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Going to a Church does not make you a Christian any more than going to a garage
makes you an automobile W A Billy Sunday.
The great issues are decided either by the proponents or the opponents, never
by the neutralists. The neutralists lose by default. Better it is to support one
side or the other, than to do nothing and let another decide the issue for you
perhaps in a way you disapprove. Viewed from this point of view, I wish to
declare that I am a devout Hindu and am proud of my Hindu inheritance going back
to the dawn of history.
I am shocked to note that on 21 May, when there was an unprecedented rush at
the Badrachalam Temple on account of Hanumath Jayanthi, some evangelical
missionaries entered the temple and pasted evangelical wall posters making Hindu
devotees angry. Some members of an organization called Vikasa Tarangini
immediately reported to the Temple Board Chairman who in turn filed a police
case. According to the law other religious activity cannot take place within 200
yards (600 ft) from a religious place. But thanks to the pseudo-secularism of
the Congress Party in power in Andhra Pradesh the Christian missionaries are
above the law. They have been emboldened after their fellow evangelist Dr Y
Samuel Rajasekhar Reddy became the Chief Minister of the state.
To quote the appropriate words of Sandhya Jain, a front rank journalist and
crusader for the cause of Sanathana Dharma: India's secular State extends undue
patronage to the Church; as a result Hindu patience is beginning to wear thin.
The situation has deteriorated with the rise of the Sonia Gandhi-led Congress in
some states. So we have a situation in which BJP-ruled Rajasthan has to change
the name of a colony named after the Goddess Sati, but Maharashtra sanctions a
Christian township!
I see from last year's press cuttings that former Australia cricket captain,
Steve Waugh, wished to set up a 100-400 acre ' Christian township ' in Mumbai.
Well known as a rabid evangelist, Waugh also donated millions of rupees for the
conversion of tsunami victims. Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh also appointed
State Industry secretary as nodal agency for the proposal, possibly in the light
of instructions from Catholic Sonia Gandhi.
In 2005, Dharam Singh, the Congress Chief Minister of Karnataka, brazenly
facilitated Benny Hinn's evangelical blitzkrieg, which mercifully fell flat,
causing embarrassment even to the official church. In the earlier Congress
regime of S M Krishna, Sangliana, a Christian Officer from North-East openly
sided with missionaries when the Ma Bhagavati temple in Devanahalli (Bangalore
Rural) and Sri Durgamba Temple in Banaswadi (Bangalore) were demolished and
churches erected in their place in 2002. In both cases, the Chief Minister and
important Congress leaders supported the evangelicals. It is hardly surprising
to learn, therefore, that as many as 84 Churches have sprung up in this area in
the last two years.
But the man who clinches the first prize as a great crusader for Christian
causes is Y Samuel Rajasekhar Reddy (YSR), Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh. A
practicing Seventh Day Adventist, Reddy reportedly had 350 farmhands converted
by the Adventists on his own farm, and is now building a church for them. Reddy
is openly pro-missionary and anti-Hindu. Last year, when it was found that a
church was being constructed on lands belonging to the famous Bhadrachalam Rama
Temple, given to a Christian organization for setting up a school, the Chief
Minister prevented restoration of the land to the temple. So now the church is
coming up and conversion activity is in full swing at an exceedingly sacred
Hindu site. What happened on 21st May is only the culmination of one
small episode in the mischievous evangelization process initiated by YSR last
year.
I understand that temple lands are also being freely distributed in Naxal-infested
areas in Andhra Pradesh. YSR has handed over the distribution of mid-day meals
meant for government school students to Christian bodies and NGOs, who make the
children recite 'Yesu nama' before giving them the food. This not only
tantamounts to forced conversion but also involves the psychological abuse of
minors.
A two-day Dharma Sammelan was held at Tirupathi on 3rd and 4th
March. After the conclusion of the programme, when all the Swamijis made their
way for the Darshan of Lord Balaji, to everyone's surprise the Swamijis were
denied entry into the Temple by Thomas Varghese (Executive Officer of Padmavathi
Guest House) who is reported to be a close associate of Dr Y Samuel Rajshekar
Reddy. And finally after a prolonged round of indoor pseudo-secular
consultations, the Swamijis were let inside the sanctum to have the Darshan of
the Lord. In the 2nd week of April, rumours were thick in the air in
Tirupathi to the effect that a vested group of Christian Zealots was operating
from inside State Transport buses plying in the sacred Hills of Tirumala. The
local BJP leaders in Tirupathi could only lodge a strong protest in front of the
Tirumala Tirupathi Devasthanam Administrative Building on 11th April.
As a crowning event to commemorate the completion of two years of anti-Hindu,
anti-Sanathana Dhrama, anti-Lord Krishna, anti-Lord Rama, anti-Lord Shiva and
anti-Durga, the UPA Government, A R Antulay, Minister for Minorities with a
great and known moral stature and record of unimpeachable integrity, has asked
the National Commission for Minorities (NCM) to conduct an on the spot
assessment of complaints of atrocities on Christians in Madhya Pradesh,
Chhattisgarh, and Rajasthan all ruled by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Laws
against conversion are in place in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh. In Rajasthan,
a bill passed by the assembly in April awaits the governor's assent. Union
Minister A R Antulay told the press recently that his ministry was concerned
about the huge number of complaints from these states and had therefore decided
to send a team for a reality check. Union Minister A R Antulay is not worried
about what has just happened in Badrachalam Temple. Nor is he worried about the
continuous slaughter of Hindu civilians in Jammu and Kashmir. In both these
states Congress is ruling and only Hindus are at the receiving end. Hindus are
non-entities to be dismissed at will. Only the Christians and Muslims are
favoured children and allowed to have their say in all matters and all
situations.
Hindus from 17th century Pundits of Tamilnadu to Mahatma Gandhi in the 20th
century have wasted no end of breath to demolish the dogma of Christianity. But
it has hardly made any difference to the arrogance of Christian theologians and
missionaries. Sita Ram Goel in his path-breaking work History of Hindu-Christian
Encounters (AD 304 to 1996) sharply concludes: This is because the dogma was
never meant for discussion. It is an axiom of logic that that which has not been
proved cannot and need not be disproved. Who has ever proved that the
non-descript Jew who was crucified by a Roman Emperor of Judaea in 33 AD atoned
for the sins of mankind for all time to come? Who has ever proved that those who
accept that man as the only saviour will ascend to a heaven of ever-lasting
bliss and those who do not will burn forever in the blazing fire of hell? Nor
can the proclamation or the promise or the threat be disproved. High-sounding
theological blah blah notwithstanding, the fact remains that the dogma is no
more than a subterfuge for forging and wielding an organizational weapon for
aggression against other people. Hindus should pay particular attention to the
Christian missionary apparatus planted in their midst. The sole aim of this
apparatus is to ruin Hindu society and culture and take over the Hindu homeland.
Mahatma
Gandhi would be dismissed today by Sonia Gandhi, Dr Y Samuel Rajasekar Reddy and
all other Congressmen as communal and saffronized because he loved ' Rama’ as
his personal God and he wanted to create a Rama Rajya. They would be provoked to
pseudo-secular anger against what Mahatma Gandhi wrote while in jail and
published in the 'Young India' of 8 February 1923: Reverend Macarish, elected
Head of the Presbyterian Church Synod which recently met at Orillia in Canada
referred to the incidental (I would say fundamental in the Andhra and Indian
context!) commercial advantages of religious missions in the following words:
'Our cry in the country had long been markets, wider markets, and since the
introduction of the Fordney Bill, that cry has been louder and more insistent
than ever. If the farmers and manufacturers desire to create a market, they
would do well to get in touch with foreign Christian Missions, and we are
assured that it would not be long till they received their money back with
liberal interest. Although the missionary went to the foreign fields to win or
harvest souls for Jesus, the results of his labours also meant the extension of
commerce. Trade would follow the banner of the Cross, as readily as it would the
Union Jack, the Stars and Stripes, or any of the other national emblems and
usually it cost a good deal less. In the past the missionaries had been the best
advertisers of heathen countries. Dr John G Paton did more to advertise the
South Sea Island than the sandalwood traders ever did, and who ever did more to
advertise Africa than Rev. Livingston?' In more senses than one, Dr Y Samuel
Rajasekar Reddy of Andhra Pradesh is now acting as the chosen spiritual heir of
Rev Livingston today, under the over-arching protective umbrella of Sonia
Gandhi's benediction!!
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