How to Be Un-Born Again
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2008/novemberweb-only/146-11.0.html

India's biggest radical Hindu group aims to wipe 
out Christianity through reconversions and violence.
Vijay Simha | posted 11/10/2008 10:14AM

Laba Digal, 50, sits mending flat tires of 
bicycles and two-wheelers near the thoroughfare 
in Kasinipada, a village in the district of India 
that saw the most anti-Christian violence this 
fall. Digal says he was a Christian until 
September, when a local head of the radical Hindu 
group Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) came to him twice.

"He told me to become a Hindu. He said if I did 
not, I would lose my home. He said I couldn't 
live in the village as a Christian. I did not 
want problems. So I accepted," Digal says.

Now a Hindu, Digal says he will get a government 
certificate stating that he is a 
<http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2008/february/6.17.html>Dalit. 
Such a certificate will make Digal eligible for 
other affirmative action benefits, such as government jobs reserved for Dalits.

The RSS has been reconverting people like Digal 
to Hinduism ­ usually from Christianity ­ for 
over a decade. Their reconversion campaign is 
called "homecoming." It is well organized and has 
cadres assigned to it almost across the whole of India.

The RSS has groups that use propaganda and groups 
that use violence. The groups entrusted with the 
task of getting the message out in words conduct 
meetings where they denounce the church as evil. 
They follow that up with warnings that Christians 
must reconvert to Hinduism or die. The RSS arm 
entrusted with enforcement follows with attacks.

A 1967 law in Orissa bars religious conversion by 
use of force and by means of inducement or 
allurement. The law says that the head of the 
district administration must permit every 
conversion. The RSS says that despite the law, 
few converts to Christianity in Orissa have 
obtained legal sanction, though the number of 
Christians in the state is rising fast.

On September 25, 2008 Vidyaram Pandey, the head 
of an RSS branch in Uttar Pradesh, made the claim 
that the RSS had reconverted 50,000 Christians so 
far in the state, India's largest. He added that 
the RSS would drive all pastors out of Uttar Pradesh in five years.

Pandey's statement offers insight into the 
timeframe that the RSS has set for its drive 
against Christians in India. The organization was 
founded in 1925 and now has about 30 different 
branches, including the Bharatiya Janata Party, 
India's principal right-wing political party.

Organizations like the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and 
the Bajrang Dal, a collection of young, armed 
radical Hindus, have targeted Christians in the 
states of Orissa, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Delhi, 
Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, and 
Rajasthan. The Bajrang Dal rarely targets the 
rich converts. The poorer Christians are warned 
to reconvert or lose lives and property. To survive, they reconvert.

The RSS may host a reconversion ceremony up to 
every fortnight. A typical reconversion ceremony 
would take about an hour or so. Christians are 
asked to burn their Bibles first in a bonfire. 
They then sit in a circle, light incense sticks, 
and tie red threads to their wrists. The person 
in charge of the reconversion ceremony, usually a 
Brahmin, says a short Hindu prayer.

Then, the Christians rise by turn and take a 
pledge that they have become Hindu, and that 
their dynasties will perish if they become 
Christian again. Each of the 
Christians-turned-Hindus breaks a coconut, and 
Hindus apply vermilion to the reconverts' foreheads.

The leader chants Hindu mantras and the 
participants repeat. In the end, they all kneel 
and place their foreheads on the ground. Weeks 
later, the reconverts will attend a yagya, a 
Hindu ritual where they will wear saffron clothes 
and a sacred thread on their torsos. They will 
get their heads shaved, and drink cow urine and 
the water of tulsi (holy basil).

In their new life, the reconverts will nurture a 
tulsi plant in their homes, have pictures of 
Hindu gods on their walls, and celebrate Hindu 
festivals. They are supposed to pray only to Hindu gods.

Hrudayabasi Dandia, 55, a Bishop based in 
Bhubaneswar, the capital of Orissa state, refers 
to the case of Madhusudan Das, one of Orissa's 
first barristers. Sometime around 1866, "Das 
wanted to continue his education abroad. He 
thought missionary support would help. So he 
converted to Christianity," says Dandia.

Das is a notable figure in the history of Orissa. 
He changed his mind about Christianity after he 
returned from England during the time of the 
British Raj. Das began to oppose conversion to 
Christianity and said he was doing so to protect 
the Jagannath Temple, Orissa's most sacred Hindu 
institution. When Das died in 1934, Hindus and Christians fought for his body.

The "homecoming" campaign has taken an urgent and 
violent turn recently, especially in the 
Kandhamal district of Orissa, which has seen a 
spate of anti-Christian violence. Almost a 
quarter of Kandhamal's population is Christian, 
according to the district magistrate. This is 
nearly three times the percentage of Christians 
across Orissa. The RSS sees this surge as 
evidence of a hostile campaign by the church to 
convert Hindus to Christianity and often 
attributes conversions to Christianity to bids for prosperity.

RSS chief KS Sudarshan used his Vijaya Dashami 
address on October 5, 2008, to lay down the path. 
The Vijaya Dashami address by the RSS chief is an 
annual event, and the most important policy 
guideline in the rightwing fraternity of India.

"The time has come for the awakened Hindu society 
to shed its image of being docile and always 
prone to be bullied and attacked by others. … 
Those who say that "Only our way is the true one 
and all others are false" cannot be a part of 
Hindu society. Those who indulge in 
proselytization by force, allurements and 
inducements have no place in this nation's life," said Sudarshan.

The RSS also takes exception to Christian 
teachings. Forgiveness through Jesus Christ is an 
appealing prospect for the many Dalits who grew 
up hearing tales of Hindu gods' revenge.

The RSS believes that Christian groups in India 
receive huge amounts of foreign money which they 
use to convert Hindus to Christianity. This, 
Sudarshan said, was a strategy to "disintegrate" 
India. The RSS says that since British rule, 
American funding and political support has 
nurtured Christian missionaries in India. To 
them, the church is a reincarnation of the East 
India Company. These accusations are accepted as truth by followers of the RSS.

The RSS also teaches that non-rightwing political 
parties in India follow a policy of appeasement 
towards Christians and that they blame the Hindu 
community­not the Christian community­for communal tension.

The campaign to reconvert Christians to Hinduism 
is part of the overall RSS strategy to convert 
India, a secular nation, into a Hindu nation. The 
events in Orissa are only the beginning.

Vijay Simha is Senior Editor with Tehelka, 
India's leading investigative magazine. He is 
based in New Delhi and reports on politics, 
religion, and policy issues that affect life in India.



<*}}}>< <http://www.holypostage.com/>Holy Postage <*}}}><
<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the Kingdom!<*}}}><

Prayer for Unborn Life:
O GOD OF LIFE AND LOVE, You have given us the 
gift to participate with You to bring new life 
into the world.  But, all too often, the mother's 
womb, which should be a nursery of life, becomes 
instead a place of it's destruction.

Help us to remove this evil and ensure respect 
for all life made in Your image and likeness, 
called to fulfill its promise on this earth,
and destined to find a home with you for all eternity.

We ask this through Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Our God, Our Savior, and Our ALL.
Amen.

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