https://emalayalee.com/vartha/289066
A Cause to Live for - A Cause to Die for!
Sir, what is this life if we have nothing to die for? The young management
professional Manjunath is said to have asked his professor Debashish Chatterjee
while he was an IIM-L student. And he literally did that - died for a
cause, which he couldn't set aside, despite the non-cooperation, ill-will and
threats, and the temptations.
I watch the Hindi movie made after his life, and the contrast emerges before
me of the Lord's dedicated in the catholic church, especially a few of the
higher-ups in the ladder faced with the numerous allegations including
mismanagement of church funds, and illegal and non-transparent collection of
funds, the latter purportedly for building church institutions.
Contrasted also by their cowardly and obsequious appeasement of an avowedly
anti-other agenda possessing BJP government and its leadership (as perceived by
the mainstream media and quite a few of the thinking community members.
Not that there aren't thinking people who think with and justify them, and
their stance). It is alleged that this is so because they are afraid to die,
they are afraid to be dispossessed of their numerous possessions, and they have
no cause worth to die for. Perhaps, they may defend themselves, crudely aping St. Paul justifying his need to continue to live for the sake of the believers (Phil 1:24) saying, 'I
am willing to die, but it is for the sake of the church institutions that I am
trying to play along'. The church has been deprived by the leadership of
a cause that it may have worth dying for!! A cause of justice, of equality, of
invincible goodness.
In spite of the few hundreds or thousands killed or displaced in Orissa, or in several other states of India, in spite of the odd Stan Samy or Graham Steins or Sr Ranimaria or Dayabai or Mother Teresa or Sadhu Ittiyavirah, the institutional church appears to have everything to protect than give up - its institutions (of which I am very much part of) and the thousands depended solely on them!
Even as I make these notes, the facilities of my previous work place, Sacred
Heart College, explicitly a Christian, Catholic, Minority, but public, higher
education institution, have been kept open to welcome the Prime Minister
Narendra Modi to address 'Yuvam', a youth gathering sans any political barriers
(as claimed by the organisers), but evidently organised by BJP to promote its
interests. Many have raised issues with this gesture of the SH management
- whether they are doing the right thing in opening up their facilities for a
programme organised by a political party of BJP's political philosophy.
I wondered if I were heading the institution whether I would have acted any
that differently. I had invited him, as the PM of India, twice, to
inaugurate and conclude our platinum jubilee celebrations, and the response was
not negative. There was the preliminary security inspection and positive
reporting, but then it was COVID, and then, I vacated my office... and perhaps,
there ended it.
In spite of my reservations regarding its almost evident anti-other
fundamentalist neo-hindutwa (contrasted with old -vedic(?)- hindutwa, where some
of the practices considered fundamental in the new avatar as hindutwa, had
never been thought of as a great virtue - e.g., the virtue of vegetarianism,
cow protection, beef eating etc.), I would have easily given in for the
attraction (temptation) of having the PM of India being on the campus -
perhaps, that is plain expediency. I don't know, as viewed by Joseph C
Mathew, the popular political analyst among Malayalees, whether this is falling
for the temptation of 'worshipping the devil to obtain all the glory and
splendour that he promises' (Mtt 4:9). Perhaps, it is.
But given the way 'Yuvam' is put across, even beyond expediency, I would
have agreed. For, it is claimed that PM will address the youth and himself will
answer the questions raised by the youth. This is very significant. Though,
definitely, it is likely that the party will see to it that only comfortable
questions and questioners come up, still I consider that an opportunity.
The claim is also that he will receive suggestions. It is very important not to
lose any such opportunity to engage in dialogue, and I hope that SH could have
set as a condition that at least 3 or 4 of its representatives (students) would be
asking pertinent questions. And, apart from all these, the very name chosen, is
appealing to me - for once, it has tried to shed the hindiization fad, of
dropping the samvratokaaram of names that make them typically
Malayalam. I don't know whether there is such a word as 'yuvam' in
Malayalam - but at least it appears evidently Malayalam and evidently implying
something to do with the youth.
But back to the vital issues - of being a Christian in the land and
proclaiming one's faith - I think Christians have to grow up and stand up for
this constitutional right of freedom of thought, expression, faith, belief and
worship, which includes the freedom in engaging in dialogue, publicly affirming
one's faith or convictions (political, religious or ideological) and changing one's
stance and belief if one's conviction changes, and affirm the same, without
having to manipulate or denigrate anyone, nor fear any force. I think
Christian leadership should have been asking for this right, and if required,
prepared to die for it, or even forgo one's institutional powers, while perhaps
also appealing for minimum guarantees for the farmers (not merely of rubber
cultivators) and definitely, of equal treatment based on social backwardness of
the Dalit Christians, and while at the same time, also doing all that is possible
in their own limits to lend them equal dignity and opportunities for growth,
treating the same as a top priority.
The educational mission, the fulcrum on which, basically the present day
Christian religious presence in India turns, should examine whether that
education is conscientiously promoting such opportunities and such outcomes in
its nationwide educational network. If they can confidently make an evidence-based
claim to that, then the mission can be considered Christian. A cause
worth even dying for! My experience as an educator and educational
administrator in Christian institution says, in spite of some token efforts
from my side, that it has not been so, it is not so. We are indeed prisoners of
our institutions and prisoners of the expediency that emerges out of them. And,
likely, that I am emboldened to make such statements, since I am out of
them.
Actors remain relevant when they are acting, attracting an audience ( the best actors have a longer mind-life - just like shelf-life for material object). But lies have only very limited life - they will be exposed, sooner they are tested against the truth. Let's hope, all the liers too have their day sooner than they expect it to come - which is inevitable. Let's hope the 'Sacred Heart' becomes the catalyst in that ππΌππΌππΌ
ReplyDelete