Why Jharkhand’s anti-conversion bill is against Constitution and not
necessary

Jharkhand’s Religious Freedom Bill, 2017, primarily targets Christians, and
goes against the freedom of religious belief in India’s Constitution

COLUMNS Updated: Sep 12, 2017 18:15 IST
Harsh Mander

PHOTO: Jharkhand chief minister Raghubar Das. Jharkhand will not be the
first government to pass an anti-conversion law if this is voted for by the
state assembly. Anti-conversion laws were passed in Orissa in 1967, in
Madhya Pradesh in 1968, in Gujarat in 2003 and Chhattisgarh in 2006. The
only Congress government to pass such a law was in Himachal Pradesh in 2006
(File Photo)(Manoj Kumar/HT)

It is a difficult time to be a part of the minority community in India
today with threats of various sorts coming from different quarters. But a
new assault on them is the approval by the Jharkhand Cabinet of a stringent
anti-conversion law, titled in characteristic double-speak, as the
Religious Freedom Bill, 2017. It contains stiff jail sentences and fines
for converting people through “allurement” or “coercion”.

A day before this Cabinet decision, residents of Jharkhand awoke to
front-page advertisements with pictures of Mahatma Gandhi, and a toxic
quote attributed to him attacking conversions by Christian missionaries. As
a columnist wrote in an online publication, the words were pulled out of
context and distorted. Gandhi must not be appropriated by an ideology that
is violently opposed to all he stood far: An India with full religious
freedom and equal rights. And it is intensely worrying that taxpayers’
money is used to foment hatred against a segment of people of the state.

Christians constitute a small 4.3% of the population of Jharkhand. The same
tribal family may have adherents of the animist Sarna faith (comprising
nearly 13% of the population), Christians and persons who identify
themselves as Hindus. Left to themselves, tribal families and communities
live with peace with this diversity of faith practices. But the propaganda
of the Right-wing, now backed by the state government, aggravated by the
draconian anti-conversion law, will tear apart these families and
communities.

The proposed anti-conversion law in Jharkhand has fostered enormous
disquiet among Christians everywhere in India. The ultra Right-wing regards
Islam and Christianity to be a “foreign” religion, and therefore requires
its adherents to respect “Hindu” culture and practices. But to advance its
political juggernaut objectives, it has built alliances with Christian
community leaders in some parts of India, such as Kerala and north-eastern
states. However, particularly in large tribal states of central India like
Jharkhand, Odisha and Chhattisgarh, the political strategy of choice has
been to target, defame and intimidate Christians, with violence against
their shrines, priests, nuns and women, and with laws that criminalise
conversions to Christianity.

But it must be stressed that Jharkhand will not be the first government to
pass an anti-conversion law if this is voted for by the state assembly.
Anti-conversion laws were passed in Orissa in 1967 under a Swatantra Party
government; in Madhya Pradesh in 1968 under the Samyukta Vidhayak Dal
coalition (which included the Jan Sangh); and in Gujarat in 2003 and
Chhattisgarh in 2006 under BJP governments. The Jayalalithaa government in
Tamil Nadu passed the law in 2002 but repealed it in two years after its
passage in 2004. The only Congress government to pass such a law was in
Himachal Pradesh in 2006. Rajasthan passed an anti-conversion law in 2006,
but the governor refused to sign the law. Arunachal Pradesh passed such a
law in 1978 under the People’s Party of Arunachal, but it was never
enforced as rules have not been framed to date.

Members of the Constituent Assembly took great care to uphold the freedom
of religious belief in India’s Constitution. After extended debate, it
decided that this freedom should not just be to practise and profess one’s
faith, but also to propagate it. KM Munshi declared that “under freedom of
speech which the Constitution guarantees, it will be open to any religious
community to persuade other people to join their faith”.

However, organisations like the RSS never reconciled to this fundamental
guarantee of the Constitution. They rail against the “menace” of Christian
conversions allegedly funded by big foreign money. It matters little that
the facts don’t bear out their claims. Christians constituted 2.5% of
India’s population in 1981, and 2.3% in 1991, 2001 and 2011. If large-scale
conversions were indeed occurring, their numbers would have swelled. This
sustained misinformation has resulted in profound and sometimes violent
schisms between Christian and other tribal people.

In this divisive competition for the religious allegiance of India’s
poorest and most vulnerable people, marked by stridency and hate, it is
important to recall the gentle counsel of one of the world’s tallest public
figures, the Dalai Lama: “It does not matter which God you worship, or even
if you worship no God. What is important is to be a compassionate human
being”.

Harsh Mander is author, Looking Away: Inequality, Prejudice and
Indifference in New India

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