zondag, september 14, 2008

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Gory stories of convent deaths Then Sister Abhaya; now Sister Anupa Mary

By S. Chandrasekhar
Sixteen years ago, in March 1992, the body of Sister Abhaya was found in the well of the St. Pious X Convent in Kottayam District, Kerala. Now, in 2008, after several rounds of police and CBI investigations, the dark minds that terminated this ‘Angel of Christ’ are still free, thanks to the political and numerical clout of the Christian church in Kerala. Although the brain mapping, polygraph and narco-analysis tests conducted on the prime suspects Father Thomas Kottoor, Fr. Jose Poothrukayil and Sister Sephy at Central Forensic Sciences Lab at Bangalore and Delhi proved positive, the CBI, the Premier investigation agency in the country, has the audacity to tell the court, “we have only clues, not clinching evidence”. There are also reports that CD’s of narco-analysis on these suspects have been tampered with! Such is the reach of the Christian church—which went, then, upto Narasimha Rao to torpedo the case and now upto Sonia Gandhi!

Sister Anupa Mary (22) who joined St. Mary’s convent in Port Kollam on May 27 was found hanging from the ceiling of her room in the convent on August 11 at 4 AM. Her Father Pappachan was a cook in the Bishop’s House at Kollam and she was promised medical education along with her nunnery.

Her father has alleged that his daughter was physically, mentally and sexually tortured by the other sisters of the convent, especially the Mother Superior. He said Anupa Mary was asked to wash the undergarments of other nuns, clean their toilets and do all menial jobs. He also alleged that his daughter was not allowed to close the doors of her room at night and the nuns used to come to her room and sexually abuse her. The sister in her suicide note, has put the blame on the Mother Superior and other sisters for her suicide.

Following all round political and public outcry the Government has ordered crime branch enquiry by IG Harinath Mishra.

An unnatural event in suicide cases, the cloth used for suicide was cut and the sister’s body placed in the cot, before police arrival. Also valuable evidences in investigations have been destroyed. Moreover media reports say that the unnatural deaths of several sisters in convents of Kerala, for the past three to four decades have been buried, no questions asked. With such skeletons in their backyard, what morality has the Pope to ask pardon for crimes committed in the name of Christianity and to falsely blame Sangh Parivar for attacks on its institutions.

If the church continues protecting the vultures who masquerade in the name of fathers and sisters and sexually abuse and murder young girls, who leave their homes and come to serve Christ, the day is not far when the believers will overthrow such people and butcher them.


Rajni Majhi was geen non. De jongere meiden noemden haar Nanni. Ze is wél ook dood.
Asia News.it
» 09/04/2008 INDIA

Fr Edward, survivor of arson in Orissa: the Hindu radicals are terrorists
by Nirmala Carvalho

Fr Edward Sequeira is among the victims of fundamentalist violence in Orissa. It was only by a miracle that he escaped from the burning of his orphanage, where his co-worker Rajni Majhi was burned to death.

Now hospitalized in Mumbai, in intensive care, he agreed to talk with AsiaNews. For the priest, there needs to be international condemnation of the lack of respect for human rights and religious freedom that dominates rural India.

Mumbai (AsiaNews) - Fr Edward Sequeira, one of the victims of the violence committed by Hindu radicals in Orissa, does not hesitate to call them "terrorists". Groups connected to Sangh Parivar seized him, beat him for more than an hour, and then shut him inside a room that they set on fire. Fr Edward was able to save himself by taking shelter in the bathroom. Before he passed out, he heard the screams of Rajni Majh, who was tied up and thrown into the flames, where she was burned to death.

Initial reports said that she was a sister, then a lay missionary. Fr Edward explains that the girl was one of the many orphans he had rescued, and that she lived and worked in the orphanage he had founded.

Fr Edward is unable to hold back the tears, and begins sobbing when he talks about her. The crowd of fanatics may have thought that Rajni was one of the many people they believe have been forced to convert through "Christian proselytism". "'She was only a simple Hindu girl", the priest says, "studying in the plus 3 class. I can still hear her voice, 'Father they are going to burn me', these were her last words to me, after this I lost consciousness". Her death "is a deep wound in my heart".

Hindu fundamentalists have long been conducting a campaign against conversions to Christianity, and against evangelization. For Fr Edward, 58, missionary activity is something that upholds the dignity of the person.

“I have been working among lepers in Padampur in Bargarh district for the past ten years. I realized that, given the preference for a male child in rural Indian communities, parents many times have more than 4-5 daughters before a son is born - and unfortunately, these girls are rarely sent to school, they are made to graze cattle or even sent at early age as domestic workers or to the landlords, and many girls suffer from malnutrition.
"So I started a very small hostel-orphanage for girls, to give them opportunity and dignity through education and vocational training.

"One such girl in my orphanage was Rajni Majhi, who was born to Hindu parents who already had 5 or 6 daughters, and they gave her up for adoption to a Hindu tribal childless couple. Sadly, when the adopted parents after a few years conceived biological children, they began ill-treating and discriminating against Rajni, and in this reality she came to my orphanage four years ago.

Within a few months, she was bubbling with life, the younger girls called her “Nanni’ (big sister), and besides studying in college in her 13th year, Rajni would be like a governess to the children. Rest artikel.

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