‘Graham Staines' death is warning against Hindu fundamentalism’
Mumbai, 25 January 2014: The martyrdom of Rev Graham Staines and his two sons in India
reminds us that "it is vital to consider seriously the challenges posed by Hindu fundamentalism",
especially in view of the upcoming general election, said Sajan George, president
of the Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC), who spoke to AsiaNews on the anniversary
of the death of the Australian missionary, killed at night on 22 January 1999.
Fifteen
years ago, Hindu extremists set fire to Rev Staines and his sons Philip and Timothy
(aged 9 and 7), as they slept in their station wagon in Manoharpur village (Keonjhar
District, Orissa). In 2006, his widow Gladys returned to live in the Indian state,
along with her surviving daughter Esther.
In the upcoming May election, two
main political parties will vie for power: the ruling, secular-oriented Congress Party
and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the Hindu nationalist opposition.
The
BJP has openly backed extremist groups affiliated with the Sangh Parivar, groups that
have carried out numerous attacks against India's ethnic and religious minorities.
For
this reason, "we must be cautious," said the GCIC president, "because their electoral
platform is part of a broader agenda to assert their nationalist ideology, destroy
the country's social fabric and endanger its religious pluralism".
Hence, "it
is urgent to uphold the secular spirit of our constitution," for example, "by eliminating
anti-conversion laws that still exist in some Indian states like Orissa." Source:
AsiaNews