how many people died. Any other group with that many dead would stir large amounts of outrage. Mumbai, with a death toll under 200, is a perfect example of that. Not all of them were Indian, there were a lot of other nationalities working in India. The India government has done a massive PR campaign to downgrade the severity of it.
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