How India’s Christian Organizations Are Battling Misinformation
In recent years, misinformation has led to severe consequences for Christians in India, including violence, social unrest and even death. An example occurred in May 2023 during the ethnic and religious violence in Manipur, where clashes between the majority Hindu Meitei community and the Christian Kuki tribe resulted in tragic casualties and destruction of properties, including over three dozen churches. In one particularly harrowing incident, a Christian woman was pulled from her car and her son was killed by a Meitei mob amid the ongoing violence, which has been partly fueled by rumors and misinformation within communities. The conflict forced around 23,000 people, predominantly Christians, to flee their homes as violence escalated in the region, highlighting the deadly impact misinformation can have in a climate of ethnic and religious tension. The United Christian Forum (UCF), which tracks incidents of hate crimes against Christians, has reported a concerning surge in violence targeting the community. Their 2023 data shows over 687 documented attacks, indicating that approximately two Christians face violence every day across India. This trend underscores an ongoing pattern of hostility affecting the Christian population. As misinformation continues to challenge communities across India, faith-based organizations are stepping up to promote understanding and counter harmful narratives. Through
100 Christians banned from villages in India if they don’t denounce faith
CHHATTISGARH, India (BP) – At least 40 members of New Bethesda Jesus Tribal Ministry in Michwar Village remain sheltered at the church two weeks after the village council banned them from the community unless they renounce their faith. The Christians are among 100 impacted by a joint resolution adopted Nov. 17 by eight village councils in the Sukma District of Chhattisgarh State. Christians who don’t denounce Jesus must leave the villages or their fields, belongings and property will be looted, the joint resolution threatened. When the Christians in Michwar Village tried to file a police complaint on Nov. 18, they returned home to find a mob of at least 1,500 individuals looting their agricultural harvests and demanding that they either renounce their faith or flee the village, CSW reported. Police left the area without intervening, despite the guarantee of freedom of religion or belief under Article 25 of the Indian Constitution. Mervyn Thomas, CSW founding president, condemned the village councils’ actions. “We call on state authorities to intervene as a matter of urgency, ensuring that reparations are made for any loss of or damage to property since the resolution was passed,” Thomas said Nov. 28, “and that Christians in these villages are free to
Rajasthan Anti-Conversion Bill: 10-year jail term, Rs 5 lakh compensation and more
The BJP-led Rajasthan government on Monday cleared a bill to curb religious conversions by force, fraud or inducement. The bill, which introduces stringent measures against unlawful conversions, was a key agenda item in the cabinet meeting chaired by Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma last month. State’s Law Minister Jogaram Patel defended the bill and said, “Several instances of religious conversions through inducements or fraud have come to light, necessitating this law.” He emphasised that the law would prevent individuals or institutions from using coercion to alter a person’s faith. Notably, this is not the state’s first attempt at introducing an anti-conversion law. In 2006, a similar bill was introduced by Vasundhara Raje’s BJP government but failed to receive governor and presidential assent. In 2017, the Rajasthan High Court issued guidelines for interfaith marriages to prevent forced conversions Penalties under the new Bill The Prohibition of Unlawful Conversion of Religion Bill prescribes severe penalties for forced conversions, including imprisonment ranging from two to ten years and fines up to Rs 25,000. Conversions involving minors, women or individuals from Scheduled Castes (SC) and Scheduled Tribes (ST) carry harsher penalties, with jail terms between three and ten years and fines of Rs 50,000. For large-scale conversions, the punishment
Hindu organizations seek FIR against Navsari teacher & his wife over religious conversion allegations
Navsari; A video allegedly showing a teacher from the Seventh Day School in Navsari’s Vejalpore area, along with his wife, encouraging religious conversions, is circulating on social media. The video, which depicts an oath declaring Jesus as the only God, has sparked outrage among Hindu organizations. The controversy began when the video surfaced, showing Kamal Naskar, a teacher at the Seventh Day English Medium School, and his wife, Sarita, leading a Christian prayer with children and others. In the video, Sarita is heard saying, “Jesus is the true God,” and administering an oath renouncing faith in Hindu deities in favor of Jesus. The incident has provoked strong reactions from Hindu groups in Navsari’s Vejalpore area. The oath reportedly included the words,“ઈશુ આ..!! હમારે હિન્દુ ધર્મ મેં જે ભી દૈવી દેવતા હો, જે વાચા વાચી થી, હમ ઉસ વાચા કો ઈસુ કે નામ સે તોડ દેતે હૈ… ઈસુ હી જીવિત પરમેશ્વર હૈ…મેરા ખાના, મેરી પ્રીત પ્રભુ યેશુ કો હી… ઈસુ પરમેશ્વર કો ભજેંગે, અબ તું હિ હમારા પરમેશ્વર હૈ…” Following the video’s circulation, the AntarRashtriya Hindu Parishad and Rashtriya Bajrang Dal filed a written application with the Navsari District Police Chief. They accused Kamal Naskar and Sarita of misleading and converting underprivileged Hindus, as
Christians banned from 8 villages in India’s Chhattisgarh state
In the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh, eight village councils have passed a resolution that bans Christians from staying in their villages, requiring them to either renounce their faith or leave. The order impacts about 100 Christians whose property and fields were threatened with confiscation if they did not comply, according to reports. The villages in Sukma district collectively approved the resolution, instructing Christians to either abandon their faith or face the loss of all belongings and property, reported the U.K.-based organization Christian Solidarity Worldwide. A local leader from one of the affected villages, Michwar, upheld the decree, reportedly asserting that the authority of the village councils supersedes India's Constitution, which guarantees freedom of religion under Article 25. The ban, which appears to be a targeted effort to eradicate Christianity in these areas, has forced at least 40 people from their homes, according to Asia News. On Nov. 18, a group of Christians lodged a complaint at the Gadiras Police Station, presenting audio evidence of statements made by the village chief of Michwar. However, the police refused to register a formal complaint, which is necessary to initiate a legal investigation. Instead, police officers asked the complainants to take them to the fields. When they arrived,
The Political Earthquake Amidst Manipur’s Religious Rift – OpEd
The violence in Manipur, India, has brought the growing tide of religious persecution in the country to the forefront. Since May 2023, the state has witnessed violent clashes between the Hindu Meitei and Christian Kuki communities, with over 415 lives lost and tens of thousands displaced. However, what is truly alarming is not only the violence itself but also the failure of India’s leadership to take decisive action in curbing the rising tide of religious intolerance. The indifference shown by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his government has allowed the persecution of religious minorities, particularly Christians, to flourish unchecked. Manipur’s unrest is rooted in complex ethnic and religious tensions. The Meitei, a predominantly Hindu community, have been demanding Scheduled Tribe status, a move that has been fiercely opposed by the Kuki community, which is largely Christian. The demand for Scheduled Tribe status is seen by many as a means of securing affirmative action benefits, which would favor the Meitei population over other groups in the state, including the Christian Kukis. This has led to violent clashes, with the Kuki people bearing the brunt of the attacks. The violence has been particularly devastating for the Christian community in Manipur. Over 360 churches have
India: How anti-conversion laws are fine-tuned to allow policing of Christians
In July, more than two years after a Christian prayer service at his home was raided by police, a court in Uttar Pradesh in northern India acquitted Abhishek Gupta, a 41-year-old radiologist, of violating the state’s anti-conversion law. Legally, his victory was more than a win; it was a rout: The judge in the case cleared Gupta and a co-defendant of trying to recruit Hindus into Utter Pradesh’s tiny Christian minority, but further ruled that the complainant, a member of a Hindu nationalist activist group, was not eligible to file the case and that police investigators were “the real culprits”.But personally, the case has ruined Gupta, he said. “My entire family is Christian. I pray on Sundays. I don’t know why anyone would think I was converting anyone,” Gupta told RNS by phone from his home village in Gorakhpur, where he moved after he and his wife, a nurse, were asked to resign their jobs for fear their employers would be harassed by vigilantes. “We exhausted our life savings, and our life was turned upside down,” he said. A study by Article 14, a watchdog group, revealed that in the first year after the original 2021 statute passed, half of the 101 reported violations
Ethnoreligious Violence Continues to Rock India’s Manipur State
Recent weeks have seen a spike in ethnoreligious violence in northeastern India’s Manipur state after a period of relative calm. Widespread unrest tore through the state in 2023, dividing residents along ethnic and religious lines and leading to hundreds of deaths, the destruction of more than 300 churches, and the displacement of at least 60,000 mostly Christian residents. According to reports, the recent violence was sparked by the murder of a young Kuki woman, whose body was found abandoned in a river. The Kuki people are a minority ethnic group concentrated in Manipur’s hill country. They are mostly made up of Christians, while the majority are Meitei, a Hindu-majority ethnic group concentrated in the state’s valley. Reports that emerged during the violence of 2023 indicated that dozens of Meitei churches were among those destroyed by Meitei attackers, suggesting that Meitei mobs and militias were targeting communities based not only on their ethnicity but also based on religion. More than a dozen people were reportedly killed in this month’s flareup, and half a dozen churches were torched. The violence in 2023 sparked when the Manipur High Court recommended that the executive branch of the state government make the majority Meitei people eligible for Scheduled Tribe benefits,