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Vacation Bible School in India Closed by Hindu Radicals

May 7, 2018 | Asia
May 7, 2018

ICC Note: A vacation Bible school in India’s Tamil Nadu state was closed after Hindu nationalists threatened the program on its first day. Fifty children were studying the Bible when men from the Hindu radical group the Hindu Munani barged into the church and demanded the program be stopped. Similar harassment has been reported by churches across India with many preemptively closing programs that may draw the ire of Hindu radicals.

05/07/2018 India (Christian Post) – A six-day Vacation Bible School for children run by a Pentecostal church in southern India was forced to suspend the program on its first day after two men from Hindu nationalist groups disrupted it and threatened the organizers, according to a report.

The men from India’s governing Bharatiya Janata Party and a group associated with it, the Hindu Munani, or Hindu Front, barged into the church premises in the Palavanatham village of Tamil Nadu state’s Virudhunagar District on Tuesday when around 50 children were studying the Bible, and demanded that the program be stopped, according to the U.K.-based charity Christian Solidarity Worldwide.

The children, between the ages of 4 and 12, had been given permission from their parents to attend the program, which was supposed to run until Sunday.

“The Vacation Bible School has been conducted for well over 50 years across India,” Nehemiah Christie, the executive director of The Synod of Pentecostal Churches, was quoted as saying. “It is sad to see children being exposed to this level of religious intolerance and intimidation.”

Christie added that the communal mobilization of Hindu nationalism “is expanding at an alarming rate here where we see religious hardline groups employ bullying tactics and flagrantly use of the law enforcement apparatus to instill fear on Christian interests.”

Former Chief Minister, equivalent to a governor in the United States, J. Jayalalithaa, died in December 2016, leaving a political vacuum, which Hindu nationalists are seeking to exploit for their electoral gain.

The BJP seeks to divide voters along religious lines. Christian persecution, which includes violent attacks, destruction of Christian property and false accusations, has risen throughout India since the party won the general election in 2014.

A report by an evangelical group in India described 2017 as “one of the most traumatic for the Christian community” in 10 years.

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