Christian party asserts Dalit rights in Indian elections  debut
("World Watch Monitor," May 12, 2014) 
India’s low-caste citizens are taking a sizable step into politics with a  
newly formed Christian political party and a campaign dedicated to earning 
seats  in a new state assembly. 
The election closed on May 12 for the residents of Seemandhra, a new state  
carved out of India’s southern state of Andhra Pradesh, who initially went 
to  the polls May 7 to elect 25 members to the Indian Parliament, along with 
175  members of the new state assembly. 
Launched in February, ahead of the national election, Sleeva Galilee, one 
of  the founders the Indian Christian Secular Party, noted that the party has 
put up  more than 60 candidates, the majority of them Dalit Christians. 
"With this election, there will be certainly a change in the attitude of  
other political parties towards Dalit Christians. Dalit Christians have been  
long taken for a ride and treated as a vote bank," Galilee told World Watch 
 Monitor. "We want to tell the main political parties that they cannot take 
our  votes for granted any longer." 
Dalit means ‘trampled upon’ and refers to people in low castes who are  
treated as ‘untouchables’ in caste-entrenched India. Dalits are a mixed  
population: living all over the country, speaking a variety of languages and  
practicing numerous religions. 
The Constitution of India bans discrimination based on caste, but prejudice 
 and discrimination toward Dalits is still rampant. The majority of Dalits 
have  menial jobs such as scavenging, and they live segregated from people 
in upper  castes. 
This maltreatment is especially prevalent among Christians as a result of  
federal legislation, enacted in 1950, which enabled discrimination against 
the  group. This law listed Hindu Dalits as Scheduled Caste and made them 
eligible  for free education, set quotas for government jobs and seats in 
legislatures to  improve their status. While the privileges were extended to 
Sikh 
Dalits in 1956  and Buddhist Dalits in 1990, they are still denied to 
Muslim and Christian  Dalits. 
In addition to the 1950 legislation against Muslim and Christian Dalits,  
Hindu nationalists are continuing to implement laws created to dissuade one 
from  converting to another faith. 
According to Open Doors International, a charity that supports Christians 
who  live under pressure because of their faith, "Hindu nationalists, claim 
that  every Indian has to be Hindu, continue to push their ‘Hindutva’ 
ideology through  political parties, such as the BJP, which has strong support 
in 
the media.  ‘Anti-conversion laws’ have been adopted in five states, and 
are frequently used  as a pretext to disrupt church services and harass 
Christians. Pastors are  frequently beaten up or killed, church buildings 
destroyed, and converts forced  to flee their homes. Despite this, the church 
is 
growing, particularly among the  lower castes." 
Establishing a political party may be a powerful idea to help fight this  
inequality, but whether the new Indian Christian Secular Party can 
effectively  carry that idea forward is a separate question, said Rev. Raj 
Bharat 
Patta,  general secretary of Student Christian Movement in India. 
The party "may not have much impact since it has come up all of a sudden 
and  without much ground work," he told World Watch Monitor. 
Franklin Caesar, a Dalit Christian activist, is skeptical of the Indian  
government’s ability to provide justice. His petition seeking a judicial 
remedy  for discrimination of Christian Dalits has been sitting before the 
federal  Supreme Court for 10 years. 
"Each time the [Congress party-led coalition] government was asked to make  
its stand clear on the issue by the [Supreme] Court, the government adopted 
 evasive tactics," Caesar told World Watch Monitor. He also said the 
government  failed to make its stance clear on the issue even after the 
Ranganath 
Misra  commission - appointed by the government during the hearing of his 
case -  confirmed that Dalit Christians suffer the same caste inequalities as 
other  Dalits. 
In addition to discrimination, many Christian Dalits do not make their 
faith  public as it would deprive them of the Scheduled Caste status, shutting 
them out  of government jobs, free education and state scholarship for 
studies. 
"The number of Dalit Christians is much higher than what is projected in 
the  census," said Patta, a pastor of the Andhra Evangelical Lutheran Church. 
Galilee agrees, and said that since the actual number of Christians is much 
 higher than documented, a Christian political party can make an impact in 
the  elections with their nominal presence. 
"We have a strong presence in many areas. Thousands of Christians are 
forced  to hide their Christian identity and remain Hindu in government 
registers," said  Galilee. He added that the number of church-goers is several 
times 
more than the  two percent of Christian population of Andhra Pradesh with 85 
million  people. 
India is ranked No. 28 in the 2014 World Watch List of the 50 countries 
where  it is most difficult to be a Christian. The World Watch List is 
published  annually by Open Doors International.

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