Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Global Council of Indian Christians

Bangalore, 31 March 2009

Swami Agnivesh condemned political parties for giving Manoj Pradhan, the prime accused in last year's ethno-communal riots in Kandhmal and currently behind bars tickets to contest the election in Orissa. His statement was made while he addressed the Fourth National Persecution Meet organized by the Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) at the United Theological College in Bangalore today. The GCIC team celebrated “Life and Forgiveness” with 120 victims of religious persecution from Kashmir to Kanyakumari.
The victims included 33 widows of martyrs from the Kandhamal tragedy in Orissa. The programme commenced with the honouring of these brave widows from Orissa who have undergone extreme pain and agony and yet have forgiven their perpetrators.
Dr. Sajan K. George released an alternate election manifesto from the minority community of India to the rest of the voters of the nation. While releasing the manifesto he reminded the audience of the painstaking efforts of the makers of the constitution to decide that India should be a secular democracy. He reiterated that all Indians including minorities were share-holders of the country and not merely tenants on rent. The first copy of the manifesto was presented to Swami Agnivesh. (attached election Manifesto)
The keynote address was delivered by Swami Agnivesh, the President of the World Council of Arya Samaj and winner of the Right Livelihood Award (2004). Swami Agnivesh thanked the widows of the martyrs for washing away the ugly stain of religious hatred and violence with their tears. He highlighted Jesus’ message of forgiveness that has been echoed in the lives of many persecuted Christians especially Mrs. Staines, the widow of Graham Staines. He said true Christianity was not in books or churches but in the lives of ordinary people like the Kandhamal widows. Swami concluded by saying that crimes against minorities are crimes against humanity. While Swami Agnivesh commended the victims for their forgiving hearts, he asked them to allow the law to take its course and allow justice to be served. He informed the audience of the efforts of the leaders of various religious groups to come together and work in harmony for common social issues and peace in India.
Swami Agnivesh along with other dignitaries and institutions were honoured for their work in the field of human rights and among the poor. Bangalore Baptist Hospital, Bishop Sampath Kumar, Senior Pastor T. T. Joseph, Dr. A.G. Ashok and Ms. Evangeline Rajkumar were among those who were honoured. The Graham Staines International Award for Peace and Harmony was presented to Mrs. Nirmala Carvalho, a notable human rights activist and writer who voices the cry of the voiceless. Mrs. Karkare was also awarded the Graham Staines award in absentia.In conclusion, the gathering heard a testimony by Mrs. Digal, wife of the first martyr from Kandhamal, Jacob Digal. Following the moving account of her experience, the victims from Kandhamal led the gathering in a worship song and ended the programme
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Thursday, January 1, 2009



Faith in Action

Katherine Marshall
Katherine Marshall is senior fellow at Georgetown University's Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs, and Director of the World Faiths Development Dialogue. Her blog, Faith in Action, tracks the activities of people of faith across the globe and across religious traditions. It maps their engagement around critical issues, from global health to the environment -- from AIDS to zebras. It explores the struggles, alliances, and common efforts of people of faith, public and private, local and global. And it highlights how important it is for Americans to look beyond their borders and to appreciate the struggles of the "bottom billion" people in today's globalized world. Her long career with the World Bank (1971-2006) involved a wide range of leadership assignments on issues of international development, with a focus on issues facing the world's poorest countries. From 2000-2006 she served as a counselor to the World Bank's President on ethics, values, and faith in development work. She is the author of several books including "Development and Faith: Where Mind, Heart and Soul work Together." Close.

Faith in Action

Katherine Marshall
Katherine Marshall is a senior fellow at Georgetown University's Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs and Visiting Professor. Her blog, Faith in Action, tracks the activities of people of faith across the globe and across religious traditions. Full bio »
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Clash of Civilizations?
As the new year dawns, India is massing troops near its border with Pakistan after the Mumbai tragedy, and Israel is wreaking havoc in Gaza to stop the rocket attacks from its hostile neighbor. Just days ago, the political scientist Sam Huntington died, bringing his controversial theory of "the clash of civilizations" back into the public consciousness.
I explored the Indian conflict recently with one of India's religious rebels and activists: Swami Agnivesh. His orange-swathed figure is well known in global interfaith circles and indeed he was en route from Guyana where he participated in a UN meeting on HIV/AIDS. We are collaborators on many issues of common concern - bonded labor, the "disappearance" of female children in India and elsewhere, and social justice.
We went together to visit our common friend Akbar Ahmed and his family. Ahmed is the former Pakistani High Commissioner to the Court of St. James, now at American University. The two friends and Akbar's family were looking for answers in territory where nothing is clear and simple.
The good news, we all agreed, is that the Mumbai attacks inspired wide revulsion, going well beyond intellectuals and activists. Indian Muslims demonstrated against terrorism and an interfaith mobilization to contest terrorism is taking form especially in India. In Pakistan, the group had heard, many leaders are embarrassed by the shadowy links of official bodies to the terrorists of Mumbai.
But there is plenty to be gloomy about. Even at our sub-continental tea, some viewed terrorists as evil people akin to savage beasts, but others cautioned that there are reasons for their anger, and that unless those reasons are addressed the fringe elements will always be ready to rise up. Sam Huntington's theory--that tension between cultures and religions will define the conflicts of the future--hovered in the atmosphere.
So it comes back to the classic dilemmas of our times: the tight interconnectedness of today's world coupled with its diverse beliefs. The change that disorients, spelling hope for some and despair for others.
Swami Agnivesh gave up a prosperous life as a professor from an elite family to fight for social justice. I remember a meeting on the eve of the U.S. invasion of Iraq when, among prominent ex heads of state and religious leaders, he suggested that we all go to Iraq as a human shield, in the name of social justice and perhaps to halt what seemed the inevitable coming clash. Everyone, myself included, blanched, and the idea did not go forward. But he like others is wrestling with the Huntington theory - is a clash of civilizations that pits religions against one another inevitable? Or can a more just world forestall those conflicts?
As we look to 2009, that's a question that really demands our hearts, minds, and souls.
Posted by Katherine Marshall on December 31, 2008 11:04 AM