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Thursday, 18 May 2006

ImagePope Benedict XVI has condemned Hindu nationalist attempts to ban religious conversions in India in a speech in Paris on 18 May 2006 reflecting growing tension among major faiths about the role and nature of missionary work.

In an unusually strong language, the Pontiff told Amitava Tripathi, India’s new ambassador to the Vatican, that efforts in some states to outlaw conversions were unconstitutional and should be rejected.

It was his second declaration this week in defence of religious freedom in countries with non-Christian majorities. On 15 May 2006, he urged Muslim countries to give their Christian minorities the same rights as Muslims enjoyed in Western states. "The disturbing signs of religious intolerance which have troubled some regions of the nation, including the reprehensible attempt to legislate clearly discriminatory restrictions on the fundamental right of religious freedom, must be firmly rejected," Pope Benedict said.

Anti-conversion laws were "unconstitutional (and) contrary to the highest ideals of India's founding fathers," he said, according to the text of his speech released by the Vatican.

Also this week, representatives of world religions met in Rome to begin working on a "code of conduct" that would affirm conversion as a basic right but curb aggressive proselytising.

The Vatican and the mostly Protestant and Orthodox World Council of Churches launched the initiative after Christian minorities in India complained about aggressive proselytising by newly arrived evangelical groups. The conversion meeting came two months after Afghanistan threatened to execute a Muslim convert to Christianity, who took refuge in Italy after an outcry from Western countries and the Vatican. Several Muslim states prescribe death for apostates.

”Both Christianity and Islam are missionary religions whose scriptures tell believers to spread the faith, a mission that religious minorities usually play down to keep civil peace,” he said. In his statement on 15 May 2006, Pope Benedict said Christians in Muslim countries should have the right to speak openly about their religion. Saudi Arabia bars non-Muslims from building churches or making any public expression of their faith.

(Source: The New Indian Express)

 
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