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Tribal Christians in India Forced to Pay Heavy Fine for Attending Easter Service

May 17, 2017 | Asia
May 17, 2017
AsiaIndia

ICC Note:

Tribal Christians in India’s Chhattisgarh state were forced to pay heavy fines for attending an Easter church service last month. Shortly after, they were forcefully converted to Hinduism or faced severe consequences. Restrictions on Christians in Chhattisgarh have dramatically increased since June 2014 when over 50 villages passed resolutions making Christianity effectively illegal. Since then, similar resolutions have been passed in many other villages and have been enforced through fines, social boycotts, and even violence. Will India’s government step in and insure these Christians are able to exercise their religious freedom rights? 

05/17/2017 India (Christian Times) – Christians in a tribal village in India have reportedly been ordered to pay heavy fines for attending Easter service last month and forced to convert back to Hinduism.

The authorities in the Junwani village of Chhattisgarh have reportedly prohibited Christians from attending service on Easter Sunday and imposed a penalty of $312, which is almost four to five months’ worth of wages, for each person who was caught going to church to celebrate Christ’s resurrection.

According to International Christian Concern (ICC), the village elders have also forced 15 Christian families to “reconvert” to Hinduism and imposed tough restrictions on those who refused.

Somari Komra, a 40-year-old Christian who was fined for attending Easter service, said that he and three others were intimidated and forced to stand in the middle of a village meeting on the day after Easter Sunday.

He said he knew that they would be questioned by the village elders because they saw five men who were sent to the church to spy and testify against them.

While he was being questioned, Komra told the elders that he started going to church because Jesus alleviated his physical problems.

“I was suffering with physical illness and mental disorder but none of you came and helped me,” he said.

“Neither the village leaders nor the society helped. But Jesus made me well as I trusted in Him and started going to church. I will not stop going to church and I am ready to pay the fine and face the consequences of social boycott. If you stop me [from going to] church, then you must take the responsibility of my health,” he went on to say.

Shivaram Tekam, a member of one of 15 families that went through the reconversion ceremony, said that he had to give a pair of chickens, a bottle of wine and 551 rupees as sacrifice to the village deity.

Despite attending the reconversion ceremony, Tekam told a local pastor that he will keep following Jesus Christ in his heart.

[Full Story]
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