***Untung berita ini tidak menyangkut pada Islam. kalo tidak, sudah menjadi 
topik panas di milis ini.

***Semua agam tidak mau penganutnya pindah ke agama lain, bedanya Islam 
terang2an, Hindu terang2an, Katolik dan Kristen 3/4 terang2an. Nampaknya 
cuma Buddha yang tidak ambil pusing...

Last Updated: Friday, 4 August 2006, 16:08 GMT 17:08 UK

Christian anger at conversion law
By Faisal Mohammad Ali
BBC News, Central India


Christian groups have reacted strongly to a new law passed by the Indian 
state of Chhattisgarh which requires official approval of any religious 
conversion.

They said they were prepared to take the case to India's Supreme Court.

The General Secretary of the Chhattisgarh Christian Forum, Arun Pannalal, 
said they hoped to persuade the governor to withhold assent.

Mr Pannalal said the law contravened the fundamental rights of a citizen to 
freedom of thought and conscience.

Speaking from Raipur, he told the BBC that Christian groups had employed a 
similar strategy in Rajasthan which led to the governor refusing to give his 
assent to a similar conversion bill.

'Draconian law'

Mr Panalal said: "We will also go to the highest court if necessary to 
challenge this draconian law."

Chhattisgarh's Christian population has remained less than 2% since the 
early 1960s. The bill has been amended to say that "returning to one's 
forefather's religion or his original religion will not be treated as 
conversion".


Religious conversion remains a hot political issue

Many see this as a means to allow the continuance of programmes promoted by 
right-wing Hindu organisations to reconvert Christians to Hinduism.

But Home Minister Ram Vichar Netam speaking in support of the law, said it 
was a common practice to change religion, especially in tribal areas, 
through force, lure or fraudulent means.

He said that because of these enforced conversions, it was necessary to 
amend the anti-conversion law to enable people to return to their original 
religion.

The bill asks for an application, from the person intending to convert and 
also the priest conducting the ceremony, to be put up before the district 
collector a month in advance with details as the date and venue of the 
ceremony.

Plans for sit-ins

The authorities will have the right to reject such an application.

The Christian Forum has announced plans to hold sit-ins and demonstrations 
from Monday to "educate people about the bill which is against the spirit of 
the Indian constitution".

Ravi Baksh, a Christian priest, said the new law had nothing to do with 
protecting Hindu religion but was a political game of Chhattisgarh's ruling 
party to please their masters.

  Since they also have a constituency to satisfy they raise the issue of 
conversion through a sustained misinformation campaign by raising the bogey 
of large scale conversion of Hindus by Christian missionaries

Rajendra Sayal

Anyone violating this clause could be punished with a three-year jail-term 
and a fine or both.

Only a week ago another Indian state, Madhya Pradesh, also passed a similar 
legislation on religious conversion.

'Fascist agenda'

Rajendra Sayal, who has written extensively on religious conversion, called 
the bill "part of the larger fascist agenda of the right-wing Bhartiya 
Janata Party which considers Muslims, Christians and communists to be the 
biggest enemy of the Hindu state".

He said: "Since they also have a constituency to satisfy, they raise the 
issue of conversion through a sustained misinformation campaign by raising 
the bogey of large-scale conversion of Hindus by Christian missionaries."

The issue of conversion, especially to Christianity, has been one of the 
most emotive political issues in central India, and was even before India's 
independence in 1947.

Some princely states, now part of Chhattisgarh, passed anti-conversion laws 
as early as the 1930s.

The Vanvasi Kalyan Asharam was first established in the princely state of 
Jashpur to counter Christian missionary activity and to "awaken tribesmen of 
their true Hindu identity".

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5246328.stm




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