Indian Church mourns death of former official

Published: 1:53 pm, September 10, 2013

New Delhi: Fr. Thomas d’Aquino Sequeira, a Scripture scholar and Church
historian who advocated interfaith dialogue at grassroots, died of cancer
early today in the United States. He was 60.

Fr. Sequeira had served as the Deputy Secretary General of the Catholic
Bishops’ Conference of India (CBCI) for six years until May 31, 2012. He
then left to the United States for his doctoral studies while helping in
St. Bernard’s Catholic Church, Tracy, California.

A press note from the CBCI headquarters in New Delhi that the Goan priest
once headed said he was diagnosed with colon cancer in advanced stage two
months ago. He then underwent surgery and chemotherapy. The end came at
1:20 pm Monday local time (1:50 pm on Tuesday in India), said the press
note issued by Fr. Sequeira’s successor Fr. Joseph Chinnayan.

The note said the Indian Church received the news with deep sorrow. “The
CBCI Centre community deeply mourns the sudden demise of Fr. Thomas
d’Aquino Sequeira, whose fond memories, this community cherishes with love
and gratitude,” it added.

The funeral details are yet to be finalized as the body is to be flown from
the US to Goa in coming days.

Fr. Sequeira’s mother died on August 18 at the age of 92.

The priest was a promoter of interfaith faith dialogue at all fronts,
especially at parish level. He considered it as a blessing to be a minority
in India and used various forums to urged Indian Christians to shed their
minority complex.

According to him, the minority status was an invitation to join the
majority community for nation building.

The Church, he used to assert, had to engage all its pastoral structures to
form human communities where people of all religions work together for
common good.

He disapproved limiting interfaith dialogue to occasional meetings of
religious leaders, and encouraged such dialogue at village councils where
people come together to resolve common problems.

Fr. Sequeira was concerned about increasing attacks on Christians in India,
but often told Church groups instead of getting discouraged they should try
to remove general misconception about the community.

http://mattersindia.com/indian-church-mourns-death-of-former-official/

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