"After all, the Christian conquests in India and in America are two sides of the same coin. In the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas, the Pope awarded one half of the world (ultimately comprising areas from Brazil to Macao, including Africa and India) to Portugal, and the other half (including most of America and the Philippines) to Spain, on condition that they use their power to christianise the population. The Spanish campaign in America had juridically and theologically exactly the same status as its Portuguese counterpart in India. If the result was not as absolutely devastating in India as it was in America, this was merely due to different power equations: the Portuguese were less numerous than the Spanish, and the Indians were technologically and militarily more equal to the Europeans than the Native Americans were. The Churchâs intentions behind Columbusâs discovery of America and Vasco da Gamaâs landing in India were exactly the same.....Seldom have I seen such viper-like mischievousness as in the most recent strategies of the Christian mission in India. It is a viper with two teeth. On the one side, there is the gentle penetration through social and educational services, now compounded with rhetoric of âinculturationâ: glib talk of âdialogueâ, âsharingâ, âcommon groundâ, fraudulent donning of Hindu robes by Christian monks, all calculated to fool Hindus about the continuity of the Christian striving to destroy Hinduism and replace it with the cult of Jesus....On the other side, there is a vicious attempt to delegitimize Hinduism as Indiaâs native religion, and to mobilize the weaker sections of Hindu society against it with âblood and soilâ slogans. Seeing how the nativist movement in the Americas is partly directed against Christianity because of its historical aggression against native society (in spite of Liberation Theologyâs attempts to recuperate the movement), the Indian Church tries to take over this nativist tendency and forge it into a weapon against Hinduism. Christian involvement in the so-called Dalit (âoppressedâ) and Adivasi (âaboriginalâ) movements is an attempt to channel the nativist revival and perversely direct it against native society itself.It advertises its services as the guardian of the interests of the âtrue nativesâ (meaning the Scheduled Castes and Tribes) against native society, while labelling the upper castes as âAryan invadersâ, on the basis of an outdated theory postulating an immigration in 1500 BC. To declare people âinvadersâ because of a supposed immigration of some of their ancestors 3500 years ago is an unusual feat of political hate rhetoric in itself, but the point is that it follows a pattern of earlier rounds of Christian aggression. It is Cortes all over again...The attempt to divide the people of a country on an ethnic basis â whether it is a real ethnic distinction as in the case of Cortesâ Mexico, or a wilfully invented one as in the case of India â is an obvious act of hostility, unmistakably an element of warfare...."
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Why Indians Should Reject St. Thomas And Christianityâ Koenraad Elst
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Ishwar Sharan
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