India’s Catholic bishops condemn fake letter defaming Church
CBCI logo. |
The fake letter claims the Indian Church is in conspiracy
with the Holy See to carry out conversions among a minority community in
Karnataka state.
By Robin Gomes
India’s Catholic bishops have condemned a malicious fake
letter making the rounds on the social media, that is designed to defame the
Catholic Church and arouse communal tension for political gain in
the run-up to the crucial assembly election on Saturday in
the southern state of Karnataka.
The fake letter claims that Indian Church officials in
collusion with representatives of the Holy See in New Delhi, support demands
made by Karnataka’s Lingayat community to be recognized as a separate minority
religion in order to convert them.
False allegation of converting Lingayats
In an official
clarification dated May 9, Bishop Theodore Mascarenhas,
the Secretary General of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India (CBCI)
wrote, “The purportedly fake letter falsely attributed to Cardinal
Oswald Gracias and as having been written by him to Archbishop
Bernard Moras of Bangalore,” making “wild allegations about Church
involvement in the Lingayat issue.”
The March 28 fake letter claims that on December 21, 2013
officials of the Apostolic Nunciature (Vatican embassy) in New
Delhi held their first meeting with Karnataka’s ruling political leadership to
convince them to grant Lingayats a minority religion status. The mail alleges
that since then, subsequent meetings have taken place with the state government
to convince them on the issue.
The fake mail with a slew of language errors and wrong
designations to persons, also suggests nine strategic steps on how to go about
what it called “harvest of souls”, or converting Lingayats to
Catholicism and setting Lingayats against Hindus. It claims much
of this could be largely achieved through the European Union’s developmental
schemes and funds channeled through the “Embassy of the Holy See”.
Legal action
Bishop Mascarenhas said that neither the CBCI nor Cardinal
Gracias will “ever indulge in divisive tactics” as indicated in the false
letter. “The circulation of this letter just before the Karnataka
elections is a disgraceful mischievous ploy,” he said, adding
the CBCI “reserved the right to take legal action against those involved in
making and promoting the letter.”
Bishop Mascarenhas has been battling against those peddling
the fake letter as genuine, especially on the social media.
"Absolutely malafide malicious and diabolic. So sad that people can
stoop to this level to malign others," he wrote in one of his posts on the
Indian bishops' Twitter account.
Political rivalry
The Lingayats who make up 17% of Karnataka’s population have
an influence on nearly 100 seats in the 224-member state assembly where
the Congress party is in power. The community is seen as
a trump card in the May 12 election in which the Congress is pitched against
the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), in power in the centre.
The Lingayats traditionally support the BJP, especially in
northern Karnataka. Christians, who form 1.8 percent or 1.1 million
in the state's population, are traditionally seen as Congress supporters.
On March 19, the Karnataka government approved a minority
religion status to the Lingayat community, a move largely seen as a bid by to
woo the community to the Congress party, as well as split BJP’s Lingayat vote
base. A Congress victory in Saturday’s election will go a long way to its
chances in the general election in 2019.
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