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An Indian Speaks Out on Christianity —
Part 2
Continued from Part 1
by
Pradeep Sharma
The systematic slander and crusade against
Indian culture and particularly Vaishnava culture
in India seems to have begun immediately after
the arrival of the Portuguese and Christian
(Catholic) missionaries in India (Goa/Kerala)
almost five centuries ago and has to one degree
or another persisted up to the present day.
The fall of the Viyajnagar Empire to the
Muslim invaders shortly after the arrival
of the Portuguese in Goa left much of the
coastal regions in the south without a strong
Hindu Protector. Thus the Portuguese/Christian
conquest in Goa went largely unopposed until
the British Raja came to power in India and
the Portuguese military eventually withdrew,
leaving only the Church behind.
The Goan Inquisition was the bloody inauguration
of what has been a 500 year slander and crusade
against Vaishnavism, which now reaches many
distant corners of the world. It is recorded
and admitted by 'Saint' Xavier (a Jesuit
Priest) in his letters that he personally
insisted that his monarch Dom Joao of Portugal
dispatch the Inquisition to India. During
this time the figure of a Vaishnava and their
shrines were not so distinguishable to the
uneducated eye of the Portuguese and so the
Inquisition focused on Brahmanism in general
and not particularly on Vaishnavism. After
starting the Inquisition, Xavier departed
for Japan and did not stay in Goa to see
the bloodshed and suffering that he caused.
Not able to withstand the horrors of the
Portuguese/Christian conquest in Goa, thousands
of Gaura Saraswata Vaishnava Brahmins made
a mass exodus at that time and resettled
in Dakshin Kanada (Karnataka) to the south.
These Gaura Saraswata Brahmins from Goa who
settled in Karnataka were the forefathers
of Rupa and Sanatana Goswamis.
After sometime the Protestant Churches also
joined the crusade against everything Indian
or Vedic, with a particular scorn for Lord
Jagannatha at Puri. The Protestant Reverends
of the times, such as Rev. Claudius Buchanan
(1813), considered Jagannatha as a morbid
God of death with a bloodthirsty smile. These
missionaries and Christian travelers in India
created a gross misrepresentation of the
sect of Jagannatha and spread their maliciousness
throughout the Christian world in their writings.
Rev.
Claudius Buchanan wrote, "From
Surat to this place (Jagannatha Puri, a distance
of not less than 3,000 kilometers), all the
highway was stowed with dead people, our
noses never free from the stink of them.
Women were seen to roast their children.
A man or woman no sooner dead but they were
cut in pieces to be eaten.
"I
have seen Juggernaut. The scene at Bhadrak
is but the vestibule of Juggernaut. No
record of ancient or modern history can
give, I think, an adequate idea of this Valley
of Death; it may be truly compared with the
Valley of Hinnom (a place in Israel where
human child sacrifices were performed before
the god Moloch). The idol called Juggernaut
has been considered as the Moloch of the
present age; and he is justly so named, for
the sacrifices offered up to him by self-devotement
are not less criminal, perhaps not less numerous,
than those recorded of the Moloch of Canaan
(Canaan was the state and Hinnom the city
for human child sacrifices).
"The
senses are assailed by the squalid and
ghastly appearance of the famished pilgrims;
many of whom die in the streets of want or
disease; while the devotees, with clotted
hair and painted flesh, are seen practicing
their various austerities, and modes of self-torture.
Persons of both sexes, with little regard
to concealment, sit down on the sands, close
to the town in public view; and the sacred
bulls walk about among them and eat the ordure
(stool).
"The idol is a block of wood, having
a frightful visage painted black, with a
distended mouth of a bloody colour. The characteristics
of Moloch's worship are obscenity and blood."(From
the diary of Rev. Claudius Buchanan)
Robert
Southey (1809) wrote in "Curse
of Kehama" (XIV 5) a scornful poem about
Lord Jagannatha to the delight of his Christian
readers.
"The
ponderous car rolls on and crushes all,
Through flesh and bones it ploughs its dreadful
path.
Groans rise unheard; the dying cry and death
and agony.
Are trodden under foot by your mad throng.
Who follow close and thrust the deadly wheels
along."
The
Christian crusade against Jagannatha was
summed up by J. Peggs in his book "A
History of the General Baptist Mission," London,
1846 as follows. "Juggernaut, the great,
the obscene, the bloody Juggernaut, must
fall; long perhaps will be the struggle and
fierce the conflict but he must fall; and
the place which knows him now will know him
no more for ever."
These exaggerated and scornful criticisms
of Jagannatha were intended to stir the emotions
of a Christian population in Europe grown
complacent to missionary activities of the
Church. The Church was in need of fresh recruits
(missionaries) and the obvious financial
support needed to carry out missionary activities.
These scornful criticisms were also intended
to shame the Hindu population.
To this day, missionary activities of the
Church are still going on in Orrissa aimed
at undoing the worship of Jagannatha and
decrying the Vaishnavas and their creed.
No more clear and unbiased evidence of the
Christian (Catholic) lack of tolerance and
utter hatred for any form of religion other
than their own is shown in the Jesuit Oath.
This oath, from 16th century circa, is still
uttered in Latin by those men who take to
the robes of the Jesuit order in modern times.
The oath clearly reveals the evil commitment
of their creed and curiously enough even
mentions India. An excerpt from that oath
follows.
"I
do further promise and declare, that I
will have no opinion or will of my own,
or any mental reservation whatever, even
as a corpse or cadaver, but will unhesitatingly
obey each and every command that I may receive
from my superiors in the Militia of the Pope
and of Jesus Christ.
"That
I may go to any part of the world withersoever
I may be sent, to the frozen regions of
the North, the burning sands of the desert
of Africa, or the jungles of India, to
the centers of civilization of Europe,
or to the wild haunts of the barbarous
savages of America, without murmuring or
repining, and will be submissive in all
things whatsoever communicated to me.
"I furthermore promise and declare
that I will, when opportunity presents, make
and wage relentless war, secretly or openly,
against all heretics, Protestants and Liberals,
as I am directed to do, to extirpate and
exterminate them from the face of the whole
earth; and that I will spare neither age,
sex or condition; and that I will hang, waste,
boil, flay, strangle and bury alive these
infamous heretics, rip up the stomachs and
wombs of their women and crush their infants'
heads against the walls, in order to annihilate
forever their execrable race. That when the
same cannot be done openly, I will secretly
use the poisoned cup, the strangulating cord,
the steel of the poniard (dagger) or the
leaden bullet, regardless of the honor, rank,
dignity, or authority of the person or persons,
whatever may be their condition in life,
either public or private, as I at any time
may be directed so to do by any agent of
the Pope or Superior of the Brotherhood of
the Holy Faith, of the Society of Jesus." (Note:
This Jesuit Oath can be read in its entirety
at http://www.reformation.org/jesuit_oath_in_action.html
).
The Catholic Church and the Protestant Church
are indeed deeply divided, as the above oath
clearly suggests. Both parties are quick
to persecute (kill, murder and torture) each
other and even members of their own faith,
what to speak of a person (man, woman, or
child) of a foreign faith.
We have God to thank for secular governments
who guarantee freedom of faith; otherwise
anyone non-Christian in this world would
soon be hung, boiled, flayed, strangled,
buried alive, stomachs and wombs ripped up,
or have their infants' heads crushed against
the walls.
This raises a very interesting point. The
United States of America (a secular government)
is perhaps the single greatest refuge or
sanctuary for religious freedom in the world.
This is because the constitution of that
country guarantees freedom of religion to
people of all faiths. Ironically America
is seen to be a Christian country and most
people believe it always has been. This however
is not a fact.
The United States of America only gradually
became a dominantly Christian country, after
its inception. The founding fathers of that
great country were in fact trying to escape
Christian oppression (both Catholic and Protestant)
in Europe and even though many were Christians
themselves, they wanted above all to guarantee
religious freedom to others. They felt that
without freedom of choice a person could
not have real faith or religion - a point
that all deep thinkers of our day will surely
concur with.
Many of those founding forefathers of America
were Deists and not Christians. Deism is
a belief in God based on reason rather than
revelation, that God has set the universe
in motion but does not interfere with how
it runs. These Deists had a great influence
over the making of the United States Constitution,
a document considered to be one of the most
enlightened political statements ever written.
The founders of the United States rarely
practiced what today we might call Christianity.
Although they supported the free exercise
of any religion, they understood the dangers
of religion. Most of them believed in Deism,
and many attended Freemasonry lodges. Masonry
welcomed anyone from any religion or non-religion,
as long as they believed in a Supreme Being.
Washington, Franklin, Hancock, Hamilton,
and even Lafayette, and many others accepted
the Freemasonry order.
The American forefathers' distain for Christianity,
in uncompromising words, is quite clear from
their many statements and letters.
Thomas Paine (Statesman/Author) states;
"Whenever we read the obscene stories,
the voluptuous debaucheries, the cruel and
torturous executions, the unrelenting vindictiveness,
with which more than half of the Bible is filled,
it would be more consistent that we call it
the word of a demon than the word of God. It
is a history of wickedness that has served
to corrupt and brutalize mankind."
"Take
away from Genesis the belief that Moses
was the author, on which only the strange
belief that it is the word of God has stood,
and there remains nothing of Genesis but
an anonymous book of stories, fables, and
contradictory or invented absurdities,
or of downright lies."
Benjamin Franklin states;
"I wish it (Christianity) were more productive
of good works ... I mean real good works ...
not holy-day keeping, sermon-hearing ... or
making long prayers, filled with flatteries
and compliments despised by wise men, and much
less capable of pleasing the Deity."
"If
we look back into history for the character
of the present sects in Christianity, we
shall find few that have not in their turns
been persecutors, and complainers of persecution.
The primitive Christians thought persecution
extremely wrong in the Pagans, but practiced
it on one another. The first Protestants
of the Church of England blamed persecution
in the Romish Church, but practiced it
upon the Puritans. They found it wrong
in Bishops, but fell into the practice
themselves both here (England) and in New
England (USA)."
"Some
books against Deism fell into my hands.
It happened that they wrought an effect
on me quite contrary to what was intended
by them; for the arguments of the Deists,
which were quoted to be refuted, appeared
to me much stronger than the refutations;
in short, I soon became a thorough Deist."
Thomas Jefferson (Author of the Declaration
of Independence and the Virginia Statute
for Religious Freedom) states;
"Millions of innocent men, women and children,
since the introduction of Christianity, have
been burnt, tortured, fined, imprisoned; yet
we have not advanced an inch towards uniformity.
What has been the effect of coercion? To make
one half the world fools, and the other half
hypocrites - to support roguery and error all
over the earth. I do not find in orthodox Christianity
one redeeming feature."
"It
has been fifty and sixty years since I
read the Apocalypse (Revelations), and
then I considered it merely the ravings
of a maniac."
"I
have recently been examining all the known
superstitions of the world, and do not
find in our particular superstition (Christianity)
one redeeming feature. They are all alike
founded on fables and mythology."
"We
discover in the Gospels a groundwork of
vulgar ignorance, of things impossible,
of superstition, fanaticism and fabrication."
"The
legitimate powers of government extend
to such acts only as are injurious to others.
But it does me no injury for my neighbor
to say there are twenty gods, or no God.
It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my
leg."
"Believing
with you that religion is a matter which
lies solely between man and his God, that
he owes account to none other for his faith
or his worship, that the legislative powers
of government reach actions only, and not
opinions, I contemplate with sovereign
reverence that act of the whole American
people which declared that their legislature
should 'make no law respecting an establishment
of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise
thereof,' thus building a wall of separation
between church and State."
It
is interesting to note that in his autobiography
Thomas Jefferson also made a specific mention
of the "Hindoo" (as well as others),
assuring them their religious freedom in
the United States. Jefferson wrote in reference
to the "Virginia Act for Religious Freedom" as
follows: "Where the preamble declares,
that coercion is a departure from the plan
of the holy author of our religion, an amendment
was proposed by inserting 'Jesus Christ,'
so that it would read 'A departure from the
plan of Jesus Christ, the holy author of
our religion;' the insertion was rejected
by the great majority, in proof that they
meant to comprehend, within the mantle of
its protection, the Jew and the Gentile,
the Christian and Mohammedan, the Hindoo
and infidel of every denomination." (Merrill
D. Peterson, "Thomas Jefferson Writings",
Library of America, 1984)
James Madison (Considered the father of
the American Constitution) states;
"Ecclesiastical
establishments tend to great ignorance
and corruption, all of which facilitate
the execution of mischievous projects."
"The purpose of separation of church
and state is to keep forever from these shores
the ceaseless strife that has soaked the
soil of Europe in blood for centuries." (1803
letter objecting to the use of government
land for churches)
John Adams states;
"As I understand the Christian religion,
it was, and is, a revelation. But how has it
happened that millions of fables, tales, legends,
have been blended with both Jewish and Christian
revelation that have made them the most bloody
religion that ever existed?" (letter to
F.A. Van der Kamp, Dec. 27, 1816)
"I almost shudder at the thought of
alluding to the most fatal example of the
abuses of grief which the history of mankind
has preserved -- the Cross. Consider what
calamities that engine of grief has produced!" (letter
to Thomas Jefferson)
"The
divinity of Jesus is made a convenient
cover for absurdity. Nowhere in the Gospels
do we find a precept for Creeds, Confessions,
Oaths, Doctrines, and whole cartloads of
other foolish trumpery that we find in Christianity."
"The
question before the human race is, whether
the God of Nature shall govern the world
by his own laws, or whether priests and
kings shall rule it by fictitious miracles?"
"Have
you considered that system of holy lies
and pious frauds (Christianity) that has
raged and triumphed for 1,500 years? (Now
for 2,000 years)"
George
Washington the father of the United States
was very private about his beliefs, but
it is widely considered that he was a Deist
like his colleagues. He was a Freemason.
Historian Barry Schwartz writes: "George
Washington's practice of Christianity was
limited and superficial because he was not
himself a Christian... He repeatedly declined
the church's sacraments. Never did he take
communion, and when his wife, Martha, did,
he waited for her outside the sanctuary...
Even on his deathbed, Washington asked for
no ritual, uttered no prayer to Christ, and
expressed no wish to be attended by His representative." [New
York Press, 1987, pp. 174-175]
Paul
F. Boller states in his anthology on George
Washington: "There is no mention
of Jesus Christ anywhere in his extensive
correspondence." [Dallas: Southern Methodist
University Press, 1963, pp. 14-15]
After
George Washington's death, Dr. Abercrombie,
a friend of his, replied to a Dr. Wilson,
who had interrogated him about Washington's
religion, "Sir, Washington was a Deist." (John
E. Remsburg, Six Historic Americans (New
York: Truth Seeker Co.).
The
fact that the United States was never really
intended to be a "Christian" country
is further demonstrated in a little-known
legal document written in the late 1700s
circa that explicitly reveals the secular
nature of the United States. Officially called
the "Treaty of Peace and Friendship
Between the United States of America and
the Bey and Subjects of Tripoli, of Barbary," it
was commonly referred to as the "Treaty
of Tripoli." In Article eleven it states: "As
the government of the United States of America
is not in any sense founded on the Christian
religion; as it has in itself no character
of enmity against the laws, religion or tranquility
of Mussel men; and as the said States never
have entered in any war or act of hostility
against any Mohammedan nation, it is declared
by the parties that no pretext arising from
religious opinions shall ever produce an
interruption of the harmony existing between
the two countries." (Hunter Miller,
Treaties and Other International Acts of
the United States of America, vol. 2, docs.
1-40: 1776-1818. D.C.: U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1931).
Again I say thank God for secular government
and men and women who can tolerate the faith
of another human being. This is a luxury
available in few countries of the world.
India, the United States and the United Kingdom
are on that list but not all of Europe or
Russia, what to speak of Islamic countries,
none of which have such freedoms. There,
the crusade against Vaishnavism raises its
head again and again.
Recent reports from Russia and Poland concur
that the Orthodox Church and the Catholic
Church are attempting to minimize the activities
of Hindus (Hare Krishnas) in every way. And
in Uzbekistan the Islamic government has
recently closed down the Hindu places of
worship.
In the United States the Baptist Church
recently distributed pamphlets in America
making outrageous and offensive statements
about Hinduism. When asked to make an apology
to the Hindu community, the Church showed
no signs of genuine remorse. Similar activities
of the Church are also going on at this very
moment in India. Therefore all that is required
for the Christian crusade in India to be
successful is for intelligent people to stand
by and say nothing.
Contact Pradeep Sharma: pradeep5808@yahoo.com
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