International News

India ‘Cow Vigilante’ Murderers ‘Brainwashed By Propaganda’

By Nirmala Carvalho

Stray cows sit in the middle of the road in Bangalore, India, in 2016. The Catholic Church in India has criticized growing intolerance and mob violence targeting religious minorities over cow protection. (CNS photo/Jagadeesh Nv, EPA)

MUMBAI, India (Crux) – A brutal murder of a Tribal Christian on April 10 “goes against the pluralistic fabric” of India, says Archbishop Felix Toppo.

The murder was the latest in a series of “cow vigilante” incidents in the country, where Hindus attack Christians and Muslims who are accused of killing cows, which are considered sacred in Hinduism.

The incident in Jhumro village in Jharkhand state happened when a mob attacked a group of Tribal villagers who were butchering a 20-year-old ox in a field.

“In the evening I got to know that my ox had died. It was very old and has been with me for the last 20 years. I left it in my field and informed the villagers. I was not part of the group that went to carve it up,” Adranish Kujur, the owner of the ox, told The Indian Express. However, after the villagers arrived, Hindu activists claimed they killed the animal.

“The mob beat us for two hours – until we reached Jairagi village, about 1 kilometer away,” Peter Phuljans, one of the victims, told The Indian Express. The mob attacked the Tribals with swords, sickles, sticks and iron rods, severely injuring three of them, and killing another, a man named Prakash Lakra.

“The killing goes against humanity, against human rights and justice. Those who have committed this heinous crime are brainwashed by propaganda,” said Archbishop Toppo, the archbishop of Ranchi, the capital of Jharkhand.

Christians make up more than 4 percent of the population of Jharkhand state. Most of the Christians in the state belong to  India’s marginalized Tribals, who are indigenous people living largely outside the dominant Hindu caste system. They therefore face a double discrimination – for both their religion and ethnicity.

“The fringe groups want us out, they do not want us here. They want to threaten and frighten us to leave,”Archbishop Toppo told Crux. “But we have support from all over, from our majority secular Indians who understand our work and appreciate our charitable and educational work. We also have spiritual support from the Lord, and this enables us to continue our mission for bringing peace, justice and development for our people.”

Since 2014, India has been ruled by the Hindu–nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which has strong links to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a militant Hindu nationalist organization.

Since then, incidents of harassment against religious minorities have increased, with various Christians being detained or arrested for “attempted conversion,” and places of worship being vandalized.

Since Christians and Muslims eat beef, they are often targeted by Hindu nationalists, with social media often used to generate large mobs to attack anyone accused of killing a cow.

According to Human Rights Watch, at least 44 people died in cow-related violence between May 2015 and December 2018.