12/14/2016, 13.47
INDIA
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Odisha has a new priest, faith strengthened in the pogrom (photos)

by Purushottam Nayak

Ordained on Monday, Fr Munib Pradhan celebrated his first Mass yesterday. In 2004 he saw the desecration of his parish; in 2008, he experienced the persecution of Christians in Kandhamal.

Cuttack-Bhubaneshwar (AsiaNews) – The Catholic Church in Odisha has a new priest, Fr Munib Pradhan, who yesterday celebrated his first Mass in front of 1,500 worshipers.

The new clergyman comes from Raikia Parish, in the village of Bakingia (Kandhamal district), where a group of Hindu extremists devastated the parish church and sowed terror among Christians in 2004. Later, in 2008, the district was overwhelmed by a wave of sectarian violence unleashed by extremists.

"Despite the persistent persecution,” said Juano Pradhan, the father of the new priest, “his vocation was stronger."

Fr Pradhan, the fifth of six siblings, remembers when his parish "was vandalised. There was great fear among Catholics. People wept bitter tears. Then I witnessed even more atrocious anti-Christian violence, but I was firm in my faith to follow Jesus and do the Lord's work. "

The priest was ordained on Monday (12 December) by Mgr Aplinar Senapati, bishop of Rayagada, in a ceremony held in the Church of Our Lady of Charity in Raikia in the presence of 3,000 faithful, 35 concelebrating priests, and 20 nuns.

The church itself was attacked by a group of 300 Hindu fundamentalists on 24 August 2004. Armed with sticks, they broke down the door, invaded the church and destroyed the statue of the Virgin, the crucifix and other sacred images. They opened the tabernacle and threw the Sacrament to the ground. Then they vandalised musical instruments and vestments, and set fire to the Bible and other liturgical texts.

In addition to the place of worship, the aggressors destroyed the homes of several Catholics.

All Church leaders condemned the criminal acts. Later, in the 2008pogrom, the village saw more persecution. The victims included 32-year-old Rajesh Digal, who was buried alive, and Samuel Digal and his mother who were burnt alive by extremists.

"The people who live in this region are [materially] poor but rich in faith, unity and integrity,” said Fr Pradosh Chandra Nayak, Raikia parish priest. “Eight years ago, our communities in Kandhamal had to go through the burning furnace of communal violence, a horrific holocaust, with dignity and nobility, with stoicism and serenity and sacrificed their lives and liberties.”

At present, “We must draw our strength from Jesus Christ, Our Lord, and have faith in the words of Tertullian, a Second Century Father of the Church who said: ‘The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church’.”

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