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Sub: 'The Church has harmed
many Hindu families and communities
and is still willing to do so'

From:      Ashok Chowgule, Mumbai.  6 November, 1999.

Pranam,

I am enclosing an interview which explains the VHP position with respect to the issues raised in context of the current visit of Pope John Paul II.  Some on the list may say that there is a 'different' mainline Hindu position.  If anyone wants to have clarifications on the points made, I would be happy to respond.

Namaste.
Ashok Chowgule.

=======================================

Title: 'The Church has harmed many Hindu families and communities and is  still willing to do so'
Author: Archana Masih
Publication: Rediff on Net
Date: November 4, 1999

(Note from the Vishwa Hindu Parishad:  The VHP completely endorses
everything that is said by Dr Frawley as its official position on all the
issues raised in the interview.)

Introduction: Dr David Frawley, director of the American Institute of Vedic
Studies, believes Christians should accept and understand religious
pluralism. The former Catholic maintains he has nothing against Christ or
Christians, but agrees with the VHP's demand for an apology from the Pope
over the historical excesses against Hindus. In an e-mailed interview, the
Vedic scholar spoke his mind to Archana Masih.

Q. Could you explain your stance on Pope John Paul II's visit to India?
Since there is a convergence many a time on his role as the religious head
of the Catholic Church and the symbolic leader of the Vatican, in your view,
in what capacity is he really coming to India?

China, Taiwan and Sri Lanka refused the Pope's request to visit and launch
his new activities that aim at the evangelisation of Asia. Hindu majority
India, though not a Christian country, has allowed him to do so. Therefore
the Pope should feel grateful to the tolerant people of India. Clearly no
Western country would give a state welcome to a Hindu religious leader
seeking to promote Hindu conversion activities in the West.

India is one of the few countries that recognises the Pope as a head of
state. The United States and most Western countries recognise the Pope only
as a religious leader. Clearly the Pope is not coming to India as the
political leader of a secular state but as a religious leader. He is
conducting a religious mass in Delhi, not organising a trade mission.

The Catholic Church has a long and self-proclaimed policy of evangelisation
or conversion and a special Asia synod to convert Asia. The Pope is coming
to India to promote the cause of Catholicism, which means the conversion of
Hindus. Naturally he will be friendly in this capacity, but his purpose has
an obvious ulterior motive. He is not coming here because he wants to make a
pilgrimage to honour the great Yogis and swamis of India or to visit her
great temples and tirthas.

Today the Catholic Church is losing power in the West. Most Catholics are
only nominal in their beliefs. For example, most American Catholics practise
birth control that the Church does not approve of and don't attend church on
a regular basis. The average age of priests and nuns is nearing the age of
sixty and few younger people are coming in. The Church can still get a fair
amount of money from rich Western economies but is clearly an institution in
decline. Without replenishing its population base it is facing a severe
crisis. India offers perhaps the best possibility for doing this with a
large population with a history of religious devotion and monastic activity
that could readily become priests and nuns.

Q. Why do you believe it is important for him to apologise to the Hindus for
the forced conversions in India?

The bloody history of the Church in America, Africa and Asia is an open book
and well known. The Native Americans where I live in the United States still
tell stories about how the feet of their people were cut off for refusing to
walk to church or their tongues cut off for refusing to recite prayers. The
church has claimed that its intolerance is a thing of the past. Yet even if
one accepts that it has stopped today, which is debatable, it certainly went
on well into this century. That the church was prominent in Nazi Germany and
Fascist Italy, and never really opposed Hitler or Mussolini, should not be
forgotten.

The point is that if you don't apologise how can other groups believe that
you have really given up the attitudes that caused such behaviour? Such
conversion efforts are hurtful to the communities they target, even if no
overt violence is involved. The Church has harmed many Hindu families and
communities and is still willing to do so, by turning people against their
native beliefs and customs.

Christians have made some apologies to the Native Americans and the black
Africans for their oppression of them. Why don't Hindus count in this?
Aren't they also human beings?

Q. There have been many deeds in history and at present that have gone by
without apologies and accountability. Is it worthwhile to resurrect such
issues in the present context? What purpose does this serve?

The problem is that the same attitudes and behaviour that resulted in such
violence in the past still go on today. The official policy of the Catholic
Church today is still that Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism and other
Indian religions are not valid or true. This promotes division,
misunderstanding and can still lead to violence.

Today we have given up the doctrine of racial superiority that the White
Europeans used to justify their colonial rule. But the attitude of religious
superiority -- that only Christianity is true and the other religions are
false -- still goes on. Such religious exclusivism like racism is backward
and prejudicial. If I believe, as the Church teaches, that my non-Catholic
neighbours will go to hell, it doesn't do much for communal harmony. And new
converts take these beliefs much more seriously.

Q. What are the atrocities perpetrated against Hindus by the Christians that
you would like to see the Pope apologise about? Can you name some of these
crimes?

The Goa Inquisition was probably the worst and involved torture and murder
of thousands of Hindus and the destruction of many Hindu temples over a
period of several decades. It was done by the same groups that promoted the
genocide of Native Americans. But Church policy all along has been that
Hinduism is bad and unless Hindus convert they cannot be saved. This easily
gives rise to excesses. After all if I believe that if you don't join my
religion you will suffer in eternal hell, for your benefit I must do
everything possible, which easily leads to excesses.

Q. What are the reasons for the sudden anger against the Christians?

The anger is not so much sudden as that today we have a more aware Hindu
populace and a larger media forum for airing such grievances. Oppressed
religious and social groups of all types are now making such protests.
Christians will more quickly protest against Hindus if they feel that Hindus
are not treating them fairly. Hindus have actually protested a lot less than
other groups, though they have more commonly been the target of denigration.
Such a Hindu awakening was inevitable. The real question is why it took so
long.

Another issue is that the Hindu reconversion movement has started, which
Christians find threatening and which highlights this issue.

Q. Why have Christians replaced Muslims as the hate objects for Hindus? Is
it true that the VHP's campaign is driven because Sonia Gandhi is a
Christian?

I don't think that Hindus hate Christians. They are not targeting Christians
for conversion or calling them devil worshippers as the Southern Baptists,
the largest Protestant sect in America to which both Bill Clinton and Al
Gore belong, are calling Hindus. Rather Hindus are challenging Christian
prejudices against Hindus that cause mistrust and hatred of Hindus by
Christians. You will find a picture of Christ in many Hindu homes, but you
won't find any picture of Krishna in any Christian homes.

Nor do Hindus hate Muslims. It is the general Muslim view that Hindus are
idolators, polytheists and kafirs and doomed in the eyes of Allah. Hindus
have no such doctrines about Islam. Hindu dislike of Christianity and Islam
is largely a backlash against the centuries long efforts to convert them
which are still going on.

I don't think the VHP campaign would stop if Sonia Gandhi left politics
either. That Sonia Gandhi is a Christian may be a matter of concern for
Hindus because of the Christian seeking to convert Hindus. Clearly most
Christians in America would not be happy if a Hindu became the head of a
major American political party, particularly if Hindus were actively trying
to convert Christians in America.

The greater issue is caused by the increasing Christian evangelisation
activities in India. Look throughout the country, particularly in the South
and you will find them expanding almost everywhere.

Why should there be an evangelisation of Asia at all? Don't we live in a
global society in which we must recognise pluralism in religion just as we
do in culture or language? Are not the great religions of Asia good enough
and a great legacy for the entire world? Why do Westerners come to India? It
is mainly to find spiritual teachings that they didn't find in their own
Western Christian backgrounds.

Others argue that since only about three per cent of India has become
Christian why should one care? But the areas that have become Christian,
like the northeast, are getting progressively alienated from the rest of
India and seeking to secede from the country. And the possibility of
dramatically more conversions in the future cannot be ruled out. That
someone has fired a gun against you and missed is no reason not to take it
seriously, particularly if he is loading a better gun for further shots. The
point is that it is unkind to begin with.

Q. As a former Catholic, why are you suspicious of the Pope's campaign? What
is it about Pope John Paul II that makes you suspicious of him?

As a former Catholic, I am well aware that most Catholics have no real
respect for Hinduism. My uncle became a missionary to convert Native
Americans and save them from hell, and Hindus are placed in the same
category. The current Pope is a well-known conservative promoting
evangelical activity throughout the world, but he covers his actions with a
veneer of social liberalism.

Today no major Catholic leaders in the West are saying that Hinduism is a
great and spiritual religion that is worthy of respect like Christianity.
Should they succeed in converting Hindu India to Catholicism they would
happily put an end to the great Yogic and Vedantic traditions that are
perhaps the soul of this country, which would be a great loss to humanity.
We have enough Christian countries in the world today, but there is only one
India and it is not Christianity which has made the civilisation of India
unique and great.

Catholicism has a long history of co-opting other beliefs. It is willing to
give an apparent honour and regard to something, as long as it is placed
under the supremacy of Christianity. For example, the church subordinated
the old pagan Greek philosophies of Aristotle and Plato, which it made the
basis of Christian theology. It hopes to do the same thing with Hindu and
Buddhist philosophies, which it hopes to fashion as a prelude to the message
of Christ.

In South India Catholic priests dress up like Hindu swamis and call their
organisations ashrams but are still actively engaged in conversion. Their
Hindu dress is not don to honour Hindu traditions but to make Christianity
more acceptable to the local population, like McDonalds offering vegetarian
burgers in India for Hindus who won't eat the usual hamburger.

Similarly, the Pope will probably speak of the greatness of India and the
need for brotherhood and human rights but he will certainly not say that
Hindus don't need to convert to Christianity. He will portray Christianity
as a religion of compassion, equality and democracy to appeal to the poor in
India, though historically Christianity has commonly been aligned with
monarchies, colonial armies, fascist states and ruling juntas.

Hindus may confuse such statements of general human regard with real
religious tolerance or even with an acceptance of Hinduism. They may confuse
a co-opting of their religion with a real regard for it. The new Catholic
strategy is that Hinduism is all right as far as it goes but will only reach
its real fulfilment when it accepts Christ. This is the same old conversion
ploy, only done in a more covert way. The American Protestants, who still
portray Hinduism as a religion of the devil, are at least more honest about
their views and their intentions.

Q. The Pope is a State guest, invited by the Government of India, so won't
the stance of the VHP undermine India's secular tradition and embarrass A B
Vajpayee -- even his alliance partners do not agree with such protests.

Not at all. In America visits of foreign heads of states are often marked by
protests. When the Chinese president was here recently many Americans mainly
of Chinese ancestry protested the visit, including some who were Democrats.
Such protests are part of democracy. Islamic groups in America have
protested the visit of Israeli leaders as well. The Pope cannot be made
immune to such protests. They are part of secular traditions which don't
require the people in any country to bow down to a foreign leader, whether
he is a religious figure or not.

Q. If in spite of the pressure applied for the apology, and the Pope does
not apologise, will it be a loss of face for the VHP and other organisations
demanding for the same?

I don't think anyone expects the current Pope to make such an apology,
though a future Pope might do so. But the case has to be brought out anyway
for the sake of truth and for posterity. The fact that it is coming out is
beneficial for Hindus. Hindus have long been too quiet about the attacks
against them. Hindus tend to bow down to any religious leader as a holy man,
even one who does not respect their traditions or honour their gods and
sages. It is actually more important that Hindus change than that the pope
changes.

The Pope doesn't want to apologise to Hindus because he doesn't want to
recognise Hinduism as a valid religion. He won't even mention the word
Hinduism. He will call Diwali an Indian cultural festival, not a Hindu
religious event.

Q. What impact do you think the Pope's visit is going to have on the
socio-religious culture of India?

Hopefully it will make Hindus more savvy about what is going on in the
world. Current missionary plans to convert India, both by Catholics and
Protestants, are the greatest in history in terms of financial backing,
media manipulation and manpower support. An entire new attack is being
launched. China is also emerging as a new target. Religious tolerance is not
a one way street. We cannot ask Hindus to honour Christianity when
Christians, starting with the pope, don't honour Hinduism, however much they
may talk of God, humanity or peace.

Why can't the Pope say that Christianity is not the only way and that
Hinduism by itself can be enough? That would be an expression of tolerance
and open-mindedness. Why are Hindus who accept the validity of many paths
called "hardliners" while a Pope who refuses to do so is honoured as a holy
man? Is not pluralism a sign of tolerance and exclusivism the hallmark of
intolerance?

Catholicism today is not a pluralistic tradition honouring different
religious and spiritual paths as valid. It is an exclusivist tradition
dominated by a leader who will not accept a Buddha, Krishna, Rama or Guru
Nanak as a Son of God but only Jesus. What does that say about how he views
India and the kinds of plans he intends to promote here?

Hopefully the Pope's visit will get people to really think about these
matters.

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