CARRYING DALIT CHRISTIANS鐃緒申 CROSS?

By P.N.BENJAMIN

鐃緒申

TO corrupt George Orwell's famous aphorism: "all Indian Christians are

equal, but some are more equal than others". By embracing Christianity,

theDalits have not found themselves emancipated from economic and social

inequalities. Conversions have neither offered the Dalits a way of escape

from the bondage of caste nor have they fostered the social

transformationof the Dalit Christians. They still live under the same 
conditions of

discrimination, exploitation and oppression.

By embracing Christianity the Dalits have not found themselves

Emancipated from economic and social inequities. On the other hand they even 
find

themselves to be victims of double discrimination in their new religion.

The Church has sinned more than others in perpetuating social injustices

against Dalit Christians. Casteism is rampant in the Church. Caste

discrimination takes many forms among Indian Christians In rural areas

they cannot own or rent houses, however well-placed they may be. Separate

places are marked out for them in the parish churches and burial grounds.

Inter-caste marriages are frowned upon and caste tags are still appended to the 
Christian names of high caste people. Casteism is rampant among the

clergy and the religious. For example, it is known that less than 4 per

cent of the Catholic parishes are entrusted to Dalit priests in South

India itself..

Charity begins at home. But, the home (Church) where it begins, the

Dalits Christians do not belong. According to a study, all the landed properties

of churches in India put together, the church is the second biggest

landlord in the country, next only to the Government. In addition, the

Church institutions and Church or Christians-led NGOs receive foreign

financial support amounting to over Rs. 2500 crores per year. There is no

transparency with regard to these funds as well the massive income

accruing from the elite schools, colleges and hospitals and also shopping

complexes built all over the major cities in the country. The poor Dalit 
Christian

does not even get the crumbs, leave alone participation in Church

matters.

The Indian Church leaders - be it Catholic, Protestant or the

'born-agains'- have miserably failed to take care of the 20-million

Dalits converted to Christianity. Besides, indiscriminate conversions have

ruined the spirit of Christianity into savagery. Christianity is a path paved

with suffering and service. Christ said: "If any one wants to follow me, let

him take up the Cross and follow me." But, the Indian Church leaders want

the Government to carry the Cross of Dalit Christians.

Indian Church leaders have "tamed the 20 million Dalit Christians

and reduced them to eternal slaves of organised Church bodies. On the one

hand, the Church demands reservation for Dalit Christians from the government

while on the other, it opposes and refuses to provide them reservation in

the Church structure."

Thus, the Church's call for re-distribution of national resources in

favour of Dalit Christians will be heeded only when its own resources are

re-allocated and used with a clear partiality for Dalits in its own fold.

The Church's fearless stand for justice will no longer let it remain

silent about the discrimination within the Church - a matter of shame to its

members and an embarrassment to its friends.

Time has come for Dalit Christians to refuse to be used as cannon fodder

or pawns in the hands of their so-called enlightened leaders who have grown

fat and powerful and enjoy better standards of living and greater

prestige than the poor and ordinary Dalit Christians. The eyes of these Dalit

Christian warriors are turned westward even more than during the Pax

Britannica, and they draw their inspiration not so much from the poverty,

inequality and indignities faced by the Dalit Christians within the

Church but from the next seminar in Geneva or other western capitals. There is a

vested interest in keeping the Dalit Christians as they are in the

Church.They shall always be with us so that their leaders can have a jolly good

time sermonizing on the plight of these unfortunate ones!

Dalit Christians, comprising almost 80% of the Indian Christian

population, should stand united and fight for their rights in the Church until 
they

are equals in the Christian fraternity first before seeking equal treatment

from the government. It would be futile to expect others to give them

support with a real change of heart. This goal can be achieved by

following intelligently Ambedkar's exhortation: "educate, organize and agitate.

Lastly, Dalit Christians' plight calls for a deeper analysis of the

problem so that Christian leaders do not throw stones at the caste system

prevailing in Hinduism or the Hindutva Brigade but look to something more

meaningful and constructive.

P.N.BENJAMIN

Coordinator,

Bangalore Initiative for Religious Dialogue(BIRD)

e-mail: [email protected]

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