International Federation of Karnataka Christian Associations

Last updated

International Federation of Karnataka Christian Associations
AbbreviationIFKCA
FounderRonald Colaco
PurposeSpeak for Christians in Karnataka
Region
Karnataka, India
President
Ronald Colaco
Secretary
Michael Baptist

The International Federation of Karnataka Christian Associations (IFKCA) is an organization that represents Christian associations in the Indian state of Karnataka. It is active in addressing the concerns of the Christian minority in the state, which has been subject to repeated attacks by extremists.

Contents

Foundation

The IFKCA founder and President is the Non-Resident Indian entrepreneur Ronald Colaco. [1] [lower-alpha 1] Colaco opened the IFKCA office at Link Campus, Bajal, Mangalore, on 21 April 2013. At the ceremony the Reverent Fr Cyril Pinto, Parish Priest of Holy Spirit Church, Bajal, blessed the premises. [4] Colaco called on members of the Christian community to unite. He said, "The names of the people from the community are not included in the voters' list because political parties think their votes do not matter. Every political party will bother about us when we become an influencing or deciding factor." He also said that fundamentalists would hesitate to attack Christians if they were united. [1]

Activities

The IFKCA works with other organizations such as the Karnataka Missions Network Mangalore, which represents about 100 Protestant churches and organizations, Karnataka United Christian Forum for human rights, Mangalore Christian Council and the All India Christian Council (AICC). [5] In June 2010 the IFKCA joined with Mangalore Catholic Mahila Sanghatane, Catholic Sabha, Krishi Bhumi Samrakshana Samiti and Bharathiya Catholic Yuva Sanghatane in staging a protest in solidarity with the farmer Gregory Patrao. Patrao claimed that Mangalore Special Economic Zone Limited (MSEZ) had taken his land, which they now denied, and demolished his house. The demolition had been videotaped. Patrao's family belongings, farm equipment and produce had been seized. Louis Lobo of the IFKCA said, "The authorities on the first place did not give Gregory an opportunity to use his right to move to the court. Now after Gregory’s movement gained momentum and support, the officials are asking him to come and collect his belongings. The authorities should come and hand it over to Gregory." [6]

On 1 July 2011 Ronald Colaco, president of the IFKCA, met with RSS leader Dr Kalladka Prabhakar Bhat, with the goal of strengthening relations between the Christian and Hindu communities and bringing communal harmony. Colaco presented a flower bouquet to Bhat, who praised Colaco for his effort in gaining government funding for the Christian Development Board. Colaco denied that Christians had been unlawfully engaged in conversions. [3]

In August 2011 Colaco led a delegation of Christian leaders to congratulate Chief Minister D. V. Sadananda Gowda on his election and to present IFKCA demands for actions to improve communal harmony and to withdraw the charges laid against Christian youth after the 2008 attacks on Christians in southern Karnataka. The Chief Minister promised to ensure the cases were withdrawn, and to constitute the Christian Development Board. He expressed concern that the BJP was repeatedly blamed for the church attacks, in which the party had no involvement. [7] In December 2011 Colaco thanked the Sadananda Gowda for withdrawing the charges against the Christian youths. [8] In June 2012 the Holy Hill Catholic church in Mangalore was attacked and damaged by an unidentified group. Janardhana Poojary of the Congress Party blamed the Sangh Parivar for the incident. Dr Aloysius Paul D'Souza, Bishop of Mangalore, again called for action by the authorities. The IFKCA was among Christian organizations that condemned the attack. [9]

In March 2014 a group of Christian leaders from the IFKCA and the Federation of Konkani Catholic Associations (FKCA) protested against the decision by the Congress Party to not field any Christian candidates in the forthcoming elections for the 28 Lok Sabha constituencies in Karnataka. The leaders were headed by Charles Amber and including IFKCA secretary Michael Baptist. They said that almost 4% of the 62 million people in Karnataka were Christian, with large populations in Mangalore, Udupi-Chikmagalur, Karwar, Shimoga, Dharwad, Belgaum, Mysore and Bangalore. [10] They claimed the Congress government was "deliberately sidelining Christians from the top posts in the Government". They also said that the Christian Development Council, which the previous Bharatiya Janata Party government had set up, was "not being taken forward now". They said they would mark ballots NOTA (None Of The Above) in protest. [10]

In October 2014 Ronald Colaco led a delegation of Christian leaders that met Siddaramaiah, Chief Minister of Karnataka, and thanked him on behalf of the Christian community for rejecting the report by the Somshekar Inquiry Commission concerning the 2008 attacks on Churches, and for directing a fresh inquiry. [11] [12]

Notes

  1. Colaco has been involved in other philanthropical activities. In April 2012 it was reported that he had spent 27 million rupees to build the Holy Rosary Church for the 1,200 Catholics from Venkatala-Yelahanka, with a seating capacity of over 100. Colaco also helped rebuild the ancient Hoysala Hindu temple in Chikkajala. [2] Colaco had also donated to Mosques. [3]

Related Research Articles

Mangalore Metropolis in Karnataka, India

Mangalore, officially known as Mangaluru, is the chief port city of the Indian state of Karnataka. It is located about 352 km (219 mi) west of the state capital Bangalore, between the Arabian Sea and the Western Ghats mountain range. It is the major city in Karnataka state in all aspects after the capital city Bangalore. It is the only city in Karnataka to have all modes of transport—air, road, rail and sea—along with five other major cities in India. It is known as the Gateway of Karnataka and the Rome of the East. It is the largest city in the Tulu Nadu region of Karnataka. Mangalore is the second best business destination in Karnataka after Bangalore and the 13th best in India. The population of the urban agglomeration was 619,664 according to the provisional results of the 2011 national census of India.

Dakshina Kannada District in Karnataka, India

Dakshina Kannada is a district in the state of Karnataka in India. Sheltered by the Western Ghats on the east and surrounded by the Arabian Sea on the west, Dakshina Kannada receives abundant rainfall during the monsoon. It is bordered by Udupi District to the north, Chikmagalur district to the northeast, Hassan District to the east, Kodagu to the southeast and Kasaragod District of Kerala to the south. Mangalore is the capital city and the district headquarters. The district has three agro-climatic divisions:

  1. Coastal region consisting of Mangalore and Mulki taluks
  2. Intermediate area consisting of Moodabidri and Bantwal taluks
  3. Malnad region consisting of Sullia, Belthangady, Puttur and Kadaba taluks.
Vittal Town in Karnataka, India

Vittal is a village in the southern state of Karnataka, India. It is located in the Bantwal taluk of Dakshina Kannada district in Karnataka. The pincode of Vittal is 574243.

Mangalorean Catholics Latin Rite Roman Catholic community in southwestern India

Mangalorean Catholics are an ethno-religious community of Catholics following the Latin Rite from the Mangalore Diocese on the southwestern coast of Karnataka, India. They are Konkani people and speak the Konkani language.

D. V. Sadananda Gowda Indian politician

Devaragunda Venkappa Sadananda Gowda is an Indian politician serving as the Minister of Chemicals and Fertilizers in the Government of India in the Second Modi Ministry representing the Bangalore North constituency. He had also served as the 20th Chief Minister of Karnataka.

Popular Front of India organization

The Popular Front of India (PFI) is an extremist and militant Islamic fundamentalist organisation in India formed as a successor to National Development Front (NDF) in 2006. It acquired a multi-state dimension by merging with the National Development Front, Manitha Neethi Pasarai, Karnataka Forum for Dignity and other organisations. The PFI describe themselves as a neo-social movement committed to empower people to ensure justice, freedom and security The organisation has various wings to cater to different section of society, including the National Women's Front and the Campus Front of India.

Catholic Bishops Conference of India association of the Catholic bishops of India of all rites (Latin, Syro-Malabar,  Syro-Malankara)

The Catholic Bishops' Conference of India or CBCI is the permanent association of the Catholic bishops of India. It was established in September 1944, in Chennai. The CBCI Secretariat was located in Bangalore until 1962, when it was shifted to the national capital, New Delhi. The CBCI is a member of the Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences.

Karavali Ale, meaning "Coastal Waves" in Kannada, is a local Kannada daily newspaper published in Mangalore, Karnataka, India. The publication is owned and managed by its founders B. V. Seetaram and Rohini S. It is edited by Sathish N. Vaidya.

Daijiworld Media is an Indian private limited media company, headquartered in Mangalore, that provides news services, including the web portal, www.daijiworld.com. It was founded by Walter Nandalike, as www.daijidubai.com on 14 January 2001, primarily with the objective of relaying news from the Coastal Konkan region of India. It was later renamed as www.daijiworld.com, and established as a media company in 2007.

2008 attacks on Christians in southern Karnataka attacks directed against Christian churches

The 2008 attacks on Christians in southern Karnataka refer to the wave of attacks directed against Christian churches and prayer halls in the Indian city of Mangalore and the surrounding area of southern Karnataka in September and October 2008 by Hindu organizations, Bajrang Dal and the Sri Ram Sena. The attacks were widely perceived by Christians in southern Karnataka to be punishment from right-wing Hindu nationalist organisations because they had been outspoken about Christian persecution in Orissa, after the assassination of Hindu monk Swami Lakshmanananda Saraswati allegedly by the local Christian community and also because the New Life Fellowship Trust (NLFT), a non-denominational Christian Church, was alleged by Bajrang Dal to be responsible for forced conversions of Hindus to Christianity.

Nettala Muthappa Rai is an Indian businessman, philanthropist, and currently a social activist based in Bangalore, Karnataka, India.

Christianity is a minority religion within Karnataka, a state of India. Mangalorean Catholics are a community of centuries, though there also are Mangalorean Protestants. A Roman Catholic Diocese of Mangalore, a Roman Catholic Diocese of Belgaum, a Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Bangalore, a Roman Catholic Diocese of Bellary, a Roman Catholic Diocese of Gulbarga, a Roman Catholic Diocese of Shimoga, a Roman Catholic Diocese of Mysore, a Roman Catholic Diocese of Karwar, a Roman Catholic Diocese of Udupi are present in Karnataka. The second largest church in Karnataka is the Church of South India with Karnataka Central Diocese, Karnataka Northern Diocese and the Karnataka Southern Diocese. Gangavathi has Mennonite Brethren Churches. An Anglican Body-India Christian Mission Church has its existence in Doddaballapur of Bangalore rural right from 1920s. There is also an Orthodox Diocese of Bangalore. The state had a relatively high number of anti-Christian attacks in 2009. More than 20 churches were devastated by the Hindu nationalist movement Bajrang Dal in 2008. In 2008, Karnataka had more than 100 anti-Christian attacks.

Adoration Monastery of the Sisters of St-Clare building in India

Adoration Monastery of the Sisters of St-Clare is a Christian monastery in Hampankatta, Mangalore, Karnataka, India, near Milagres Church. On 14 September 2008 the 2008 attacks on Christians in southern Karnataka broke out here, quickly followed by some 13 others within one hour. The attacks began when a group of some 15 youths on motorbikes from the suspected Hindu nationalist organization Bajrang Dal arrived at the chapel at around 10.15 am, IST, shouting a pro-Bajrang Dal slogan. They entered the monastery and attacked it with lathis, desecrating the tabernacle and the Eucharist, the monstrance, a crucifix, the oil lamps, the vases on the altar and a few statues of saints. A couple praying in the church at the time were also reportedly beaten by the intruders. Two nuns were also reportedly injured.

B. K. Somasekhara Indian judge

B. K. Somasekhara is a sitting judge of the Karnataka High Court in India.

Basil Salvadore D'Souza was the Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Mangalore from 22 March 1965 until his death on 5 September 1996. He was the longest-serving bishop in the diocese's history.

Ivan D'Souza is an Indian politician who is currently a member of Indian National Congress. He has taken part in protests against the government.

D. P. Shettian was the second Bishop - in - Karnataka Southern Diocese of Church of South India headquartered in Mangalore where the Bishop's Cathedra is placed at the CSI-Shanthi Cathedral, Balmatta, Mangalore.

Dharmakkan Dhanaraj was an Indian Old Testament Scholar who taught at the Karnataka Theological College, Mangalore, a Seminary established in 1965 and affiliated to the nation's first University, the Senate of Serampore College (University).

Fedric Anilkumar is a Theologian who teaches at the Karnataka Theological College, Mangalore, a Seminary established in 1965 and affiliated to the nation's first University, the Senate of Serampore College (University).

Karnataka State Sunni Students' Federation is the Karnataka branch of the Sunni Students' Federation and an affiliated organisation of Karnataka Muslim Jamaat. The SSF was founded in 1989.

References

Sources