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Thứ Sáu, 17 tháng 8, 2018

India’s Christians marking 10th anniversary of anti-Christian violence in Odisha state


India’s Christians marking 10th anniversary of anti-Christian violence in Odisha state
Archbishop John Berwa of Cuttack -Bhubaneswar.

Archbishop John Barwa of Cuttack-Bhubaneswar and the Catholic Bishops Conference of India (CBCI) are marking the 10th anniversary of the anti-Christian carnage with a Mass on August 25 at St Joseph Convent School in Bhubaneswar.
By Robin Gomes
Christians in India will commemorate the 10th anniversary of the terrible massacre and atrocities inflicted on Christians in the eastern state of Odisha, with a Holy Mass in the state capital Bhubaneswar on August 25.   
Archbishop John Barwa together with the Catholic Bishops Conference of India (CBCI) are organizing the Holy Mass on the theme, “Reconciliation, Thanksgiving and Grace”, appealing for secularism, democracy, justice and peace and brotherhood.
Black day - August 25, 2008

It was on August 25, 2008, that hell broke loose on the Christians of Kandhamal District, with Hindu extremists attacking them for the August 23 murder of Hindu leader Swami ‎Lakshmanananda Saraswati, even though Maoist rebels ‎claimed the assassination. 
Considered to be India’s worst anti-Christian persecution in 300 years, the outrage that followed for months, forced an estimated 56,000 Christians to flee to the safety of forests and homes of friends and relatives. Some 5,600 houses and 415 villages were raided and set on fire. According to government figures, 38 people were killed and two women raped, though activists give a higher number.  Scores of people were injured and permanently maimed.
“The inhuman attack on innocent people caught unaware in the middle of the night of August 25, 2008 will always remain a black spot in the history of the traditionally peace loving people of Odisha and Independent India,” Archbishop Barwa said in a press statement announcing the August 25 anniversary Mass at St Joseph Convent School in Bhubaneswar.
“What was heartbreaking,” he said, was that the “massacre of the innocents continued unabated for months.”  "What happened in Kandhamal, should have never happened and should never ever happen again,” he appealed.
Church close to the victims

Speaking to Vatican news, Archbishop Barwa said that in the past 10 years his archdiocese has “remained close to the victims”.

The Church, the archbishop said, has been the “prime diving force”  for the legal process to seek justice and relief for those who have suffered.   In this regard the archdiocese organized rallies, submitted memoranda to government authorities and is fighting for justice in the courts of law.
Archbishop Barwa said that in all these efforts, Christians have surrendered themselves to God, trusting that what is impossible to human beings is possible with God.
He said Christians are praying for true forgiveness, reconciliation and peace

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