Bischof Antonius aus Kerala, Indien, zelebrierte ein Pontifikal-Konventsamt in der Horber Stiftskirche
Horb: Mit mächtigem Geläut lud die Horber Stiftskirche am Montagmorgen um 11 Uhr zum feierlichen Pontifikal-Konventsamt der Bethanien-Schwestern. Ihr Bischof Antonius aus ihrer Heimat-Diözese in Kerala (Indien) ist zur Zeit auf Konventsvisite in der Schweiz. Bischof Antonius besuchte auch die Schwestern in Horb, unter ihnen auch die Schwestern, die im Altenpflegeheim Bischof-Sproll der Katholischen Spitalstiftung tätig sind. Zum Konventstreffen reisten rund 40 Schwestern an. Noch einmal so viele wurden eigentlich erwartet, aber das Wetter machte ihnen einen Strich durch die Rechnung, wie Joachim Milles, der dem Geistlichen ministrierte, nach dem rund 90-minütigen Gottesdienst erklärte. Für die Schwestern war es ein spirituelles Fest, für die Handvoll Horber, die den Weg in die Stiftskirche fanden, eher ein Buch mit sieben Siegeln, was sich vorne am Altar tat. In dem von kehligen Lauten gefärbten indischen Dialekt sangen die Schwestern und der Bischof samt seinen prächtig gekleideten Begleitern, die ebenfalls aus Indien kommen, jedoch in Deutschland tätig sind, zu Beginn des Gottesdienst ein sehr langes Lied.
Bischof Antonius zelebrierte die Feier auf Art seiner Heimat – von der die Horber Gottesdienstbesucher einen Eindruck bekamen, auch wenn sie die Sprache nicht verstanden. Immerhin: am Schluss dieses Pontifikal-Konventsamtes wurde das „Vater unser“ in deutscher Sprache gebetet. Für Joachim Milles war diese Begegnung mit der orthodoxen-katholischen Kirche ebenso fremd wie mystisch. Dafür lernte er Bischof Antonius, der auf den ersten Blick ernst und verschlossen wirkte, als heiteren und freundlichen Mann kennen, der bei seiner Arbeit am Altar ganz in seiner Aufgabe aufgeht. „Er wirkte teilweise ganz verklärt“, so Milles, der zeitweise direkt neben dem Bischof stand. Egal wie man diesen besonderen Gottesdienst erlebte, was man auf jeden Fall als gefestigte Erkenntnis mit nach Hause nahm, das war, dass auch in der indischen Kirche nicht mit Weihrauch gespart wird. Im Gegenteil. {Quelle: www.schwarzwaelder-bote.de – Peter Morlok}
Christians in India Wounded, Jailed, Expelled
Extremists in three states put Hindu nationalism, tribal custom over religious freedom
NEW DELHI (Morning Star News): Christians suffered serious head injuries, expulsion from home and incarceration based on false witness as Hindu extremists continued their reign of terror in India this month, sources said. In the southern state of Kerala, some 100 Hindu extremists on March 10 attacked a Brethren Assembly church service in Chirayinkeezzh village, Trivandrum District, beating the Christians with wooden clubs; one church member sustained a serious head injury, said Pastor M. Anil Kumar. The pastor, who has since relocated due to death threats, said a church member who goes by the single name of Ajith was hospitalized for three days for treatment of his head wounds, and that a Christian woman identified only as Lizie also sustained head injuries. The mob falsely accused church members of forceful conversion, he said. Area Brethren Assembly leader K.V. Varghese said police arrested three of the assailants after Christians filed a complaint. Hindu extremists protested the arrests by calling for an all-day strike on March 12.
False Witnesses
In Madhya Pradesh in central India, two Christian leaders who were arrested after Hindu extremists beat them and falsely accused them of forceful conversion were granted bail after repeated requests on March 6. State police arrested Pastor Isaac Rajamani and evangelist Raju Shikaria on Feb. 18 after Hindu extremists beat them on Feb. 16 in a village near Khandwa, Friends Missionary Prayer Band (FMPB) leader Jaisingh Sugumaran told Morning Star News. The extremists mounted the attack at the Gulai village home of a sick couple who had invited Rajamani and Shikaria to pray for them. Attorney Sanjay Masini said the Hindu extremists held the two Christians for an entire night. “The extremists took pastor Rajamani and evangelist Shikaria to a nearby house, accused them of forceful conversion, detained them the entire night and mercilessly thrashed them,” he said. Rajamani told Morning Star News the extremists threatened to kill them. “The extremists were telling me not to conduct worship again, and they were also discussing among themselves whether they should simply kill us or take us to the police station,” he said.
The next morning, the intolerant Hindus took the two Christians to the Khandwa police station, where a mob was waiting. “As the two Christians got down from the Jeep, the angry mob shouting anti-Christian slogans ran towards them, pushed them down to the ground and pounded on them,” Sugumaran of FMPB said. The extremists brought two people to the police station who gave false statements that Rajamani was converting people to Christianity by allurement, Sugumaran said. “There was no case of forceful conversion,” he said. “The Hindu extremists forced two people who do not even know Pastor Rajamani to falsely witness against him of forceful conversion.” The man who requested prayer, identified only as Kannaiah, said that he was healed from his illness by Jesus and that Rajamani did not force or allure him to convert to Christianity, Sugumaran added. Rajamani’s wife, Sita Rajamani, tried to contact the pastor by mobile phone throughout the night, but to no avail. The next morning, their landlord told her that police had arrested her husband. “She rushed to the police station and found her husband and evangelist Shikaria squatting inside the lock-up with bruises all over their bodies and wearing only underwear,” attorney Masini said. As Christian women were consoling the pastor’s wife at her home later that day, Hindu extremists surrounded the house and began shouting anti-Christian chants. Rajamani and Shikaria were sent to Khandwa Jail later that evening. “We were not able to eat food till Sunday, as our heads and necks were too painful after the attack,” Rajamani said. Hindu nationalists believe that all people in India are Hindu by virtue of being born in the country, though many tribal people are raised in tribal religions. They also feel that Christianity is a “foreign” faith that threatens their caste-based religion. India’s population is 74.3 percent Hindu, 14.2 percent Muslim, 1.9 percent Sikh, 0.82 percent Buddhist, and 5.8 percent Christian, according to Operation World.
Expelled
In the eastern state of Orissa, Hindu extremists in Bhalutangara village, Kankadahada block, near Dhenkanal, became furious when a Christian family refused to pay fees for festivals involving idol worship. The Rev. Christodan Takri, a church leader in Amar Jyoti, told Morning Star News the Hindu extremists on March 1 beat the family of Rabinarayana Marandi, took their mobile phone and drove them from the village. The Christians submitted a police complaint, and police and administrative officials arranged for the assailants to meet with the church members on March 8 to work out a “compromise.” The Christians agreed to contribute payment for social welfare programs and refused to give anything toward the Hindu festival idols, but the extremists insisted that village tribal law required them to contribute to all local Hindu festivals. Threatening to withdraw government benefits, local authorities ordered the Christians to comply with Hindu extremist demands for payment and to take part in all village religious activities and rituals.