INDIA  Young Catholic Buried Alive In Anti-Christian Violence In Orissa
September 11, 2008  
BHUBANESWAR, India (UCAN) -- As the anti-Christian pogrom in Orissa ebbs, 
survivors recount narrow escapes as well as atrocities they witnessed.
Anti-Christian violence swept through the eastern Indian state after Swami 
Laxmananda Saraswati, an 85-year-old Hindu religious leader, and four 
associates were killed on Aug. 23 in the state's Kandhamal district. Maoists 
claimed responsibility, but Hindu extremists blame Christians.
About 50,000 Christians hid in forests as Hindu radical mobs burned their 
houses and Church buildings, such as churches, presbyteries and convents. The 
violence claimed at least 27 lives, mostly Christians, and wounded hundreds 
including pastors and nuns.
One of the Catholics killed in the violence was Rajesh Digal. His 
brother-in-law, Kamal Digal, narrated how a mob buried Rajesh alive. Kamal, 
also a Catholic, spoke with UCA News on Sept. 9 over the phone from an 
undisclosed location in Kandhamal district.
Rajesh, 27, and a Hindu friend, Tunguru Mallick, worked in Chennai, a southern 
Indian city. The two came back to Orissa for holidays and arrived at G. 
Udayagiri, a small town, on Aug. 24, not realizing Hindu groups had called for 
a statewide strike that day to protest Swami Saraswati's murder.
The town 220 kilometers west of Bhubaneswar, the state capital, is in 
Kandhamal. Bhubaneswar lies 1,745 kilometers southeast of New Delhi.
As no transport was available, Rajesh and Tunguru decided to walk to Bataguda, 
their native village, about 60 kilometers further west from G. Udayagiri. 
However, a mob accosted the duo when they reached Paburia, about 12 kilometers 
into their journey, and demanded they identify themselves. As the two tried to 
talk, someone pulled a bible from Rajesh's bag.
The mob then began beating Rajesh, who fell down to the ground. While some 
continued to beat him, others dug a pit in a nearby field. As they dragged 
Rajesh toward it, he asked the attackers why they were burying him when he was 
still alive. They retorted, "Call your Jesus. He will save you." They then tied 
Rajesh, dumped him into the pit and covered it with mud.
Kamal said Tunguru, who watched the entire incident, recounted it all to him.
The extremists then turned to Tunguru, who kept insisting he was a Hindu. 
Nonetheless, they condemned him for befriending Christians, then poured 
kerosene on him and set him on fire. Tunguru fled to a nearby village where 
people helped douse the fire. According to Kamal, Tunguru suffered severe burns 
on his body.
Kamal said Rajesh's two younger sisters and an aged mother now live in a relief 
camp. Nobody has filed a police case over Rajesh's death, he added.
END

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