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* G * O * A * N * E * T **** C * L * A * S * S * I * F * I * E * D * S *
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Sangath, www.sangath.com, is one of Goa's leading NGOs.

Sangath is looking to build a centre for services, training and research
       and is looking to buy land of approx 1500 to 2000 sq mtrs
       betweeen Mapusa and Bambolim and surrounding rural areas

If you have land to sell, please contact:

contac...@sangath.com or yvo...@sangath.com or phone +91-9881499458


http://lists.goanet.org/pipermail/goanet-goanet.org/2009-July/180028.html
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Christians want state laws to govern assets of churches
Church funds equal Indian Navy’s annual budget
Panaji:

Christians are a mere 2.5 per cent of the country’s population. But,
the Church in India suffers from a case of plenty, says Remy Denis,
All India Catholic Union President.

Church authorities control funds equivalent to the Indian Navy’s
annual budget. The Church is also the second largest employer after
the government, he said.

Eduardo Faleiro, a former Union minister and Goa NRI Commissioner, is
among the growing number of Catholics like Prof Denis, who support a
law to govern Church properties and a far greater degree of
transparency in the way the Church manages its earthly assets.

“The Church is not a symbol of power but service, and democratic laws
must apply to it equally. All religions must be kept on the same
footing,” Faleiro said at a conference called to debate the matter of
bringing Church properties under state laws.

The laws that govern Church properties in Goa were enacted during the
Portuguese regime. The same laws have long since been repealed in
Portugal, Faleiro said.

Almost all other religions in India have laws enacted to administer
their properties, K T Thomas, former Supreme Court judge, said. Hindu
temples are governed by laws specifically enacted for each trust and
their accounts are subject to judicial review. The Sikhs, one of the
smallest religious groups in the country, have the Sikh Gurudwara Act.
Muslim trust properties comes under the Wakf Act.

“I feel the opposition from the Christians is on account of a fear
that a provision for judicial scrutiny is likely to expose the
expenses and magnitude of wealth of the denomination,” Thomas said.
The head of the Believers Church had recently acquired a huge
plantation in Kerala for Rs 123 crore. This was apart from the vast
assets already held by the denomination, he said. The Church in Kerala
also runs its own media network.

Thomas said there was a misplaced apprehension that the Parliament,
through legislation, would grab the properties of the churches. No
such law could be passed by Parliament or State legislatures, he said.
All religious denominations have the right to own and acquire
properties, establish and maintain religious institutions. “But, in
matters of administration of your properties you have to abide by the
law,” he said.

DH News Service

http://www.deccanherald.com/content/16533/church-funds-equal-indian-navys.html

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