HINDUSTAN TIMES - November  4, 2006
November 4, 2006 Soumitro Das,
September 15, 2008
First Published: 20:36 IST(15/9/2008)
Last Updated: 21:46 IST(15/9/2008)
 November 4, 2006 Soumitro Das,
September 15, 2008
First Published: 20:36 IST(15/9/2008)
Last Updated: 21:46 IST(15/9/2008)
Faith accompli
The violence against Christians in Orissa,  Madhya Pradesh and now in Karnataka should be seen at various levels  from the  economy of conversion to the historical roots and real meaning of  conversion.  
 First, funding. Nobody seems to know exactly  how much money the VHP receives from abroad. The only figure we have is $1.7  million from the India Development and Relief Fund (IDRF) that raises money from  individuals and corporations in the United States (including Cisco and Sun  Microsystems) to distribute them among a plethora of Sangh parivar agencies,  some of whom work for 'tribal welfare'. 
 On the Christian side, thanks to the Foreign  Contributions Regulation Act, the Home Ministry is in possession of  the  Annual Report on Foreign Contributions for 2005-06.  It lays out in minute  detail the funds received by churches and Christian organisations in India. We  know, for example, that the top donors are church-based or Christian-inspired  organisations from the US, Britain, Germany, the Netherlands and Italy. We also  know that a greater part of the funds  Rs 7,785 crore  goes to mainly  Christian and church-based organisations in India. According to the Home  Ministry's analysis, the major part of the fund are spent on disaster relief and  establishment costs. Welfare of scheduled tribes gets only Rs 25 crore and  welfare of scheduled Castes only Rs 9 crore. The rest of the money goes into  social work  building of schools, colleges, hospitals, etc. Nowhere is the word  proselytisation mentioned. There are also no records of mass conversions.  
 Hence, the Sangh parivar's argument that  Christian charitable and social work is a disguise to convert 'innocent,  illiterate' tribals and Dalits is a lie  at least as  far as the records  go. The Home Ministry report also tells us that the bulk of the money is spent  in Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Delhi  not in Orissa or  Gujarat.
 Now to come to the violence at  Kandhmal  in Orissa. The man, Laxmananda Saraswati, whose murder had sparked off the  latest round of violence, was a VHP sant who was at the forefront of the VHP's  ghar wapasi ('home coming') movement that consisted of reconverting tribals and  Dalits who had been converted by the Christian missionaries.  
 At one level, the violence that followed  Saraswati's death was a result of a century-old conflict between the tribal  Kandhs and the Dalit Pano. The former accuse the latter of stealing their land,  aided by missionaries who, on their part, continue to occupy land that belongs  to the state. The Panos who have converted to Christianity in large numbers are  clamouring for Scheduled Tribe status because their conversion  has not  mitigated the effects of caste prejudice against them. As a Scheduled Tribe the  Panos hope to preserve their religious identity and also be eligible for  reserved government jobs. This infuriates the Kandhs as well as the VHP.  
 Conversion has two dimensions to it. In the  first place, it is an intensely personal affair. It is this individual  realisation occurring over a period of time that makes the conversion of entire  communities a slow, painstaking and laborious  process. It is also this  individual repudiation of Hinduism that rattles the VHP beyond measure. It means  that the tribal or the Dalit in question is no longer bound by any fate or  destiny, but is, in fact, a free agent who can transform his life by changing  his value and belief system. 
 The second dimension of conversion is that it  is a political act. When, over a period of  time, an entire community is  converted, it has revolutionary implications. What does it mean for a Dalit to  convert to Christianity? To know that, one has to understand where the Dalit is  coming from. He lives beyond the pale of 'caste Hindu' society  even his   shadow is considered polluting  in  some  regions of this  country; the jobs that he  does are considered the most filthy  dealing  with animal hides (chamars), disposing of the corpse after cremation (doms) and  cleaning the night soil (bhangis). He does not have the right to use a  mechanised transport, wear nice clothes, or jewellery. His house is frequently  burned, his women are routinely raped. He lives in a night without end.  
 Then, he finds a God who, like him, suffered  excruciating pain, who chose his  disciples among the poor and the wretched  and gave his own life  so that others could find  salvation through  his  suffering.  The Dalit also understands that, in the light of  Jesus' story, the Hindus do not seem to have a moral order, that the only thing  that counts for them is ritual purity and impurity. Instead of good and evil,  Hinduism deals in the categories of ritual cleanliness and uncleanliness. The  community, fortified by its realisation that the Hindu world view is only one  among many others and not even of the most superior kind, gradually revolts and  crosses over to Christianity. 
 Thus what began as a conversion of an  individual ends as a collective revolt against the oppression, the brutality and  the inhuman humiliations of caste society. That is what the VHP and the Sangh  parivar do not want. They want to crush this revolt.
 Soumitro Das is  a Kolkata-based writer 
  
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