Recent reports of Christian missionaries
reaping a harvest of over ten thousand Muslim converts in Kashmir, and
of American Christian organizations following close on the heels of US
forces in southern Iraq, spreading their faith while at the same time appearing
to be distributing relief to the hapless victims of American terror, point
to the continued vexed issue of Christian missionary work among Muslim
peoples.
If you thought that aggressive Christian
proselytisation was a thing of the West’s colonial past, then think again.
Today, the devout, practicing Christian might be a near extinct species
in the West, which, for all practical purposes, is now a post-Christian
society. But all over the so-called ‘Third World’ scores of Christian fundamentalist
evangelist groups, liberally funded by Western donors, are actively engaged
in what they see as a spiritual crusade against the Devil and his minions,
by which they mean all non-Christian faiths and their adherents. Convinced
that Jesus (sws) alone is the way to salvation, they represent the contemporary
face of the historical nexus between establishment Christianity and European
imperialism.
For fundamentalist Christian evangelists,
the Muslim world represents the single most impermeable frontier, a major
stumbling block in their ambitious plans of global hegemony. For centuries,
Christian missionaries have sought to work among Muslims to win them to
their faith, but have registered little success. Yet, even today, numerous
Christian organizations, Catholic as well as Protestant, are actively engaged
in missionary work among Muslim peoples, although under various guises.
Recent developments in Christian theology
indicate a deliberate effort to fashion new ways of presenting the faith
before non-Christians in order to make it more appealing and less culturally
alienating. Conscious of its association with European colonialism, which
sharply limited its appeal in post-colonial societies in Africa and Asia,
the Church has sought to revise the external trappings of its theology
and the forms in which it is expressed—what is fashionably called ‘inculturation’
in Christian theological parlance. Thus, for instance, in several churches
in South India, Mary is decked up in a sari and Jesus (sws) draped in a
dhoti; Church services sometimes begin with Vedic verses and Catholic
sadhus dress like Hindu mendicants and train in yogic disciplines.
In some Muslim countries, Christian missionaries dress like Muslim Sufis,
‘go native’ and adopt the local culture, and even use verses from the Qur’an
in their prayers. In Delhi, a Christian group has set up a Christian
qawwali team, which sings Christian hymns in traditional Sufi style. Another
group of missionaries are said to have started an ‘Isa’i Tablighi Jama‘at’,
using the same practices and methods as their Muslim counterpart. A Protestant
group is said to operate the ‘Madrasatu’l-Masih’ in Bangalore, where
Urdu and the Bible are taught to Muslim children from destitute families.
On a visit to Kashmir, some years ago, I came across a church shaped like
a mosque, with a board outside announcing ‘Baytu’l-Masih’, a clearly
deliberate effort to be more acceptable and inviting for the locals. I
could cite several more examples, but the point is clear: advocates of
inculturation hope to be able to give Christianity a new look, making it
seem somehow more familiar, less alien and, therefore, less difficult for
a potential convert to take the momentous decision to adopt it.
Another related development in recent
Christian thinking and praxis is the active involvement of Christian priests
and laity in inter-religious dialogue work. Unsuspecting non-Christians
might see this as a generous ecumenism and a major departure from the Church’s
traditional hostility towards other religions. Yet, as even a cursory examination
of the statements and encyclicals issued by the Church authorities reveals,
inter-faith dialogue is regarded by the Church as primarily a tool for
its evangelistic task. It is recognized that only by establishing friendly
relations with people of other faiths and knowing about their religions
can one present before them the Christian message. Hence, the inseparable
link between Christian dialogue and mission. As the Patna Declaration of
the All-India Consultation on Evangelization declared: ‘Far from lessening
evangelical zeal, it [dialogue] makes the task of evangelization more inspiring
and meaningful’. It went on to stress the need for dialogue with Muslims
in India, but in the same breath appealed for ‘an adequate number of evangelical
workers’ to preach Christianity to them (quoted in ‘The New Leader’, October,
1973). Echoing the same view were a group of missionaries working among
Muslims in various Arab countries attending the ‘Conference on Literature,
Correspondence Courses and Broadcasting in the Arab World’, all of which
aimed at ‘Communicating the Gospel to the Muslim’ in Beirut in 1969. They
appealed for the need for building bridges between Muslims and Christians
through inter-faith dialogue, for only in that way, they insisted, could
the Muslims be brought closer to Christianity, or at least be encouraged
to give its missionary advocates a patient listening.
Catholic clergy often point to the
Second Vatican Council (1962-65) as ‘proof’ that the Church has finally
renounced its imperialistic claims over other faiths and their adherents
and has ushered in a new dawn of peaceful inter-religious relations. Yet,
as Sebastian Kim argues in his recent book ‘In Search of Identity: Debates
in Religious Conversion in India’ (Oxford University Press, New Delhi,
2003), Vatican II’s stand on people of other religious communities was
‘ambiguous’. In fact, Kim tells us, the much-touted Vatican II reaffirmed
the traditional doctrine that ‘it is through Christ’s Catholic Church alone,
which is the universal help towards salvation, that the fullness of the
means of salvation can be obtained’. Hence, Vatican II insisted, everyone
‘ought to be converted to Christ’.
Despite the increasingly loud rhetoric
of disinterested dialogue emanating from the managers of the Church, the
missionary enterprise still retains the central task of the Church. Some
years ago, a group of what are called Catholic charismatics launched the
global ‘Evangelization 2000’ project, in order to mobilize Christians to
Christianize all humanity by the year 2000, this being said to be ‘the
best birthday gift for Jesus’. In a similar vein, the Vatican’s official
encyclical ‘Redemptoris Mission’, issued in 1990, called in no uncertain
terms for conversions, stressing the ‘urgency of missionary activity’ as
the millennium drew near. It lay down that it was the ‘supreme duty’ of
all Christians to ‘proclaim Christ to all people’, on the alleged grounds
that ‘Christ is the one savior of all, the only one able to reveal God
and lead to God’. It reiterated the traditional Catholic imperialistic
claim that ‘salvation can only come from Jesus Christ’, because ‘in him,
and only in him, are we set free from all alienation and doubt, from slavery
to the power of sin and death’.
As the millennium drew closer, Christian
missionaries began making frantic efforts to spread what they see as the
‘Good News’, hoping and praying for an abundant flood of converts. However,
Asia, with its overwhelmingly Muslim, Hindu and Buddhist population, was
seen as a major stumbling block to Christianity’s global sway. Hence, it
emerged as a particularly important target for various missionary outfits.
None less than the Pope himself is said to have blessed the venture when
in his statement titled ‘Ecclesia in Asia’ he declared ‘…just as in the
first millennium the Cross was planted on the soul of Europe, and in the
second on that of the Americas and Africa, we can pray that in the third
Christian millennium a great harvest of faith will be reaped in this vast
and vital continent [Asia]’. In the same statement he stressed that Catholic
evangelical work was an ‘absolute priority’, because Christ, he declared,
‘is the one Mediator between God and Man, and the sole Redeemer of the
World’. This clearly suggested to the perspicacious that the Church’s commitment
to genuine, disinterested inter-faith dialogue was itself seriously questionable,
to say the least. Those who concluded that ‘dialogue’ was simply yet another
clever missionary tactic were not widely off the mark, for as the Pope
went on to add, although the Church respected what it saw as good in other
faiths, the values that they contain ‘await their fulfillment in Jesus
Christ’. Hence, he insisted, while the Church should not stay away from
dialogue with other faiths, it must remain faithful to its missionary mandate
of ‘the proclamation of Jesus Christ, true God and true Man, the one and
only Savior for all peoples’.
Although both the Catholic Church
and the various Protestant denominations share the same missionary agenda—of
preaching Christianity to the ends of the world—they differ in matters
of methods and strategies. Generally, the Catholics appear to be more accommodative
towards other faiths, this itself being a marked departure from past precedent.
On the other hand, several Protestant fundamentalist groups, many of them
based in the United States, unabashedly denigrate other faiths as Satanic,
and see themselves as leading God’s army against the forces of devilish
falsehood that other faiths are said to represent.
Such Protestant groups are active
in India as well as in several Muslim countries. Some of them specialize
in missionary work among Muslim peoples, and have established a wide network
of missionaries specially trained for this difficult task. They have also
developed an extensive corpus of missionary literature, calculated to denigrate
Islam and to proclaim the superiority of their own version of Christianity.
One such organization is the Austria-based ‘Light of Life’ Society, which
has produced a number of books, mostly penned by a certain ‘Abdu’l-Masih,
aiming to ‘prove’ that the Prophet Muhammad (sws) was an imposter who invented
a violent religion to serve his own lust. Its books, which are easily available
at Christian evangelical bookstores in India, are replete with the worst
sorts of clichéd orientalist barbs about Islam. ‘Abdu’l-Masih,
for one, is confident that, along with all other non-Christians, Muslims
labor under terrible ‘spiritual bondage’, and are destined to hell if they
do not accept ‘Jesus as God’. He condemns Islam as an ‘anti-Christian’
force, going to the extent of claiming that ‘the spirit of Islam unmasks
itself in the fact that it legalizes lying’. As for the Prophet (sws),
he spares no effort to depict him in the most lurid terms possible. ‘Mohammad
ordered a violent and murderous type of mission’, he claims (‘Abdu’l-Masih,
‘The Main Challenges for Committed Christians in Serving Muslims’, Life
of Life, Villach, Austria, 1996). In another book, ‘Abdu’l-Masih cautions
that Muslims are allegedly plotting to set up a global Islamic empire that
would spell doom for Christianity. Hence, Christian missionaries must double
up their efforts to bring Muslims into the Christian fold before it is
too late (‘Abdu’l-Masih, ‘Is An Islamic World Empire Imminent?,
Light of Life, 1994). A similar appeal is issued by the Chennai-based Bible
League, which repeats some of ‘Abdu’l-Masih’s accusations against
Islam (‘Islam is a religion based in self-righteousness’; ‘The only sure
way to Paradise is to die as a martyr during an Islamic holy war, jihad’;
Allah ‘judges according to His will rather than on justice’, etc..). Because
it is convinced that its version of Christianity alone is the truth, it
appeals for the setting up of a church in every ‘unreached people group’
(a more ‘politically correct’ equivalent for the once fashionable term
‘benighted heathen’). The League has prepared a detailed list of such Muslim
(and Hindu) groups in India, complete with population tables, population
distribution patterns, caste and ethnic divisions. It hopes to see mission
stations set up in each group, so that the group as a whole, rather than
scattered individuals, goes over to Christianity (Tony Hilton, ‘Muslims
in India’, People India, Bible League, Chennai, 1999).
This is not, of course, to paint all
Christian groups working among Muslims with the same brush, for among them
are some which might genuinely have no hidden agenda of any sort. Every
religious community does, of course, have the right to preach and propagate
its own faith, and this is as it indeed should be. My point, and the burden
of this article, is that all missionary activities must be regulated by
a set of ethical principles that all groups abide by and which can be enforced
by the law. In no case should monetary incentives be offered as a price
for conversion, which actually seems to have been the situation in the
case of several conversions to Christianity in Kashmir, for instance. The
temptation to denigrate other faiths by attributing to them aspects that
its own followers would refuse to recognize must also be constantly guarded
against. Let the followers of all faiths bloom, to paraphrase Mao, but
let this be done in a spirit of mutual respect.
Recent newspaper reports speak of
alarmingly large-scale conversions to Christianity among impoverished Muslims
in the Kashmir valley. According to an investigative story published in
the ‘Indian Express’ early this April, some 10,000 Kashmiri Muslims are
said to have converted to Christianity in the last ten years, a period
in which the valley has witnessed unrelenting violence and destruction.
The report suggests that ultra-conservative Protestant Christian evangelist
groups, many of them generously funded by wealthy American and Western
European Christian foundations, have been actively working in the region
in recent years. Providing money, jobs and other much sought-after services,
these groups have been able, so it seems, to make a large and growing number
of converts in the valley.
Christianity is not new to Kashmir,
but the Christian population in the region has always remained miniscule
despite the existence of Christian institutions in some towns such as Srinagar
and Baramulla for several decades now. These institutions, run mostly by
Catholic groups, have stayed away from overt missionary activities, preferring
to focus instead on educational provision, albeit on a limited scale. The
emergence of Western-funded Protestant Christian missionary groups in Kashmir
is a relatively recent development, a direct outcome of the ongoing turmoil
in the region. As in neighboring Afghanistan, Protestant evangelist groups,
taking advantage of the mass misery caused by the ravages of years of civil
war, have entered Kashmir in a major way, providing badly needed services
and funds as a means for winning converts. That this should have happened
is hardly surprising given the ambitious missionary agenda of American
and European Protestant evangelist groups, who see themselves as engaged
in a global crusade to spread their faith and combat other religions, which
they regard as representing unrelenting darkness and evil.
While recognizing the freedom of all
people to preach and propagate their faith, the large-scale intrusion of
Protestant evangelists in politically sensitive Kashmir raises several
serious questions. To begin with, as the current debate on religious conversions
in India has forced us to accept, the freedom to preach one’s faith cannot
be regarded as absolute, that is to say in the exercise of this right missionary
groups must abide by a set of accepted ethical guidelines and norms.
To take advantage of a people’s haplessness, poverty and misery, offering
material inducements and promises of further reward in exchange for changing
one’s religious affiliation is not just completely unethical, but, even
worse, a gross affront to any true spirituality. One would have had no
problem with religious groups providing material services to the needy
out of a spirit of genuine concern and sympathy, but if these are simply
a clever ruse to reap a rich harvest of converts it makes a complete mockery
of all protestations of charity. This suggests that such groups are in
fact hardly concerned about the plight of the people whom they claim to
serve. Unfortunately, for many Protestant evangelist groups providing social
services is considered simply a tool for pursuing the hidden agenda of
proselytisation. Sasanka Perera, in his study ‘New Evangelical Movements
and Conflict in South Asia’ [Colombo, 1998] raises the interesting question
of whether Protestant fundamentalist groups would still continue the façade
of serving the poor if conversions were made illegal, and suggests that
‘it seems to me as quite unlikely that evangelical organizations would
be willing to operate in such conditions’.
Another crucial issue that must be
raised in this regard is the possible political implications of the activities
of fundamentalist Protestant groups in Kashmir. Numerous scholars who have
studied such movements in other parts of the world have pointed to the
complex political linkages between such groups and their financers, themselves
often major political actors based in America and Europe. Typically, such
groups stand for and promote an extremely regressive, ultra-conservative
and fiercely pro-American political agenda. Some Protestant missionary
outfits are even said to have been liberally funded by the CIA in order
to undermine political forces that are seen as inimical to American interests.
In today’s America, the right-wing Protestant fundamentalist camp is closely
linked to the Republican Party, both sharing a common commitment to global
American supremacy, this being construed as representing the ultimate in
Christian civilization. For the American establishment such missionary
groups serve as a powerful means to advance its global interests. As Christopher
Soper comments in his survey of Protestant fundamentalist groups based
in America, such groups are often readily willing to use the vast financial
resources that they have at their disposal for ‘political purposes’ [‘Evangelical
Christianity in the United States and Britain’, London, 1994]. As Sasanka
Perera warns us, ‘the extensive networks of cooperation and contact between
the Republican Party and evangelical movement in the United States are
such that one could even pose the question of whether the Republicans constitute
a wing of the collective evangelical movement in the United States’. This
political clout the evangelists enjoy in the United States, Perera adds,
‘translates into the ability […] to operate from a position of power’.
To the grave political implications
of aggressive missionary organizations one must add the crucial cultural
transformations that such groups are generally determined to set in motion.
Typically, such groups see local religions, cultures and traditions as
‘Satanic’ and ‘anti-Christian’, making them a special target of the attack.
In their place, they propagate an individualistic consumerism and blind
westernization, or, more specifically, Americanization. As such, then,
as Perera argues, such groups pose the grave threat of causing serious
conflicts in local societies. In a similar vein, according to another source,
‘Christian fundamentalism, not Islam, may have the potential to create
more conflict internationally, for it can avail itself of all the advantages
and power generated by a western-dominated economic system and its invasive
message of consumerism’ (S. Brouwer, P.Gifford, S.Rose, ‘South Korea: Modernisation
with a Vengeance, Evangelisation with a Modern Edge’, 1996).
That said, one must recognize that
the evangelical Protestant groups would have hardly been able to make any
headway in Kashmir had it not been for the almost complete lack of any
effort on the part of local Muslim groups to seriously address the crucial
economic and social problems of their own people. Despite being in a majority
in the state, the Kashmiri Muslims have done little by way of setting up
institutions to provide relief and succor to the needy. The Jammu and Kashmir
Muslim Awqaf Trust, with control over properties of several crores (millions
in currency), has tragically done almost nothing by way of development
work. Its activities are mainly confined to maintaining mosques and shrines,
establishing shopping complexes, and providing a lucrative source of income
to those with the right political connections. Kashmir University now boasts
of a department of business management, but the powers that be seem to
imagine that a department of social work is still quite unnecessary, and
this in a state where over 50,000 people have been killed in the last decade
or so. Recent years have witnessed the mushrooming of a number of
NGOs in Kashmir, but many of these are said to be simply money-raking ventures.
For all the talk of ‘jihad’ in Kashmir, there are hardly any madrasahs
of note in the state, and for higher Islamic education Kashmiris are forced
to head to the Nadwatu’l-‘Ulama and Deoband. On the other hand,
although they are in a minority in the state, the Hindus of Jammu and the
Buddhists of Ladakh are clearly ahead of the valley’s Muslims in establishing
and managing development agencies for their own people.
Clearly, no heady talk of ‘Islamic
Revolution’ can substitute for working for the everyday, this-worldly bread-and-butter
concerns of the least of the poor. It is only because such concerns have
received little attention that Protestant evangelists have managed to make
such serious inroad in Kashmir, if the newspaper reports are to be believed.
If the conversions are occurring because the plight of the poor leads them
open to the blandishments of the missionaries, the way out, is, as the
Qur’an suggests, to ‘vie with one another in good deeds’, working
for the least of the poor, for in that alone can the fruits of true faith
be seen.
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