guardian.co.uk,
Henry McDonald, Friday 23 November 2012
A statue of Christ in Mumbai. Local people declared a miracle when 'tears' trickled down the statue at the Church of Our Lady of Velan Kanni. Photograph: Sherwin Crasto/Associated Press |
When water
started trickling down a statue of Jesus Christ at a Catholic church in Mumbai
earlier this year, locals were quick to declare a miracle. Some began
collecting the holy water and the Church of Our Lady of Velan Kanni began to
promote it as a site of pilgrimage.
So when
Sanal Edamaruku arrived and established that this was not a matter of holy
water so much as holey plumbing, the backlash was severe. The renowned
rationalist was accused of blasphemy, charged with offences that carry a
three-year prison sentence and eventually, after receiving death threats, had
to seek exile in Finland.
Now he is
calling for European governments to press New Delhi into dropping the case. And
on the first leg of a tour around EU capitals on Friday, he warned that India
was sacrificing freedom of expression for outdated, colonial-era rules about
blasphemy.
"There
is a huge contradiction in the content of the Indian constitution which
guarantees freedom of speech and the blasphemy law from 1860 under then
colonial rule," Edamaruku told the Guardian in an interview in Dublin.
"This
blasphemy law can affect anyone in India, even a girl recently who wrote on
Facebook against closing down a city because of the death of a famous local
politician. She was prosecuted under the blasphemy law and another girl who
'liked' her comment on Facebook was also arrested and then charged with
blasphemy."
Edamaruku,
who has the support of rationalists and atheists such as Richard Dawkins, is
well known in India for debunking religious myths, and was already unpopular
among Indian Catholics for publicly criticising Mother Teresa's legacy in
Kolkata.
When the
state "miracle" was pronounced, he went to Mumbai and found that the
dripping water was the result of clogged drainage pipes behind the wall where
it stood. His revelation provoked death threats from religious zealots and ultimately
charges of blasphemy under the Indian penal code in the Mumbai high court.
"India
cannot criticise Pakistan for arresting young girls for blaspheming against
Islam while it arrests and locks up its own citizens for breaking our country's
blasphemy laws," he said. "It is an absurd law but also extremely
dangerous because it gives fanatics, whether they are Hindus, Catholics or
Muslims, a licence to be offended. It also allows people who are in dispute
with you to make up false accusations of blasphemy."
Edamaruku
said his exposure of the weeping statue was also a contribution to public
health in Mumbai as some believers were drinking the water hoping it could cure
ailments. "This was sewage water seeping through a wall due to faulty
plumbing," he said. "It posed a health risk to people who were fooled
into believing it was a miracle."
He has been
living in Finland since the summer. He was in Europe on a lecture tour in July
when his partner rang to say the police had arrived at his apartment. "I felt
really upset because under the blasphemy law you cannot get bail until the
court case begins. I would be in jail now if I had been at my apartment in
Delhi," he said.
He has
spurned an offer from a senior Indian Catholic bishop to apologise for the exposure
of the "miracle".
"The
Catholic archbishop of Bombay, Oswald Cardinal Gracias, has said that if I
apologise for the 'offence' I have caused he will see to it that the charges
are dropped. This shows that he has influence in the situation but he will not
use it unless I apologise, which I will not do as I have done nothing
wrong," he said.
"In a
way I am lucky because I have friends and supporters in Europe. I am well known
in India and have the telephone numbers of at least five Indian cabinet ministers.
And I have some means of fighting back. But what would happen to the common man
or woman if they were accused of blasphemy? They would be sent straight to jail
without any chance of bail," he said.
Edamaruku
asked for "mounting international pressure" particularly from Ireland
and other EU nations to be placed on the Indian government. The Indian state
would have the power to halt the prosecution before a court case, citing a lack
of evidence to pursue it, he said.
Mick Nugent
from Atheist Ireland, the organisation hosting Edamaruku's visit to the
republic and Northern Ireland next week, said Edamaruku's plight also
underlined the need for the Fine Gael-Labour government in Dublin to repeal the
Irish blasphemy law.
"Blasphemy
laws are very strange because they can be both very silly and also very
sinister. They are very silly because you are talking about crying statues and
moving statues or Virgin Marys appearing in tree stumps in Co Limerick. But on
the other hand these type of laws are used in Islamic countries to jail people
or sentence them to death. Or in Sanal's case facing a jail sentence for his
work exposing bogus miracles.
"The
Irish government should pay attention to Sanal's case and realise they must get
rid of this absurd and dangerous law. Because we shouldn't be so smug in
Ireland. After all we have had the hysteria about moving statues and a man
bringing people to a shrine in Co Mayo so they can look at the sun and see the
Virgin Mary."
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9. It can be no other way—simply, this is the physics that governs life in this universe. As Earth continues apace into successively higher planes, nothing with low vibrations in any form—physical bodies, subversive plans, theft, dishonesty, unjust laws and imprisonment, bigotry, cruel customs and deeds—can survive.
10. Moving on, no, it will not be quite like religions being “totally discarded and replaced by universal laws in the Golden Age.” When the truths come forth that science and spirit are one and the same and that religious dogmas were originated by early leaders of church and state to control the masses, people whose consciousness has risen beyond the constraints of third density will adhere to the spiritual aspects of their respective religions and the devised, controlling aspects will fall by the wayside.
11. One of the truths to come forth is that Zionism, which by dark intent has been made synonymous with Judaism, actually is a bellicose political movement within the Illuminati, and its aim for more than six decades has been to create conflict and instability in the entire Middle East. Zionists, who have wielded powerful influence within and behind major governments and their military forces, do NOT represent the Jewish peoples in Israel or anywhere else. And, like all other Illuminati factions, they have been committed to that cabal’s goal of global domination.
12. Although Semites are of diverse national origins and religions, the Zionists have been successful in convincing many that “anti-Semitic” is exclusively prejudice against the Jewish peoples and opposition to Israel’s right to defend itself from its “enemies.” By means of that blatant distortion, they obtained not only world sympathy, but also massive defense funding from Israel’s allies, most especially the United States, all of which served to increase the Illuminati’s vast profits from their industrial-military machine.
13. In addition to controlling the masses through dogmatic teachings, religions have served the dark purpose of divisiveness to such an extent that it resulted in centuries of trauma and bloodshed. Witness the Crusades, wars between Catholics and Protestants, pogroms against Jews, executions of “blasphemous” individuals who refused to “recant.” (Read More …)
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