Thanks Ventakji for putting such an extraordinary piece which will certainly 
heal (?) the wounds and bring peace (if you understand the meaning of this 
word). Please send it again to Mr. Kumar (I could see reasons to overlook this 
by Mr. Kumar) so that he understands what the evangelist run (as proclaimed by 
him in the past) CNN-IBN has conspired to reflect.

--- On Wed, 27/8/08, sri venkat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: sri venkat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Blind faith? Fragile peace blown to bits in Orissa -- SMS poll
To:
Date: Wednesday, 27 August, 2008, 9:14 AM






Dear Friends

I came across this IBNlive poll regarding the recent murder and
violence in Khandamal.

Blind faith? Fragile peace blown to bits in Orissa

A MATTER OF FAITH: CNN-IBN panelists debate if conversions pitting Hindus 
against Christians.
Religion has split Orissa and the divide is murderous. Several people have been 
killed in communal clashes in Kandhamal district after the murder of a Vishwa 
Hindu Parishad (VHP) leader on Saturday.

The VHP called for a statewide shutdown in the state on Monday during which 
churches, prayer houses and vehicles were attacked in many places.

The communal tension began after Swami Laxmananand Saraswati, a member of VHP’s 
central advisory committee, and four others were murdered by suspected Naxals 
in Kandhamal district.

Police and paramilitary forces are on guard in towns of Kandhamal district. 
Section 144, which prohibits the assembly of four or more people, has been 
clamped across Kandhamal.

Saraswati was leading a campaign against cow slaughter and religious conversion 
in the communally sensitive district. Rightwing Hindu groups allege that 
Christians killed Saraswati because he opposed conversion. Christian 
organisations reject such allegations.

In one of the worst attacks, a Christian woman died and a priest was severely 
burnt when a mob set fire to an orphanage run by Christian missionaries in 
Bargarh district on Monday.

The incident again brought shame to the state. Nine years ago, Australian 
missionary Graham Staines and his two young sons were burnt alive by a Hindu 
mob in Keonjhar district.

What has caused the communal divide in Orissa? Is religion to blame or 
politics? Are conversions pitting Hindus against Christians? CNN-IBN’s Sagarika 
Ghose asked this on Face The Nation.

The guests on the show were: RSS spokesperson Ram Madhav, Reverend Dr Richard 
Howell, general secretary of the Evangelical Fellowship of India, and Professor 
Manoranjan Mohanty, of the Council for Social Development.

Madhav was infuriated at allegations that Hindu groups were targeting 
missionaries and Christians in Orissa. “The situation is quite different. 
Hindus are at the receiving end. A highly respected saint was killed. There is 
enough evidence to prove the complicity of Christian organisations in the 
murder,” he claimed.

Howell rejected the Madhav’s allegation and claimed conversion has become an 
excuse to attack Christians and malign them. “The VHP gets the maximum amount 
of money India than Christians. Christians have used money to serve and empower 
the poor and marginalized. Not a single case has been proved till date in the 
courts of forced conversion (by Christian groups),” he said.

The issue is not religion but poverty, said Professor Mohanty. “Kandhamal is 
one of the poorest regions in the country. Seventy per cent people here are 
below the poverty line; 51 per cent are tribals and 16 per cent are Dalits,” he 
said.

“It is a situation of poverty and landlessness, both among Hindus and 
Christians. Orissa has become the experiment ground of globalisation, economic 
reforms, mega projects and Hindutva politics.”

Hindu groups are not to blame for the violence and the state is in turmoil 
because of Christian missionaries, alleged Madhav. “Every conversion in Orissa 
has to be registered with the local police or magistrate but no such thing 
happens. Where is the chance for Hindutva politics when missionaries are going 
about aggressively and alluring people,” he said.

The Sangh Parivar doesn’t hate conversions as much as it does Christians, 
alleged Howell. “An ideology of hatred has been propagated by some sections of 
the Sangh Parivar. They don’t hate Christian service; it is the very identity 
of being a Christian that is hated. There are just 2.4 per cent Christians in 
India and we too have contributed to the growth of the country.”

Christians are not hated, insisted Madhav. “Every religion is respected in this 
country but Christians criticise and attack Hindu religion. It this attitude of 
Christians which is leading to tension in this country,” he alleged.

The communal divide in Orissa’s tribal districts is the result of poverty and 
“competitive politics”, said Mohanty. “The shrinking rights of tribals over 
forests and land and the coming of mega projects is the economic issue there. 
They are all poor there and poverty is being diverted to communalism. It is 
competitive politics,” he said.

Madhav called such an analysis wrong. “There is a clear cut division between 
Hindus and Christians and it is because of their (missionaries) wrongdoing and 
Congress leaders. A holy person is killed and the very next day the Congress 
tables a no-confidence motion against the state government—what does it 
suggest? The Congress is a part of a larger political conspiracy,” he alleged.

Howell announced Christian institutions in the country would close on August 29 
to protest against the attacks in Orissa. “I hope the civil society wakes up 
before it’s too late,” he said.

Madhav said Christian groups were free to shut their schools and institutions 
but they must also shut “proselytization” activity.

“Do not make this a Christian versus Hindu issue. We must go into the sources 
of violence,” said Mohanty.

SMS poll on ‘Are conversions pitting Hindus against Christians?’

Yes: 91 per cent, No: 9 per cent.

Blind faith? Fragile peace blown to bits in Orissa
http://www.ibnlive. com/news/ blind-faith- fragile-peace- blown-to- 
bits-in-orissa/ 72250-3-single. html











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