Preparing
for the harvest ...
A new mood of aggressive evangelism has been emanating from America.
Well-funded, superbly networked,
backed by the highest of the land, seized of its moral supremacy, it has
India as one of its key targets, reveals
VK Shashikumar in a disturbing exposé
This
could be the plot of a fevered thriller. A jingoistic president, multi-million
dollar corporations, high technology, a grand if furtive mission, networks
spanning the globe, and biblical invocations.
Only it's real. And
its got India in its crosshair.
Religious expansionism
has not witnessed this scale, scope, and state resources in a long time.
Detailed investigations by Tehelka reveal that American evangelical agencies
have established in India an enormous, well-coordinated and strategised
religious conversion plan. The operation was launched in the early 1990s
but really came into its own after George W Bush Jr, an avowed born-again
Christian, became president of the United States in 2001. Since then,
aggressive evangelists have found pro-active support from the new administration
in their efforts to convert some sections of Indian society to Christianity.
At the heart of this complex and sophisticated operation is a simple strategy-convert
locals and then give them the know-how and money to plant their own churches
and multiply.
Around the time that
Bush Jr moved into the Oval office, a worldwide conversion movement, funded
and effected by American evangelical groups, was peaking in India. The
movement, which began as AD2000 & Beyond and later morphed into Joshua
Project I and Joshua Project II, was designed to be a sledgehammer-a breathtaking,
decade-long steamroller of a campaign that would set the stage for a systematic,
sophisticated and self-sustaining "harvest" of the "unreached
people groups" in India in the 21st century. It was just as the operation
was taking off that the script changed. Much to the delight of American
evangelicals, one of their own, George Bush Jr, became the occupant of
the White House.
In a major policy
decision taken very early into his presidency, Bush, on January 29, 2001,
unveiled a "faith based" social service initiative that included
a new White House office to promote government aid to churches and Christian
faith-based organisations. This, in effect, threw the massive weight of
the federal government behind religious groups and religious conversions.
The Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives was set up in the
White House in the first week of February 2002 and a man called Jim Towey
was appointed director. (A snap introduction to Towey: he was the legal
counsel to Mother Teresa in the late 1980s.)
Though Bush's initiative to fund "salvation and religious conversion"
is stalled in the Congress over constitutional and civil rights concerns,
he has pushed for its implementation through executive orders.
White House-Christian
Coalition nexus
The American press
is replete with reports on Bush's largesse to faith-based organisations.
They say it's his "return gift" to the Christian Right for having
loyally supported his presidential campaign. The Christian Coalition,
founded by American TV evangelist and head of the multi-billion Christian
Broadcasting Network (CBN), Pat Robertson, played a crucial role in the
2000 election. Recently, in his TV programme, Club 700, broadcast on CBN,
Robertson created a stir by announcing that he is confident Bush will
win the 2004 election in a "blowout" because God has told him
so.
Indeed, Bush is keen to retain what we call the votebank and Americans
'the base'. After all, the Far Right Christian evangelists have also been
the most loyal backers of his hardline militarism in Afghanistan, Iraq
and elsewhere.
But there is another,
perhaps more important, reason why Bush is keen on supporting his evangelist
friends who run huge transnational missionary organisations (TMOs). In
the decade 1990-2000 they ran a global intelligence operation so complex
and sophisticated that its scale and implications are no less than staggering.
This operation has put in place a system which enables the US government
to access any ethnographic information on any location virtually at the
click of the mouse. This network in India, established with funding and
strategic assistance from US-based TMOs, gives US intelligence agencies
virtually real time access to every nook and corner of the country. (See
'List of TMOs Active in India')
Since Bush's ascendancy
to the presidency this network of networks has multiplied rapidly in India.
Bush supports conversion in India because he supports those American TMOs
who fund and strategise conversion activities in this country. Organisations
like the International Mission Board, Southern Baptist Convention, Christian
Aid, World Vision, Seventh Day Adventist Church and multi-billion enterprises
run by evangelists like Pat Robertson, Billy Graham and Roger Houtsma,
amongst many others, were instrumental in running a coordinated conversion
campaign in India under the banner of AD2000. These later became the Joshua
Project and when the decade-long movement officially closed down in March
2001, Joshua Project II was launched to sustain conversions and intelligence-gathering.
Graham's TMO, Billy Graham Evangelist Association, supports conversion
activities in Gurgaon, Haryana, and Kolkata.
When AD2000 was conceived for India, the plan was based on a military
model with the intent to invade, occupy, control, or subjugate its population.
It was based on solid intelligence emanating from the ground and well-researched
information on various facets of selected people groups. The idea was
to send out spying missions to source micro details on religion and culture.
The social and economic divisions in the various Indian communities were
closely examined. Given the oppressive and institutionalised caste system
in the Hindu society, American evangelical strategists chalked out plans
for reaching these various "unmixable" caste groups. The many
faultlines running through the country-divisions in terms of ethnicity,
caste, creed, language and class-were all factored in during the generation
of ethnographic data.
North India was designated the core target of American evangelists. It
was described as the "core of the core of the core" of a worldwide
evangelical movement conceived by fundamentalist American missionaries.
This movement that took shape over the 1990s, has now taken off because
of a unique collaboration between the American government and US-based
evangelical mission agencies. In the 1990s this movement was shaped by
the World Evangelical Fellowship (an international alliance of national
evangelical alliances), working with the AD2000 movement. It brought together
a wide variety of individuals and organisations, under the single goal
of achieving "a church for every people and the gospel for every
person by the year 2000." Its focus was missionary mobilisation and
church planting in India and other regions of the world where the Christian
population was negligible. This movement was also a massive intelligence
gathering exercise funded and supported by American missionary organisations
that were responsible for the election of George W Bush.
Global evangelism plans
AD2000 first attracted
attention at a convention of international evangelical missions called
Lausanne II in Manila in 1989. The movement then spread rapidly around
the globe to help catalyse evangelism. The strategy behind the movement
was to establish pioneering global partnerships to eventually provide
a church within every "unreached people group". Ralph Winter,
founder of the US Center for World Mission, characterised the movement
as "the largest, most pervasive global evangelical network ever to
exist."
This movement, spearheaded by Luis Bush from the movement's headquarters
in Colorado Springs, US, was planned for large conversion of people living
within the "10/40 Window". Incidentally, Billy Graham, a Christian
fundamentalist and rabid evangelist, who was responsible for George W's
"born again" Christian status and whom the president considers
as his godfather was the honorary co-chairman of the AD 2000 movement.
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