The Guardian (USA)

India bans Mother Teresa charity from receiving funds from abroad

- Hannah Ellis-Petersen in Delhi

The Indian government has blocked Mother Teresa’s charity from receiving funds from abroad, just days after it faced a police investigat­ion for “hurting religious sentiments of Hindus” amid rising intoleranc­e towards Christians in India.

The Missionari­es of Charity, which was started by Mother Teresa in 1950 and runs a network of shelters across India led by nuns to help the poor, was denied the licence to continue to receive funds from abroad, cutting the charity off from vital resources.

The home ministry, which made the decision on Christmas Day, said it had come across “adverse inputs” when considerin­g the applicatio­n.

The rejection of the applicatio­n comes less than two weeks after Hindu hardliners accused the charity of carrying out forced conversion­s of Hindus to Christiani­ty in a home for girls it runs in Vadodara in the state of Gujarat.

The accusation­s, which the charity fiercely denies, were that the charity was “luring” poor young Hindu women into becoming Christian by forcing them to read Christian texts and take part in Christian prayer.

“The institutio­n has been involved in activities to hurt the religious sentiments of Hindus intentiona­lly and with bitterness,” a report filed to the police alleged.

“The girls inside the Home for Girls are being lured to adopt Christiani­ty by making them wear the cross around their neck and also placing the Bible on the table of the storeroom used by the girls, in order to compel them to read the Bible … It is an attempted crime to force religious conversion upon the girls.”

A spokespers­on for the Missionari­es of Charity rejected all the allegation­s as unfounded. “We have not converted anyone or forced anyone to marry into Christian faith,” he said.

The accusation come amid a wave of anti-Christian intoleranc­e and violence that has been spreading across India, with rightwing Hindu nationalis­t groups accusing Christians of forcing Hindus to convert against their will, or through bribes.

Christian pastors have been attacked and church services violently disrupted in recent months as antiChrist­ian hysteria has grown, and over Christmas there was an unpreceden­ted spate of attacks against the Christian community, including the vandalisin­g of a statue of Jesus Christ.

The refusal by the government, which is ruled by the Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata party (BJP), to grant a new licence to Mother Teresa’s charity has been seen by many as indicative of a growing hostility towards Christian organisati­ons operating in India.

In recent years, the BJP government, led by the prime minister, Narendra Modi, has put a tight rein on NGOs receiving foreign funding, particular­ly those that have been critical of the government, and both Greenpeace and Amnesty Internatio­nal are among those who have had their accounts frozen by the government.

In a statement on Monday, the Missionari­es of Charity confirmed that its renewal applicatio­n had been denied, and that it would not operate any foreign funding accounts “until the matter is resolved”.

 ?? ?? India’s government has blocked Mother Teresa’s Missionari­es of Charity organisati­on from receiving funds from abroad. Photograph: Bikas Das/AP
India’s government has blocked Mother Teresa’s Missionari­es of Charity organisati­on from receiving funds from abroad. Photograph: Bikas Das/AP

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