Communalising Kerala
By R Krishnakumar
12 October, 2004
The
Frontline
The political furore
that followed the attack on the members of the Missionaries of Charity
at a Dalit colony in Kozhikode, Kerala, perhaps drowned a significant
statement made by a bewildered victim, Sister Kusumum. "We want
the police to find out who the culprits are, not to seek revenge, but
to understand why they attacked us," she told mediapersons who
visited Sneha Bhavan, the local office of the organisation founded by
Nobel laureate Mother Teresa. Sneha Bhavan provides shelter to over
50 inmates, Hindus, Muslims and Christians, all of them poor, sick or
old.
On September 25,
a small gang of men assaulted two nuns from Sneha Bhavan and the driver
of their vehicle as soon as they reached the `Four-Cent Harijan Colony',
at Mampuzhakkadu near Pantheerankavu in Olavanna panchayat. The gang
accused them of preparing the ground for religious conversion in the
Dalit colony. The nuns were reportedly invited to the colony by a woman
who had been receiving rice and essential provisions as charity from
them for over a year and who wanted some of her neighbours too to get
such help. The assailants told the nuns that they would be burnt alive
if they came to the colony again. Finally, when the women of the colony
formed a cordon around the nuns, the assailants left the scene threatening
that they would wait for the nuns at a nearby location.
The terrified nuns
ran to a house nearby to call the police and to inform their colleagues
at Sneha Bhavan. Then they took refuge in the nearest police station,
at Nallalam. Meanwhile, on hearing the news of the attack, another group
from Sneha Bhavan, including Mother Superior Kusumum, Brother Varghese
and a visiting member of the Missionaries of Charity from Kenya, Brother
Bernard, reached the colony. While they were about to return, a mob,
allegedly raising the slogans `BJP-RSS zindabad' and `Bharat Mata Ki
Jai', surrounded their vehicle. The mob pushed the outnumbered police
personnel aside, smashed the windowpanes of the vehicle and brutally
attacked the group members. The mob threw mud at them, hit them on the
head and neck with iron rods and metal bangles, and tore their clothes.
The group was eventually rescued by the police and admitted to hospital.
Although there were initial indications that the first group of assailants
were from the locality, residents of the colony later said that "outsiders"
carried out the attacks. The nuns also said that the attackers were
"outsiders".
Close on the heels
of the attack on the nuns, on September 29, "unidentified assailants"
broke into the St. Thomas Mar Thoma Church in Thiruvananthapuram city.
The altar, curtains and furniture were damaged when the assailants set
them on fire, which was contained only because a priest detected it
early.
UNLIKE several other
States, Kerala had been relatively free of such attacks. But in January
2003, J.W. Cooper, a bishop in a Pentecostal church based in Ohio, the
United States, became the target of a communal mob in rural Thiruvananthapuram
(Frontline, February 28, 2003). Importantly, the attack came at a time
when the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh-Bharatiya Janata Party-Vishwa Hindu
Parishad combine was launching a fresh offensive on the religious, social,
cultural and political fronts in the State. The incident highlighted
the growing intolerance of the Hindutva forces, but it also put the
spotlight on the activities of a variety of Pentecostal groups and growing
competition among them to win over "human souls" following,
especially, the (continuing) power struggles within prominent Churches
in the State.
Simultaneously,
Kerala also witnessed a large section of the general laity turning to
Christian meditation and charismatic centres and small churches and
Pentecostal initiatives that sprouted in all parts of the State. In
a State where Christians form a substantial section of the population,
the mushrooming of such religious centres and activities was viewed
with apprehension by the RSS, the BJP and the VHP and they used it effectively
to spread their own influence in the name of guarding "faithfuls
in the Hindu fold" and protecting them from the "threat of
missionary activity". Although the Sangh Parivar's target initially
had been the Pentecostal programmes, over the years, charity work and
religious activity by a majority of Christian organisations too fell
under their suspicious eye, especially after, in the words of Sangh
Parivar leaders, "the controversial statement of Pope John Paul
II at the turn of the century calling for religious conversions all
over Asia".
The editorial published
by the BJP's Malayalam daily, Janmabhoomi, two days after the attack
on the nuns is a window to the Sangh Parivar's thinking. Titled "The
Olavanna incident: Let all the facts come out", the editorial says:
"It has become the practice of many Christian Churches today to
indulge in religious activity and forced religious conversions in the
name of charity work. Many would find it difficult to deny that the
main agenda of the Catholic Church and others is forced conversions.
In this context we must also take into consideration the call given
by Pope John Paul II when he visited India a few years ago. He called
for the Christianisation of Asia. On whom does the onus lie to prove
that when the Pope's smiling faithfuls descend on the members of the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes with wheat, clothes and milk powder,
they are not trying to implement the Pope's call? Activities that cast
doubts naturally lead to criticism. Such activities may work well among
illiterate tribal people and others. But it is not surprising if such
activities create suspicion in a colony near Kozhikode city. Maybe it
is this suspicion that led to the tension... "
The attack at Olavanna
is the first such incident against the members of the Missionaries of
Charity anywhere in India. Sangh Parivar leaders have repeatedly denied
any role in the incident but, at the same time, they also used the opportunity
to cast doubts on the charity work initiated by the nuns. The presence
of the Kenyan national, Brother Bernard, in the second group that went
to the colony has come in handy for the critics. The Hindutva organisations
have been trying hard to portray it as a case similar to the Cooper
incident, wherein the U.S. citizen was accused of indulging in "illegal
missionary activity" while he was "overstaying" in the
country after the expiry of his tourist visa. Soon after the attack
on Cooper, even while shrill demands were being made for his arrest,
the State police controversially ordered him to leave the country.
According to the
volunteers of the Missionaries of Charity, Brother Bernard was on a
brief visit to Kerala and he had a valid visa that permitted him to
stay in the country for one year and undergo training with the organisation.
His presence at the colony on September 25 was accidental, according
to them, though he reportedly registered himself with the State police
only after the incident occurred, a slip, perhaps, that has now come
in handy for his tormentors.
WITH hardly a few
months to go before the elections to the local bodies in the State,
the ruling United Democratic Front (UDF), troubled as it was by factional
wars in the State unit of the Congress and the serious differences with
the minority communities that its previous Chief Minister A.K. Antony
ran into, had barely managed to start afresh on a "clean slate"
under the new Chief Minister Oommen Chandy and his team of Ministers.
The Opposition Left
Democratic Front termed the attack as the handiwork of the Sangh Parivar.
It also alleged that it proved the failure of the State police under
Oommen Chandy. The Dalit colony is generally considered a pro-Communist
Party of India (Marxist) area coming under the LDF-ruled Olavanna panchayat.
Of late, however, the RSS had intensified its activity in the locality,
the latest instance being a mega Hindu ritual held near the colony a
few days before the attack occurred. The Sangh Parivar had since then
claimed that its "growing influence" had rattled its opponents,
both political and religious, and that the first group of attackers
included "those from a local club" (known to be run by CPI(M)
supporters).
Although Chief Minister
Oommen Chandy announced that the police had identified 13 of the assailants,
only one person has been arrested so far. Chandy refused to divulge
the political affiliation of the assailants or to give further information
on the inquiry "prematurely". However, his political compulsions
became clear when he sought to use the event to score points with the
Opposition at a media conference in Thiruvananthapuram on September
29, soon after his high-visibility visit to the colony and meeting with
the victims of the attack.
He said that along
with the combined police-Crime Branch inquiry into the attack, the government
had decided to conduct a detailed inquiry by a senior Indian Administrative
Service (IAS) officer into the "circumstances that led to the nuns'
visit to the colony". This, he added, was "the extreme and
continuing poverty in the colony", which had "no reliable
water or power supply or even a pucca road link" with the rest
of the panchayat. He also said pointedly that "Olavanna panchayat
had for long been a CPI(M)-ruled panchayat" and that "the
panchayat member from the particular area had been elected on the CPI(M)
ticket". The IAS officer was asked to inquire why "even after
several years under the decentralised local body system in the State
and people's planning initiatives, a [CPI-M] panchayat like Olavanna,
showcased for its grassroots development achievements, had failed the
people of the Dalit colony, though mechanisms like the grama sabhas
were still supposed to be working well within the panchayat system".
The inquiry report would help the government find out "what had
gone wrong with the decentralisation experiment in Kerala" (launched
by the previous LDF government) and take "corrective measures"
elsewhere in the State, the Chief Minister said.
Oommen Chandy also
announced a list of relief measures for the households in the colony,
including free ration for a month, pucca houses and jobs for women under
the Kudumbashree (poverty eradication) Mission. With barely a few months
to go for the panchayat elactions, the attack has, obviously, come in
handy for the ruling UDF.