Down with ‘Missionaries’

January 13, 2020

“I strongly believe that missionaries make better products. They care more. For a missionary, it's not just about the business. There has to be a business, and the business has to make sense, but that's not why you do it. You do it because you have something meaningful that motivates you.” -Jeff Bezos (b.1964), American internet entrepreneur and founder, CEO and President of Amazon Inc.

Not all agree with Jeff Bezos. One such disagreement, the latest, comes from Union Minister Giriraj Singh who said on January 2, 2020 at Bagusarai, UP, ”Students who go to missionary schools qualify for IIT and become engineers, but when they go abroad most of them start eating beef because they do not know about our sanskar and sanskriti.” (traditional values and culture).

Contrast this with what Deepak Chopra, India-born American author, perhaps the best-known human export from India, has said: “When I was growing up, I went to an Irish-Christian Missionary school”. So have generations of Indians who did not necessarily end up eating beef. The fact is there are no missionaries in India any more. But, we invent them to whip them verbally and please the gallery of bhakths’.

Take the case of Karnataka, where people and politicians are better educated and more balanced. There has been a running debate in Karnataka on the medium of instruction – Kannada Vs English. The English medium lobby has apparently come up trumps. In recent public discourses, politicians, instead of talking about English medium schools (mainly church and convent-run), now talk about 'missionary' schools because it is an emotive word like cow slaughter and cow protection. The dictionary says that missionary is a person sent by a church into an area to carry on evangelism or other activities as education and hospital work. Such sending has stopped long ago as far India is concerned. Even Pope Benedict XVI, who headed the Papacy from 2005 to 2013 when he resigned, has conceded: “If it is true that the great missionaries of the 16th century were convinced that one who was not baptized was lost - and that explains their missionary commitment . In the Catholic Church after the Second Vatican Council, that conviction was definitely abandoned.” The Second Vatican Council, held between 1962 and 1965, addressed the relations between the Catholic Church and the modern world.

The current verbal missionary bashing is the latest; but not the first and there have been cases of anti-“missionary” action. One such was reported in the media on August 14, 2018. The Jharkhand government was to cancel the license of seven children’s homes run by Missionaries of Charity in Ranchi. The Ranchi DC had ordered a probe into the children’s homes run by Missionaries of Charity. The district officials inspected the homes and recommended action as these homes allegedly did not follow the norms.

It was then said that the action against the nuns was to drown the noise over extensive rapes in children’s and women’s homes (non-Christian) in Bihar and UP. This was a diversionary tactic to avoid focusing on the rapes over which the Supreme Court anguished on August 11, 2018. It had expressed serious concern over cases of rape and sexual abuse of women at shelter homes in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh and asked when these horrific incidents would stop. The top court’s observation came while hearing a matter relating to sexual abuse of children at orphanages.

“Tell us what is this happening?,” a bench of justices Madan B Lokur, S Abdul Nazeer and Deepak Gupta said while referring to the recent (then) incident at Pratapgarh in Uttar Pradesh where 26 women had been reported to be missing from shelter homes. “Yesterday, I read so many women have been raped in Pratapgarh. How will these things stop?” Justice Lokur asked, adding “When it is going to stop?”

So, apparently, tweaking norms by ‘Missionaries’ attracts swift action while cases of rape are downplayed and linger. The fault lies in the ‘Missionary’ tag of Christians, though there is a long history of missionaries in the Indian-origin Hindu, Buddhist and Sikh religions on which a brief reference is made below.

Hinduism was introduced into Java by travellers from India in ancient times when the early Javanese princes accepted Hinduism. Shantidas Adhikari was a Hindu preacher from Sylhet who converted King Pamheiba of Manipur to Hinduism in 1717.

Historically, Hinduism has only recently had a large influence in western countries such as the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and Canada. Swami Vivekananda, the founder of the Ramakrishna Mission, is one of the greatest Hindu missionaries to the West. Modern-day Indian/Hindu guru Osho had more acolytes in Oregon, USA, than in Koregoan, Pune. So is the foreign reach of Here Krishna movement.

Guru Nanak Dev, whose 500th birthday is being currently celebrated, made four distinct major journeys, in four different directions, which are called Udasis, spanning many thousands of kilometers, preaching the message of God. Currently there are Gurdwaras in over 50 countries.

The first Buddhist missionaries were called ‘Dharma Bhanaks’, and some see a missionary charge in the symbolism behind the Buddhist wheel, which is said to travel all over the earth bringing Buddhism with it. Emperor Ashoka was a significant early Buddhist missionary. Buddhism was spread eastward to the present lands of (old) Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Indonesia.

So, missionary work and religious conversion are not the sole monopoly of Christians. Yet, the words ‘Missionaries’ and ‘Conversion’ evoke toxic negative emotions against Christians in India - the same way ‘Cow’ has a strong emotive image for Hindus

The Catholic Church authorities in India should dump the terms ‘Missionaries’ and ‘Conversion’ as these terms evoke toxic negative emotions among non-Christians. Much contemporary Catholic “missionary” work has undergone profound change since the Second Vatican Council of 1962-1965 with increased push for indigenization and enculturation, along with social justice issues as constitutive part of preaching the gospel.

In this historically changed context, the words ‘Missionaries’ has no relevance as the church service is offered by national priests and nuns. Even so, dumping of ‘Missionary’ and ‘Conversion’ should be consciously done and replaced by local terms like ‘Save’ (service) and ‘Sevaks’ – ‘Sevaks of Charity’, for instance, instead of Missionaries of Charity. Changing names to ‘Indianize’ them (Sanskrit, Hindi or any Indian language) should be consciously done by the church leadership. Indian corporates change their names to reflect change in their business mission or focus. Why not Indian church shed its toxic nominal legacy ‘Missionary’?

 

By John B Monteiro
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Comment on this article

  • John B. Monteiro, Bondel Mangalore

    Sun, Jan 26 2020

    Thank you Henry for your positive and encouraging comments about my article. I am with you that mere cosmetic changes will not go far enough. Yet, our inherited baggage need not, and should not, stop us from course correction and we should not lose hope.
    We have to consciously accept the lacunae, you have rightly implied, in our present situation and, instead of despair, should re-track our future corrective future at the church, community and individual levels.
    There is no shame in admitting our present adverse situation and plan and implement a fresh corrective path at various levels.

  • Henry Mascarenhas, Greenville, NC, USA

    Fri, Jan 24 2020

    Acculturation (assimilation to a different culture) has not been easy within our society that has born the scars of colonization by the Mughals and the British that have left behind long-lasting scars on a larger faction of the society. We have been stigmatized for what religion we practice, our attire, food practices, and how we represent ourselves in a society where the majority perceives us as alien. Mere cosmetic changes in changing terminology to acts of devotion and service to our fellow human beings do not change how others see us unless enculturation occurs in a society, which is a long shot. We have been a fractured society for a long time. Thank you for a thought-provoking article Mr. Monteiro.

  • John B. Monteiro, Bondel Mangalore

    Mon, Jan 20 2020

    I agree with you, Vincent. If any bee comes on its own to suck the flowers in the church garden, it is a different matter. There are elaborate rules governing conversion and the church should follow them in letter and spirit. Finally, the church authorities have enough and more on their plate to look after the spiritual and temporal needs of its existing flock.

  • Vincent D'sa, Pangala Parish/Dubai

    Mon, Jan 20 2020

    Nice article. It is not only about changing the names only ,the need of the hour is to declare that we dont do conversions if we are to claim that we are progressive and educated class. When we say that God is one conversions go against that fundamental belief .

  • Mangalurian, Mangaluru

    Sun, Jan 19 2020

    Yet another great article. Thank you Mr Monteiro.

    Post-independence, and as a democracy, India is run through elections, and elections need simple binary assertions: us versus them.

    The "us versus them" will remain so long as there is over-population, poverty and ill-education. Religion is only an excuse for such a mindset.

    In the south of India, with one-two children per household, better education and reduced poverty, the effect of the "us versus them" has reduced to a great degree. People are able to see through the word-play of the politicians.

    But the BIMARU north will remain a worry for at least the next 50 years. The ill-educated mobs in the region will ensure that India remains a third-world country.

  • Preetham Kirem, Sharjah

    Sat, Jan 18 2020

    Every word in this article is worth reflecting.
    Let’s change at the time of time, and not hesitate to address tactically as per the present dominating trend. Sevaks, Chukidaars ,Pradhan Sevaks or even Swamy’s or Sadhwis would be preferred.

  • Pradeep, Bengaluru

    Fri, Jan 17 2020

    "I go with the missionary's position."
    - Jack Sparrow

  • Dan M, Dubai / Mangalore

    Wed, Jan 15 2020

    No more missions only great tribulations ??

    Call of Fray Pio of Pietrelcina

    Message to Enoch
    December 31, 2019


    Great tribulations are getting near so you need to prepare spiritually; do not let go of the Holy Rosary, because it is the greatest protection that Heaven has given you.

    "Peace and Good, my brothers.

    I am your brother Fray Pio of Pietrelcina. I salute you in the Name of the Good God. I am in your midst by the Grace and Mercy of the Lord. Ask for my humble intercession and I will come to your aid. People of God, the days of the great tribulation are approaching and, to many souls, it seems that they do not care, because they do not want to hear the calls of Heaven.

    Many souls are going to be lost for walking in distance from God, time is running out, and if they do not reconsider, they are going to die eternally. All my Brothers (and I) in Heaven, gathered around Our Lady, intercede for all the humanity of this world and especially for those souls who walk daily with sin; we hope that they awake from their lethargy, convert so that tomorrow they can attain the joy of eternal life.

    Children, great tribulations are getting near so you need to prepare spiritually; do not let go of the Holy Rosary, because it is the greatest protection that Heaven has given you. Pray in group, because this was my greatest desire when I was in this world: the groups of prayer around the prayer of the Holy Rosary, as well as prayer, fasting, penance, confession and daily communion, were the pillars of my evangelization that I instilled in my children, so that they might attain the favors of the Good God. Continue with my work so that more lamps may light up the darkness of this sinful world.

    Propagate at all times, children, the prayer of the Holy Rosary with its Litanies, and the Blessed Mother will give peace to your souls and She will deliver you from the snares of the evil one; when the time comes to depart from this world, She, Our Beloved Mother, will come for her

  • Nita Pinto, Mangalore/Auckland

    Wed, Jan 15 2020

    Great article John! Agree with you that these terms should not be used although they only mean "service to humanity" . Having said that, whatever Christians do some of the hardcore fundamentalists will always have a reason to blame them for conversion.

    Thanks once again for a thought provoking article!

    Nita Pinto

  • WILLIAM, BANGALORE

    Tue, Jan 14 2020

    VERY EXHAUSTIVE AND THOUGHT PROVOKING ARTICLE.
    THOUGH CHRISTIANITY CAME TO INDIA DURING THE FIRST CENTURY, WE HAVE NOT ADOPTED TO INDIAN CUSTOMS / DRESS, THEREFORE WE ARE SEEN AS A WESTERN RELIGION.
    WE SHOULD BE ENCOURAGED TO HAVE INDIAN OR LOCAL NAMES, OUR RELIGIOUS TO ADAPT INDIAN ATTIRE, SO THAT WE ARE SEEN MORE INDIAN THAN WESTERN.

    IF ADOPTED BY MAJORITY, PERHAPS THEN, WE WILL BE CONSIDERED MORE INDIAN THAN WESTERN AND WOULD NOT BE EASY TARGETS.

  • John B. Monteiro, Bondel Mangalore

    Tue, Jan 14 2020

    Thank you Leo for your auspicious Boni. I invite the inactive/ fence-sitters to stand up and have their say on this forum . You have nothing to lose than your inertia. Have your say either way. Silence i not golden in this critical situation.

  • Leo Lasrado, Mangalore /Singapore

    Tue, Jan 14 2020

    A very important suggestion which needs speedy implementation by all concerned.


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