> By: TNM Staff
>> Published in: *The Wire*
>> Date: January 5, 2026
>>
>   Source:
> https://thewire.in/communalism/people-who-arrived-in-2000-bc-are-saying-that-all-foreigners-must-go-back-malankara-church-head
>

The head of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church added that if the Union
government makes no effort to condemn or control the attacks on Christians,
it is because they are silently approving it.

Signalling a clear shift from his earlier position, the head of the
Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church, Baselios Marthoma Mathews III, has spoken
out against attacks against Christians and questioned the silence of the
Union government.
He made the remarks while delivering the feast message at St Mary’s Church
in Panayampala of Kottayam, on January 2.

Highlighting recent incidents targeting Christians, the church head said,
“Here, today, one thing that we are forced to face are the attacks against
the Christian community. It is necessary to create proper awareness about
this. In a very wrong approach, RSS affiliates like the Bajrang Dal and
Vishwa Hindu Parishad are attacking Christians and other religious
minorities in this society. It is a fact.”

He pointed to reports in the media regarding incidents of violence and
cautioned that it could escalate further. “We know that after the nuns, now
it is the turn of the priests. After ruining the Christmas celebrations
outside the church, it won’t be long before they enter the church itself.
Maybe, the coming attacks will be against worship inside the church. We
must surely expect that.”

Emphasising constitutional guarantees, Baselios Marthoma Mathews III
underlined the responsibility of governments to rein in extremist elements.
He said, “Every religion gives a message of truth, justice, and love, but
in any religion there can be fanatics. The people who govern the country
are responsible for controlling such fanatics, regardless of the community
or religion. We all have the freedom of religion and the right to practice
our rituals.”
‘Christians and Muslims born and raised here’

Referring to slogans raised during attacks on Christmas displays, the
bishop questioned claims that some religions were “foreign” to India.

“Any person who knows history will understand what a wrong notion they are
expressing. There is no Aryan or Hindu who originated solely from India;
everyone came from the Iranian region.”

He went on to outline migration patterns to argue that no community could
claim exclusive ownership of the land. “The Dravidians are not originally
from here either; they reached India from Africa through Iran. However,
they were living in the Indus Valley Civilisation until the Aryans came in
2000 BC and took over, seizing all the regions and pushing the Dravidians
to the south. The Dravidians who thus fled and migrated south live in south
India today.”

Questioning present-day rhetoric, he asked, “People who arrived in 2000 BC
are saying that all ‘foreigners’ must go back. Who is the foreigner? The
Aryans were early migrants. Before them, the Dravidians.”

Rejecting claims that Christians and Muslims are ‘outsiders’, he asserted
their rootedness in India. “The Christians here were born and raised here,
having embraced Christianity since 52 AD. They are citizens of this
country.” He extended the same argument to Muslims, saying, “It is the same
for the Muslims here; they were born and raised here. Therefore, that
religion has the right to exist here, as does Christianity and Hinduism.”

Warning of the consequences of the Union government’s inaction against the
attacks on Christians, the bishop said minorities would read silence as
consent. “When they remain silent without raising their voice against it or
condemning it, Christians or minorities can only understand it as being
part of their programme. Everyone knows that if they do not condemn or
control it, they are silently approving it.”

Shift in tone

The speech marks a notable shift in tone from the senior church leader, who
in the past had publicly engaged with and expressed support for the Union
government’s development initiatives. During a meeting with Prime Minister
Narendra Modi in parliament in April 2023, he had welcomed the Union
government’s development initiatives and described the concerns faced by
Christian institutions in some regions as limited and localised.

At the time, he had expressed confidence that dialogue with the government
could address such issues and resolve grievances. The interaction, which
took place in the presence of a Union minister, was publicly projected by
the government as cordial and constructive.
*This article was originally published
<https://www.thenewsminute.com/kerala/keralaaryans-were-migrants-too-malankara-church-head-counters-foreign-religion-tag-on-christianity-and-islam>
in
The News Minute. *

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