MORE MARTYRS: A CARMELITE PRIEST IS MASSACRED IN ANDHRA PRADESH

by Nirmala Carvalho

38 year old Fr. Thomas Pandippallyil, was assassinate don the night of
August 16th on his way to a village to celebrate Sunday mass. His body
showed signs of torture, with wounds to his face, his hands and legs
broken and his eyes pulled from their sockets. The bishop of Hyderabad
denounces the growing climate of "violence against Catholics" in the
country.

August 18, 2008

New Delhi (AsiaNews) - "Father Thomas is a martyr: he sacrificed his
life for the poor and marginalised. But he did not die in vain,
because his body and his blood enrich the Church in India,
particularly the Church in Andhra Pradesh". Those are the words of
Msgr. Marampudi Joji, archbishop of Hyderabad and secretary of the
bishops' conference of Andhra Pradesh (a state in South East India),
commenting the barbarous killing of the Carmelite priest Thomas
Pandippallyil, 38, assassinated on the night of August 16th in
Mosalikunta, on the road between Lingampet and Yellareddy, 90 km from
the regional capital.

On the night of August 16th his body was found on the roadside by a
group of people, not far from the village of Balampilly; the body of
the Carmelite of Mary Immaculate carried wounds to the face while the
hands and legs had been crushed and the eyes gouged out. His
motorbike was found one kilometre on from the body. According to
witnesses, Saturday afternoon Fr. Thomas celebrated mass in Burgida,
before setting out for another village in the district where he was to
have celebrated Sunday mass. The last people to have seen him alive
were religious sisters from Lingapetta convent, where the priest had
stopped for supper before continuing his journey.

"P. Thomas is a martyr - said Msgr. Marampudi, archbishop of
Hyderabad, on hearing of the brutal murder. The Indian Church is
shocked and deeply saddened by this barbarous killing, the result of a
growing climate of intolerance and violence against Christians in this
country". The prelate immediately made his way to the area where the
massacre took place and speaks of a "traumatized" Christian community.
He forcefully denies accusations of "proselytism and forced
conversions". Given that there are "five families of Catholic faith"
in the parish where Fr. Thomas was murdered.

Msgr. Marampudi Joji maintains the crime is the result of a climate of
"jealousy of the Catholic Church", whose only fault is that of trying
to help develop the abandoned rural areas of the country and support
and aid those who are "victims of violence and oppression". "Priests
and nuns - continues the archbishop of Hyderabad - have for decades
been at the service of the least fortunate in India, and this makes
them targets of forces of evil who do not want the marginalized and
impoverished to become empowered".

The remains of Fr. Thomas Pandippallyil will be laid to rest on
Wednesday in the Carmelite provincial house in Balampilly: the priest
was actively involved in educational field. He joined the Chanda
mission of the CMI on 24th June 1987. He was ordained a priest in
2002. He was the rector for the Chanda mission province of the CMI,
and also worked as hospital administrator, school manager and mission
centre director.

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