CONTEXT
India’s population is approximately 1.39 billion (2023 estimate), making it the second-most populous country in the world. The religious affiliation of India’s population is 80 percent Hindu, 14 percent Muslim, 2 percent Christian, 2 percent Sikh, and 2 percent other.
India gained independence from the United Kingdom on August 15, 1947. India’s Constitution opens with words stating that the country is both a republic and a democracy. In the preamble of its constitution, India is described as a “sovereign socialist secular democratic republic.” India has a powerful national government, but states vary in a substantial number of laws.
Article 25 of India’s constitution grants all individuals freedom of conscience, including the right to “practice, profess, and propagate religion.”
Since 2014, the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP), a Hindu nationalist party, has controlled India’s central government. At the national, state, and local levels, they have substantially damaged India’s democratic principles by persecuting the country’s religious minorities, including Muslims, Christians, and to an extent, Sikhs. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has long been associated with extreme Hindu nationalist policies. In 2002, in the Gujarat State on India’s west coast, two train cars carrying Hindus returning from a religious pilgrimage were set on fire at Godhra. Fifty-seven people were killed, mostly Hindus. Although it was never officially proven that Muslims started the fire or that the fire was accidental, the state government responded violently with over 900 Muslims killed and at least 150,000 displaced by rioting. Modi, who was then Gujarat Chief Minister, used the riots as a campaign tool for his successful reelection as he affirmed that India was a Hindu nation. Since becoming prime minister, Modi actions have drawn substantial negative international attention.
Freedom House is a highly respected organization founded on the conviction that freedom flourishes in democratic nations where governments are accountable to their people. Published since 1973, “Freedom in the World” is Freedom House’s flagship annual report, assessing the status of political rights and civil liberties throughout the world. “Freedom in the World” reports annually categorize countries as “Free,” “Partially Free,” and “Unfree.” Countries and territories scores include a combination of “Political Rights” scores and “Civil Liberties” scores. The higher the score, the freer the country. For years, India was classified as “Free,” but this is no longer the case. India was categorized as “Partially Free” in the 2023 “Freedom in the World” report that included 210 countries and territories. India’s score was sixty-six out of 100. India was last categorized as “Free” in 2020.
Narendra Modi: Early Life and Political Career
Narendra Modi, in full Narendra Damodardas Modi, (born September 17, 1950, Vadnagar, India), is an Indian politician and government official who rose to become a senior leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). In 2014, he led his party to victory in elections to the Lok Sabha (lower chamber of the Indian parliament), after which he was sworn in as Prime Minister of India. Prior to that he had served (2001–2014) as Chief Minister (Head of Government) of Gujarat state in western India.
Modi was raised in a small town in northern Gujarat, and he completed an MA degree in political science from Gujarat University in Ahmadabad. He joined the pro-Hindu Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) organization in the early 1970s and set up a unit of the RSS’s students’ wing, the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, in his area. Modi rose steadily in the RSS hierarchy, and his association with the organization significantly benefited his subsequent political career.
Modi joined the BJP in 1987, and a year later he was made the General Secretary of the Gujarat branch of the party. He was instrumental in greatly strengthening the party’s presence in the state in succeeding years. In 1990 Modi was one of the BJP members who participated in a coalition government in the state, and he helped the BJP achieve success in the 1995 state legislative assembly elections that in March allowed the party to form the first-ever BJP-controlled government in India. The BJP’s control of the state government was relatively short-lived, however, ending in September 1996.
Modi’s political career thereafter remained a mixture of deep controversy and self-promoted achievements. His role as chief minister during communal riots that engulfed Gujarat in 2002 was particularly questioned.
Source: Excerpts from “Narendra Modi,” Britannica, http://tinyurl.com/4p5xtjpy.
The Modi Government has been implicated in promoting Hindu nationalism in a variety of ways, such as state-supported anti-conversion laws. By February 2023, twelve of India’s twenty-eight states have passed anti-conversion laws. Courts have ordered some states to pause enforcement of these laws, but some states are actively charging individuals.
Hindu mob attacks are now quite-common despite the Indian Supreme Court warning it could become the new normal. Hindu vigilante groups often attack Muslims who are rumored to kill or trade cows (many Hindus believe that cows are sacred). A Human Rights Watch Report indicates that at least forty-four people have been killed by the vigilantes.
The same organization reported that in February 2020, major protests occurred against The Citizenship (Amendment) Act to India’s constitution that reduced eligibility for citizenship for non-Muslims from eleven years of living and working in India to six, though it excluded Muslims from this amendment. On February 23, fifty-three protestors were killed in New Delhi, forty of them Muslim. Further violence and riots occurred. An independent investigation by the Delhi Minorities Commission reported to Human Rights Watch that police refused to stop the violence and filed cases against Muslim victims.
To be fair, readers should know that a significant number of Hindus, as well as India’s Supreme Court, at times have opposed Hindu nationalism. It is also quite difficult to obtain accurate information about many of the incidents involving Hindus and Muslims because conflicting accounts of what happened regularly occur. The frequency of disputed accounts of Christian persecution tend to be much lower.
The Modi government has condoned, or not intervened, in a dramatic rise in persecution of India’s 69.5 million Christians. Although they represent only 5 percent of India’s population, India’s Christians often include “Dalits,” formerly “Untouchables” in the caste system so the situation is particularly poignant. Open Doors, a Christian Support Organization active in over seventy countries, helps persecuted Christians. The organization publishes an annual ranking of fifty countries where Christians face the most extreme persecution. In 2023, India ranked
eleventh in the world (The Sudan ranked tenth and Syria twelfth). Two excerpts from the most recent Open Doors report provide readers with an introductory overview of contemporary persecution of Christians in India. It is also useful to read the Open Doors explanation of the table.
Christianity Today, and multiple corroborating sources, confirm that beginning in May 2023 in Manipur, a state in northeast India, violence that in some ways exceeded the Open Doors report occurred. Religious and ethnic violence has resulted in the deaths of at least 142 people, the destruction of over 300 churches and hundreds of villages, and one of the largest violence-driven internal displacements in recent Indian history. Violence has caused more than 65,000 people to flee their homes and seek shelter elsewhere.
L. Kamzamang, a Delhi-based pastor working with refugees from Manipur, estimates as of September 2023 that had least 1,000 families are sheltering in that city.
NOTES:
1. “The Constitution of India,” Legislative Department, accessed August 31, 2023, https://tinyurl.com/4f7z6b29 (put page #)
2. Ibid.
Sources:
“People and Society,” CIA World Factbook, https://tinyurl.com/3b8ms626.
“Country Update: India,” United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, https://tinyurl.com/mtz7wv2n.
“Countries and Territories,” Freedom House, https://tinyurl.com/2p84b7nn.
“India’s Muslims: An Increasingly Marginalized Population,” Council on Foreign Relations, https://tinyurl.com/mryxppv7.
“India: Government Policies, Actions Target Minorities, https://tinyurl.com/2a6nrtrm.
“Violent Cow Protection in India, Vigilante Groups Attack Minorities” Human Rights Watch, https://tinyurl.com/28mdkwer.
Open Doors, UK, https://tinyurl.com/5yz77wax.
“Extremists Are Destroying Indian Christians’ Homes and Shattering Their Lives,” Christianity Today, https://tinyurl.com/y3rh7fsv.
“World Watch List 2023,” Open Doors, https://tinyurl.com/y5bffzy9 (all prior sources accessed August 31, 2023);
Christophe Jaffrelot, “Communal Riots in Gujarat: The State at Risk?” Heidelberg Papers in South Asian and Comparative Politics, Working Paper #3, July 2003, https://tinyurl.com/36c2rw6e.
“Timeline of the Riots in Modi’s Gujarat,” New York Times. August 19, 2005; https://tinyurl.com/mtx26zpy;
“Citizenship Amendment Bill: India’s New ‘Anti-Muslim’ Law Explained,” BBC, December 11, 2019, http://tinyurl.com/h6nam487.