A year on from the Orissa violence, prayers for peace in India
Christian groups in many parts of India are organizing vigils, meetings, prayers to remember the martyrs killed last year in Orissa and to demand peace in a country that must remain "multi-cultural, multi - religious, multi-lingual,” reports AsiaNews.
The day after the death of their radical leader Swami Laxamananda Saraswati, August 24 2008, crowds of Hindu nationalist extremists, linked to the VHP (Vishwa Hindu Parishad) and the Sang Parivar, launched a campaign that had as its’ slogan "Kill the Christians, destroy their institutions”.
In a few days 123 faithful were killed (but unofficial estimates speak of 500), hundreds of churches and thousands of homes destroyed and burned, creating 51 thousand refugees. One year on from the violence, many Christian groups want to remember the victims, but above all to convey a message of coexistence and peace with justice.
The Ecumenical Christian Forum of Human Rights (ECFoHR) has arranged a day for interreligious harmony to be held August 24 at Madurai (Tamil Nadu), with a prayer vigil for the Christian martyrs killed in the district of Kadhamal, among the most affected by extremists fury.
Dr. Sajan George, president of the Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) has long been committed to legal assistance and rehabilitation for victims of Kandhamal. He explains to AsiaNews that "Kandhamal needs peace and through this, equal opportunities for all sectors of society, who are entitled to live and to live with dignity."
"The culture of the conflict - he explains - needs to be replaced by the art of communication and diplomacy". But dialogue does not mean hiding evil. "So far, the Kandhamal widows of Martyrdom have washed the shame of hatred with their tears. Now is the time to bring them out in the open and place them before the world community, which is clamouring and hoping for peace in each corner of the globe. The more we see them, the more will develop an urge to move away from the path that leads us to such an end."
“Peace – he continues - is the basic framework necessary for all development programs in education, health and other infrastructure sectors to be launched and led for the good of humanity. So, let us resolve to prevent conflicts as far as we can think and devote ourselves to human development”.
Tony Anthony
three time World Champion in Kung Fu, former elite bodyguard. The founding Director of the International mission Avanti Ministries. Author of books Taming the Tiger and Roar of the Tiger