By Rupa
Subramanya
Is the
Christian community in Delhi under threat now that the Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP) is in power? Many people would like you to think so.
Since December
2014, six specific incidents, all in Delhi, of alleged attacks on churches and,
most recently, on a Christian school have been widely reported and commented
upon by the media, both domestic and foreign.
The burden of
this spate of reportage and commentary is to suggest that the recent attacks
reflect a broader trend of rising intolerance against religious minorities, in
this instance Christians in particular. It’s also suggested that this, in turn,
is a result, either directly or indirectly, of the rise to power of
Narendra Modi and the BJP in May 2014.
PTI
Even US
President Barack Obama chose to pinpoint the issue of religious intolerance in
India in widely publicised speeches, both in India and on his return to the US.
While he made no specific mention of the BJP being responsible, his comments
were widely read as a veiled critique of the Modi government.
While it’s hard
to quantify the impact, the church attacks also figured in the recently
concluded Delhi assembly election which swept the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and Arvind Kejriwal to a landslide victory.
Minority communities, both Muslim and Christian , appear to have heavily favoured the
AAP, and church leaders in the recent past have made no secret of the
fact that their preferred party was indeed AAP. In fact, in the aftermath
of AAP’s victory in the Delhi elections, the Catholic Archbishop Anil Joseph
Thomas Couto celebrated
the BJP’s defeat.
It’s routinely
assumed that Hindu groups support the BJP, which many do. Yet many in the mainstream
establishment refuse to acknowledge the obvious fact that minority religious
groups, both Muslim and Christian, themselves play an overtly political role.
It’s no wonder
then that church leaders, including the same archbishop, have proclaimed there’s
a pattern to these recent alleged attacks.
But do the
facts actually bear out the claims being made? In a word: no.
The first of
these six alleged attacks, the fire that resulted in the burning of St.
Sebastian Church in Dilshad Garden, is currently under investigation by a
Special Investigative Team (SIT) set up by the Home Ministry shortly after the
incident occurred in December.
In a second incident in Jasola it was alleged that a group of
miscreants threw a stone and shattered a window pane. The police commissioner,
as reported here by a news editor and here said it was due to a group of kids playing outside, which
resulted in a stone landing inside the church. There is no evidence as yet of
any communal angle.
The third incident in Rohini, in which the Christmas crib was
charred, was determined by the police to be the result of an electrical short
circuit.
The fourth incident in Vikaspuri, in which a small group of men
allegedly vandalised a church, turned out to be the result of a drunken dare.
What’s more, they were caught on CCTV and arrested shortly thereafter by the
police and have confessed to the crime. Again, there’s no evidence whatsoever
of a communal angle.
The fifth incident in Vasant Kunj, allegedly a case of burglary,
is currently under investigation by the police.
The sixth and most recent incident, in Vasant Vihar, of a burglary
at a Christian school, has been determined by the police and the school itself
to be a case of theft— Rs. 8,000 was reported to have been stolen — again, no
communal angle.
And, according to the Delhi Police themselves, there’s no evidence whatever that these six incidents in Dilshad
Garden, Jasola, Rohini, Vikaspuri, Vasant Kunj and Vasant Vihar are related or
part of a pattern of attacks on minority institutions. Further, again according
to the police themselves, and as noted above, there’s no evidence that communal
sentiment animated any of these attacks.
It’s also
necessary to keep the nature and quantum of these incidents in the proper
perspective.
According to
the Delhi Police’s
own statistics, in 2014 there were 155,654 incidents of crime
in the city, of which there were 10,309 burglaries and 42,634 “other” incidents
of theft, that is not involving motor vehicles or houses. Total crimes reported
almost doubled from 2013 to 2014, reflecting,
according
to the police themselves, more diligent filing of reports by them rather than a
huge jump in the incidence of crime.
Crucially, it’s
not just churches that are periodically vandalised and robbed in India. With
incidents of theft alone, according to the Delhi Police, 206 temples, 30
gurdwaras and three churches (out of some 200 or more churches in Delhi) and 14
mosques were burgled in 2014. And such crimes didn’t mysteriously start to
occur in May 2014 after the BJP’s victory — as with other crimes, they
routinely occur every year in Delhi as the data show.
Despite the facts
pointing in one direction, church leaders and commentators, both in the
domestic and foreign media who
parrot their line,
continue to insist that there’s a
pattern to the incidents, the motivation is communal, and the
BJP or affiliated groups are somehow responsible. An entire narrative of a
rising tide of religious intolerance in India has been crafted, on the back of
unpersuasive evidence, such as these six incidents and misinformation around
the conversion and reconversion
debate
in India.
Even in an open
and shut case like the Vikaspuri incident in which the perpetrators were caught
and confessed to the drunken dare, Archbishop Cuoto maintains in the face of
the evidence that he was dissatisfied with the police explanation, without explaining
how the CCTV footage and the perpetrators’ own confession somehow bears a
different interpretation.
Of course, the
police aren’t infallible, and if church leaders or those who toe their line
have any evidence of a communal angle or the involvement of Hindu groups in any
of these incidents, they’re surely obliged to come forward with whatever facts
they may have to back up their assertions. They haven't done so, which suggests
that their assertions are based on prejudice or a pre-determined agenda, not
facts.
Unfortunately,
the authorities reinforce the erroneous impression that minorities are under
threat when, for example, as reported here they propose to set up special protection for minority
religious institutions in Delhi. As we’ve seen, houses of worship of all faiths
are subject to burglary and vandalism, so why extend this preferential
treatment to only minority institutions? Aren’t temples equally worthy of
protection?
This is where
the Modi government must step up to the plate and improve the messaging.
Reacting passively and with a lag to loud cries that minorities are under
attack only reinforces that narrative of persecution. What is needed is a
positive counter-narrative which stresses that the problem is not crimes
against Christians but the larger problem of law and order, which affects
everyone regardless of religious affiliation.
And all of us
should be asking why exactly are church leaders and their friends in the media
so eager to establish there’s a communal angle to these recent incidents when
the facts say the opposite? What are they hoping to gain?
Church leaders
and their media acolytes have every right to dislike the BJP or Hindu groups if
they so wish. But it’s irresponsible and downright dangerous if they promote
their agenda in the face of the facts.
Rupa Subramanya
is a Mumbai-based economist and commentator. On Twitter @rupasubramanya
Srinivas Thatipelli,
EGL D Block, IBM India Pvt Ltd,
Koramangala-off-Indiranagar road
"Positive response OK… Negative response OK… Zero response NOT OK because it is direct indication of dis-respect"