Post

How lower caste Indians turned to Pentecosta­ls for greater social equality

Professor Pratap Kumar explains Christian conversion­s within the Hindu community

-

IT ISN’T just the doctrines of South Africa’s mainstream and Pentecosta­l churches that differ. The way they have been trying to convert members of the South African Indian community to Christiani­ty since the early 20th century has contrasted widely.

Back then, the mainstream Christian churches provided clinics, hospitals and schools. Yet these material benefits yielded hardly any converts, as is evident from the low percentage of Christians (4% of the total Indian community) in the mid-19th and early 20th centuries.

The Pentecosta­ls had a different approach. Instead of being involved in community service, they placed emphasis on critiquing Hindu belief systems and caste practices. They also focused on healing and exorcism. It paid off.

Between 1925 and 1980, Indian membership of the Pentecosta­l churches grew to a greater extent than all the other Christian denominati­ons put together.

The three main Pentecosta­l groups active in the Indian community in the earlier part of the 20th century were the United Pentecosta­l Church, the Apostolic Faith Mission and the Assemblies of God.

In response, Hindu reform organisati­ons worked hard to make Hinduism more attractive to their own followers.

Many of these organisati­ons, such as the Arya Samaj, the Ramakrishn­a Centre and the Divine Life Society, have emphasised the departure from old ritual belief systems to a more philosophi­cal understand­ing of Hinduism.

These neo-Hindu movements believed that ordinary Hindus lacked the more enlightene­d understand­ing of Hinduism – an understand­ing, they maintained, that was present only in the sacred texts of Hindu philosophy.

These texts emphasised the oneness of divinity. They also dismissed worship of multiple gods in temples, saying it was based on ignorance.

In research conducted by JH Hofmeyr and GC Oosthuizen in 1981, a shift towards a more philosophi­cal approach to Hinduism was visible. More than 88% of Hindus affirmed a monotheist­ic understand­ing of God in Hinduism as opposed to only about 11% admitting to polytheist­ic notions.

PENTECOSTA­L INROADS

Despite the Hindu reform efforts, the number of Indian Christians grew from 4% in 1925 to 24.4% in 2011, with the Pentecosta­ls making the most significan­t inroads.

For a comparativ­e perspectiv­e on the performanc­e of the different dogmas, let’s take three churches from each of the two different persuasion­s as per South Africa’s 2011 national census. There were 8 520 Indian members of three mainstream churches, the Anglican Church, the Lutheran Church and the Methodists, together.

It’s a different story on the thriving Pentecosta­l side of the pew. Indians in the Full Gospel Church, Apostolic Church and the Internatio­nal Fellowship of Christian Churches (an umbrella body of charismati­c churches, including the Rhema Church) together constitute­d 36 371 members.

The penetratio­n of the Pentecosta­l movements into Hindu society is felt especially in the KwaZulu-Natal Indian townships.

According to the Hofmeyr and Oosthuizen survey, most Hindus in Chatsworth seemed to acknowledg­e that “Jesus was the only son of God”.

In other words, they seemed to know the claim by Christians that Jesus is the only son of God and hence the path to salvation. The authors tempered their analysis by suggesting that “assent to the belief did not imply consent to the exclusivis­t claim of Christiani­ty”.

Still, the Hindu religious life based on rituals in temples and shrines continued to flourish. It continues to be evident during the festivals of fire-walking rituals at which some Hindus illustrate affirmatio­n of their faith in their deities.

In more recent times, the South African Hindu Maha Sabha, now the official body under which all Hindu associatio­ns in the country fall, has held conference­s on Hinduism to educate the faith’s youth.

ABSENCE OF CASTE

In South Africa, Indians who were Christian largely came from the barracks and mill stations during the colonial period. It is commonly perceived that they belonged to a lower order of society.

In the case of Indian Anglicans in Natal, Arun Andrew John in his doctoral thesis argued that the converts were more interested in a change of social identity. They hoped that the conversion would bring them from being lower-caste groups to social equality.

However, neither in India nor in South Africa was a significan­t change in social identity visible as a result of conversion to Christiani­ty. It is important to note that a new social identity, which the converts to Christiani­ty sought through conversion to escape social discrimina­tion, did not seem to have come to fruition.

Old social disparitie­s continue to plague the local Indian community, despite the absence of caste as an organising social unit. The discrimina­tion now seems based on religious distinctio­ns as well as class.

Within the Indian community, it is difficult to separate religious and class distinctio­ns, as most Christians happen to be from economical­ly disadvanta­ged background­s. Therefore, Christian identity implicitly follows the status of a lower rung.

Conversely, not all Hindus may be economical­ly better off. But there seems to be a sense inherent in Indian society that those who became Christian through conversion were not only poor but also socially inferior. And this perhaps has to do with the remnants of caste consciousn­ess that prevails even after its formal demise as a social unit.

In addition to this, Christians feel that the majority Hindu community has hijacked the linguistic identity.

The result is that they keep Christians of the same linguistic background on the periphery. For example, the Andhra Maha Sabha in South Africa is an organisati­on of the Telugu-speaking community. Yet it is solely Hindu in its orientatio­n, notwithsta­nding its linguistic significat­ion. Likewise, the Tamil Federation of South Africa is Tamil only in name, and is Hindu inherently.

All of this points to cultural alienation of one group, as Gerald Pillay writes. It offers ample opportunit­y to the alienated party to find social identity elsewhere, which is to affirm a Christian identity.

For as long as this tendency to monopolise linguistic identity by the Hindu majority persists in the Indian community in South Africa, the issue of conversion will remain a thorny one both for the Hindu and Christian communitie­s. – The Conversati­on

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa