The article refered by Dr. Barad.
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/conversations-with-foreignfunded-charity/372252/

Conversations with foreign-funded charity
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Sudheendra Kulkarni
Posted: Oct 12, 2008 at 0041 hrs IST

Has the time come for the Government to set up a National Commission to 
investigate religious conversions in India? Certainly. Let the Nation know how 
many conversions have taken place from—and into—Hinduism, Islam, Christianity, 
Sikhism and other faiths since 1947. Let the commission throw light on the 
districts where, and how, significant changes in religious demography have 
taken place, and whether conversions have created resentment and social 
disharmony in their wake. 


An unbiased commission would reveal three irrefutable facts: (1) Christianity 
accounts for the largest number of 

converts; (2) Christian organisations conduct service activities—schools, 
hospitals, poverty-alleviation programmes, relief during calamities, etc.—with 
exemplary dedication and professionalism. However, some of them, though not 
all, make the conversion agenda a part of their seva agenda; (3) Foreign funds 
supporting these charitable activities have greatly aided conversions. 

Take, for example, the following information, pertaining to the Foreign 
Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA), available on the website of the Union 
Home Ministry. During 2005-06, Rs 7,877 crore was received by way of foreign 
donations to various NGOs, up from Rs 5,105 crore in 2003-04. Tamil Nadu (Rs 
1,610 crore) and Andhra Pradesh (Rs 1,011 crore) were among the highest 
recipients. The highest foreign donors were Gospel Fellowship Trust USA (Rs 229 
crore), Gospel for Asia (Rs 137 crore), Foundation Vincent E Ferrer, Spain (Rs 
104.23 crores) and Christian Aid, UK (Rs 80.16 crores). The largest recipients 
were World Vision (Rs 256 crore), Caritas India (Rs 193 crore), Rural 
Development Trust Andhra Pradesh (Rs 127 crore), Churches Auxiliary for Social 
Action (Rs. 95.88 crores) and Gospel For Asia (Rs. 58.29 crore). The funds 
received by some of these organisations have trebled or quadrupled in just 
three years since the formation of the UPA Government. 

If the official Christian population in India is barely 3 per cent, why do 
Christian NGOs receive the largest share of foreign funds? From Christian 
organisations that are known to support evangelism in many Asian countries? 


In my travels in Karnataka, my home state, I have seen significant conversions 
to Christianity having taken place in recent years wherever World Vision and 
other foreign-funded NGOs started their charitable activities. Kannada 
newspapers in the past few weeks have carried graphic accounts of how 
proselytisation is packaged with charity, especially targeting vulnerable 
sections of society. There is resentment in Assam against World Vision’s 
flood-relief operations in Majuli, a large island in the Brahmaputra and a 
sacred seat of the Vaishnava monastery of Sankara Deva, the great reformist 
saint.

Tripura is one of the Indian states where, as the CPI(M) Chief Minister Manik 
Sarkar has himself acknowledged, the foreign-funded Baptist church supports 
subversive activities, including the conversion of tribals. The church-backed 
separatist outfit, National Liberation Front of Tripura (NLFT), gunned down 16 
Hindus at a marketplace in West Tripura district on January 13, 2002, on the 
eve of Makar Sankranti, an incident that went largely uncommented by the 
national media. 


The Internet has many reports about Buddhist resentment against World Vision 
and other evangelical bodies operating in Mongolia, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, 
Thailand, Myanmar and even Tibet, “using unethical methods, under the guise of 
being charitable organisations, to buy converts in Asia”. The Australian, a 
leading newspaper of Australia, reported on December 24, 2005: “Tensions 
between Muslims and Western aid workers have begun to erupt in Aceh as the 
tsunami-devastated Indonesian province (where 170,000 people died) slowly 
recovers. Islamic activists have claimed that aid workers are secretly 
attempting to convert Muslims to Christianity, pointing particularly to World 
Vision, the International Catholic Mission and Church World Service.” 

Lt Col A.S. Amarasekera, a Sri Lankan Buddhist activist, has expressed the 
following fear: “While everyone is focusing their minds on the LTTE problem, we 
Sinhalese Buddhists are pitted against another force as dangerous: the dangers 
that the Sinhalese Buddhist way of life will have to face due to conversions in 
the near future. What happened in South Korea, where the 80 per cent Buddhist 
population was reduced to 18 per cent in five decades, will be repeated here¿ 
It (is) proved beyond reasonable doubt that World Vision, an American-funded 
Christian evangelical organisation, was surreptitiously trying to convert 
Sinhalese Buddhists into Christianity.” 


The recent attacks on churches in Orissa and elsewhere have been justifiably 
condemned by all patriotic individuals. However, as I stated in my column last 
week, a distinction must be made between a violent campaign against our 
Christian brethren and a non-violent, democratic campaign against organised 
conversions using foreign funds. I happened to participate in a remarkable 
inter-religion conference on conversions organised by the Vatican in 
collaboration with the World Council of Churches, Geneva, a Protestant body, in 
Lariano (Italy) in May 2006. Let me mention here some of the recommendations in 
a report unanimously adopted by the conference. 

• “While everyone has a right to invite others to an understanding of their 
faith, it should not be exercised by violating other’s rights and religious 
sensibilities. At the same time, all should heal themselves from the obsession 
of converting others.”

• “Freedom of religion enjoins upon all of us the equally non-negotiable 
responsibility to respect faiths other than our own, and never to denigrate, 
vilify or misrepresent them for the purpose of affirming superiority of our 
faith.” 


• “Errors have been perpetrated and injustice committed by the adherents of 
every faith. Therefore, it is incumbent on every community to conduct honest 
self-critical examination of its historical conduct as well as its 
doctrinal/theological precepts. Such self-criticism and repentance should lead 
to necessary reforms inter alia on the issue of conversion.” 

• “A particular reform that we would commend to practitioners and 
establishments of all faiths is to ensure that conversion by ‘unethical’ means 
are discouraged and rejected by one and all. There should be transparency in 
the practice of inviting others to one’s faith.” 

• “While deeply appreciating humanitarian work by faith communities, we feel 
that it should be conducted without any ulterior motives. In the area of 
humanitarian service in times of need, what we can do together, we should not 
do separately.” 

• “No faith organisation should take advantage of vulnerable sections of 
society, such as children and the disabled.” 


• “We see the need for and usefulness of a continuing exercise to collectively 
evolve a ‘code of conduct’ on conversion, which all faiths should follow.” 

Why shouldn’t there be a sustained and sincere all-religion debate in India on 
an anti-conversion law in the spirit of the above recommendations? 

Write to: [email protected]

Shrikant Vinayak Barve



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