*Kandhamal: Long Wait for Justice*


 *Ram Puniyani*





Today, nearly a decade later when we are remember with pain the horrific
violence of Kandhmal in 2008, many issues related to the state of affairs
of communal violence, state of minorities, the state of justice delivery
system come to one’s mind.



*The incident*



Just to recall, Orissa witnessed unprecedented violence against the
Christian minority in August 2008. On August 23, 2008, Swami Laxmananand
along with his four followers was killed, probably by a group of Maoists.
Immediately, anti-Christian violence began on a big scale. The way it began
it seemed as if preparations for it were well afoot. It was systematic and
widespread. It sounded as if preparation was already there just the pretext
was being awaited. (1)





*Christians in India*



Christians are a tiny minority in India. Contrary to the perception that
British brought Christianity to India, it is one of the oldest religions of
India. Its spread has been slow. Not much was heard against this minority
till the decade of 1990s, when suddenly it started being asserted that
Christian missionaries are converting. Anti-Christian violence has been
occurring more in the remote-interior places and is accompanied by another
phenomenon, that of Ghar Vapasi (return home), which is the conversions of
Adivasis into the fold of Hinduism, by Vishwa Hindu Parishad-Vanavasi
Kalyan Ashram. (2)



It is from 1996, that this phenomenon of conversion-anti Christian violence
has captured the attention of all of us. Suddenly, as if from nowhere has
descended the ‘threat of conversion to Christianity’ by force or fraud.
Simultaneously, attacks on priests and nuns increased in distant interior
places. It has been a peculiar phenomenon that while these attacks in
remote places were being undertaken, the Christian institutions in cities –
schools, colleges and hospitals – were hard pressed to cope with the
demands on their services related to education and health. The selective
targeting of Christian missionaries in distant places was a matter of
serious attention, concern and introspection.



*Social Common Sense*



As the ‘social common sense’ started accepting, ‘yes, they are converting’,
‘they have been converting’, a sort of silent approval of layers of society
and state officials did accompany these attacks on the missionaries. One
was used to hearing about attacks on Muslim minorities so far. How come a
new minority came to be perceived as the ‘source of trouble’ and hence
started being targeted? (3)



Anti Christian violence did begin with isolated incidents like the attack
on the Catholic Health Centre of India near Latur (1996), burning of Bibles
and attacks on the Christian congregations. But most shocking was the
burning alive of Pastor Graham Steward Stains (1999, January) along with
his two sons, Philip and Timothy, aged 9 and 7 years, who were sleeping in
a jeep after a village festival. Gradually the pattern of these attacks
started emerging. In the remote places where Vanvasi Kalyan Ashrams
(Society for Welfare of Forest Dwellers), an outfit of RSS, have been
active and doing the propaganda work along with starting of Ekal schools
and have been Hinduising Adivasis, the incidents were more pronounced and
intense.



*Anti Christian Violence: Characteristics*



The violence against Christian missionaries has by now become a matter of
routine. Unlike the anti Muslim pogroms-violence, it has been scattered and
generally low key, occurring at sporadic intervals. Barring few dastardly
acts like Pastor Stains’ burning and Rani Maria’s being hacked to death the
incidents were medium in intensity and did not take the shape of carnage or
pogrom against the community till the one in Orissa (December 2007 and
later August 2008). The occurrence of these incidents was mostly in places
that are having rampant poverty and illiteracy. The apathy in highlighting
these core issues, deprivations, by a section of media was appalling. At
the same time, by word of mouth the propaganda against Christian
Missionaries was intensified.





The message has been spread that Christian missionaries working in remote
places are soft targets and one can get away without much reprisals. Also
the anti-Christian mobilization of Adivasi youth through cultural
manipulation was the groundwork on which the anti-Christian violence could
sustain. In the atmosphere created by the activities of RSS progeny, local
communal groups have felt emboldened to pick up any small issue and to make
a violent incident out of it. Its’ frightening effect on the victims is
tremendous. It also begins to polarize the local communities into Christian
and non-Christian camps amongst whom the seeds of tension are sown.



*Cultural:  Agenda*



The physical violence has been accompanied by cultural manipulation in
these areas. The silent work to Hinduise Adivasis through religio-cultural
mechanisms has been stepped up from last three decades. People like Swami
Aseemanand (Dangs), Swami Laxmanand (Kandhmal, Orissa), followers of Asaram
Bapu (Jhabua, MP) began their work in popularizing Hindu gods and Goddesses
in the region. The choice of Gods/Goddesses from the vast pantheon of Hindu
religion was a clever one. Here Shabri (Symbol of poverty and deprivation)
was the main goddess, the idol for Adivasis. Temples in her names were
started and regular Kumbhs (mass religious congregation of Hindus) were
organized in her name. Kumbhs have been a tradition in Hinduism on fixed
interval of time on the banks of Holy rivers; Ganges in particular.
Modifying that tradition, these Kumbhs were organized in Adivasis areas.
Here the work of conversion to Hinduism, the spread of ‘Hate against’
foreigners’, particularly Christians, was spread. In addition an atmosphere
of terror was created against those who do not toe the line of Vanavasi
Kalyan Ashram. (4)



Similarly the God Hanuman, the foremost devotee of Lord Ram was also made
popular, by spreading his lockets and through different stories around him,
in the Ekal Schools and Sarswati Shishu Mandirs. It created an atmosphere
of divide in the Adivasi areas; Adivasis turned Hindus, the Hindu dalits
and upper caste versus the Christians. It is this atmosphere of
divisiveness, which has been at the root of the violence in these areas.



*Political Agenda*



This has been a part of the different activities undertaken by RSS combine
to promote the agenda of Hindu nation. While RSS has floated many a
organizations to communalize different sections of society, BJP, VHP,
Bajrang Dal, etc. it has also unleashed a set of cultural activities, set
of educational institutions along with infiltration in media, bureaucracy,
police and military. They are gradually imposing the idea of Hindu nation
and accompanying culture and ideas. The culmination of this has been the
violence against minorities, polarization of communities along religious
lines and ghettoization of minorities. While all this is going on the
violence against minorities’ is the most visible part of this phenomenon.



The role of state agencies has been no different in these incidents than
what it has been in the anti Muslim violence. In most cases, the
administration has looked the other way when communal goons were on the
rampage. The administration most often provided enough leeway for them to
wreck havoc, indulge in intimidation, violence and to get away with that.
The Adivasi areas, which were so far peaceful, started witnessing communal
tensions. The area of violence in Adivasi regions is synonymous with the
map of spread of Vanvasi Kalyan Ashrams and Vishwa Hindu Parishads in an
indirect way.





RSS had been floating different organizations for different sections of
society; Vanvasi Kalyan Ashram, to Hinduise Adivasis was founded in 1952
and the Vishwa Hindu Parishad founded in 1964 was to play an important role
in the anti Christian tirade in times to come. Another RSS progeny which,
directly supported violence against Christians, Bajrang Dal, was founded by
RSS in 1984. After the intimidation and browbeating of Muslim minorities,
especially after the post Babri demolition Mumbai riots, they stepped up
their social dominance and needed another community to target their
trishuls for further expansion of their social and electoral base, and that
was done by the bogey of forced conversions and accompanying anti Christian
violence, which started coming to the fore from 1996 onwards. The targeting
of minorities has played an important role in polarizing the communities,
in consolidation of the majoritarian politics in various ways. (5)





The burning of Pastor Stains, in that sense was a turning point for Human
rights groups, who so far were trying to grapple and respond to the anti
Muslim violence. With this many concerned groups took up the investigations
of the violence against Christians in the right earnest. As such, the first
major cover up had to be undertaken by the BJP led NDA Government itself,
in the aftermath of Stains murder. Initially, as a fire fighting measure,
the functionaries of the NDA government tried to give a clean chit to the
RSS combine. After the murder, the then home minister Lal Krishna Advani
stated that he knows Bajrang Dal very well and this act could not have been
done by that organization. To put a veil on the episode, the three cabinet
ministers, George Fernandez, Murli Manohar Joshi and Navin Patnaik rushed
to the site and proclaimed that the murder of Pastor is an international
conspiracy to destabilize the BJP Government. This way they tried to bypass
the real issue, i.e. involvement of Dara Singh, an activist of Bajrang Dal.
(6)



*Struggle for Justice: People’s Tribunals *



The case of Orissa was specifically investigated by India Peoples Tribunal,
led by Justice K.K.Usha (retired) of Kerala High court in 2006. (7) This
tribunal forewarns about the shape of things to come.  This tribunal
assessed the spread of communal organizations in Orissa, which has been
accompanied by a series of small and large events and some riots…such
violations are utilized to generate the threat and reality of greater
violence, and build and infrastructure of fear and intimidation. It further
noted that minorities are being grossly ill treated; there is gross
inaction of the state Government to take action. The report also describes
in considerable detail how the cadre of majoritarian communal organizations
are indoctrinated in hatred and violence against other communities it holds
to be inherently inferior. If such communalization is undertaken in Orissa,
it is indicative of the future of the nation… the signs are truly ominous
for India's democratic future.



It is in this backdrop that when the Kandhamal carnage took place, the
offense of RSS affiliates, the lapses and partisan behaviour of state
machinery, the lack of rehabilitation and deliverance of justice came as a
big jolt to the victims and became the matter of concern for human rights
groups. The lack of proper investigation and other actions on the part of
state were the key for getting justice for the victims. While many a
sincere, scattered efforts to help the afflicted were undertaken by
different groups. These efforts were effective but inadequate in their
reach. The tribunal organized for Orissa violence under Justice A. P.Shah
(Retd) brought out the truth of the carnage. The hope was that the victims
will be suitably rehabiliatated and get justice. (8)



This tribunal observed, (excerpts)

“The appalling feature of the Kandhamal violence, where rescue and relief
work by non-profit, charitable and humanitarian organizations was
prohibited through a government notification, indicates the impunity with
which the state government acted, and its scant respect for rule of law and
human rights of the victim-survivors of the violence.”...

“The dismal conditions in the government-run relief camps  are clearly
indicative of the indifference of the state government to the plight of
victim-survivors.”...”The testimonies of victim-survivors as well as the
reports presented to the Tribunal indicate that victim-survivors were
forcibly sent back to their villages, or abandoned near their villages,
with total disregard to their safety.”...“*Peace-building Initiatives: *The
fact that many victim-survivors are unable to return to their villages due
to threats and intimidation by perpetrators, and many of those who have
returned continue to live in constant fear and security, lead us to
conclude that the state government’s peace initiatives have been a dismal
failure and nothing more than an eyewash.”

It also made lot of recommendations about relief, rehaibilation,
compensation and justice. This excerpt is very telling “*Implementation of
State’s Duty Towards Peace-building, Voluntary Return and Reintegration:*
The State should recognize the Internally Displaced Persons’ right to
return to their homes and create all possible enabling conditions to
facilitate such safe return in accordance with the above standards. The
state ought to discharge its duty of creating a conducive, safe and
peaceful environment that can sustain return or re-integration of
victim-survivors through access to public services, legal and personal
documentation, and to livelihoods and income-generating opportunities
without any form of discrimination.”

As usual the recommendations of the tribunal remain in the limbo. The
heartening feature of struggle for justice in Kandhamal is the dogged
determination of the victims and human rights activists to get the justice.
This is also the time to understand that justice is a long term goal also
which requires a programmatic alliance between the struggling sections of
society, be it dalits, Adivasis, women, workers or struggling sections of
society. In the light of growing intolerance in society, in the light of
the growing stifling of the democracy society the need to build social
alliances to preserve democracy and human rights is all the more crucial at
this juncture.



*Foot Notes*

1.       https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org/2016/03/4383286/

2.
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2016/03/14/christian-persecution-by-hindus-rises-in-india-say-humanitarian-groups.html

3.       http://www.sacw.net/article12604.html

4.       http://www.pucl.org/Topics/Religion-communalism/2006/dangs.htm

5.       https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2008/10/indi-o07.html

6.
http://www.southasianconnection.com/articles/341/1/Graham-Staines-and-His-Two-Young-Sons-Burnt-Alive-Wife-Forgives-Unconditionally/Page1.html

7.
http://archive.tehelka.com/story_main40.asp?filename=Ne130908HindutvasViolentHistory.asp

8.
http://www.persecution.in/content/kandhamal-victims-still-face-intimidation-peoples-tribunal

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http://peoplesvoice.in/2016/08/25/kandhamal-a-long-wait-for-justice/

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