Christians in Kashmir are on edge about recent violence in
this border region.
"We fear for the future," said Bishop Peter Celestine Elampassery of
Jammu-Srinager in Indian Kashmir. "Christianity has been present in
Kashmir for 200 years and has never had any difficulty with Muslims or
Hindus."
Yet, "today in Kashmir there are many new Christian groups that are very
active in missionary work," he said. "These are causing alarm among
Hindu and Muslim people and also the local authorities, who fear a sort of
'Christian propaganda.' This has broken the existing harmony and explains the episodes
of violence in recent times."
The local press has reported rumors of thousands of conversions by the new
Christian groups.
In May a number of schools were attacked: St Luke's at Anantang, run by a
Protestant group, and Good Shepherd School in Pulwama, run by the Mill Hill
missionaries.
Kashmir is at the center of a quarrel connected with the Muslim secessionist
movement, which has generated a 50-year conflict resulting in more than 70,000
killed.
"For Kashmir, our hopes for peace depend on an improvement in relations
between India and Pakistan," Bishop Elampassery explained. The people have
had enough of the war, but on both sides, India and Pakistan, militant groups
are very active, he said.