Bread Not Bibles for
Nepal
Posted: 05/01/2015
Suhag A. Shukla, Esq. HUFF POST
Headlines today are
dominated by death and casualty tolls tragically rising in the
aftermath of last week's earthquake which struck Nepal. Social
media is abuzz too -- people posting prayers and calling for
donations to one charity or another, or sharing human interest
stories. While we focus, as we must, on disaster relief, organizing
vigils and fundraisers, one story, in particular, captured my
attention -- not just because of the many shares on Facebook and
Twitter, but because of the emails we began receiving from
community members asking us at the Hindu American
Foundation, a human
rights and advocacy organization, to "please do
something."
It read:
Emergency Gideon Bibles
Rushed to Nepal
Where rescue and recovery, food, shelter, and
medical supplies and services are so desperately and obviously
needed, the story understandably elicited concerns as to whether
giving Bibles to the primarily Hindu, Buddhist, and Muslim victims
is either appropriate or ethical. It turned out, of course, that
the story appearing in The Lapine, a well-known satirical paper
from Canada, was just that -- satire. But, the sad truth is that
the story stirred such outrage because it is plausible. It's
plausible because of the exclusivist ideology that motivates
organizations like Gideon's and its ilk -- that is to travel around
the world and set up shop in order to save "unreached people" from
the darkness of their religions to some purported One True
Way.
At its core, we want to believe that religion
elicits the best that humanity has to offer -- love, compassion,
selfless service. In fact, for most believers and non-believers,
tragedies of the scale of Nepal's awaken a deep heart-opening
towards those who are facing unimaginable loss and hardship, no
matter how far or how different they may be. Some are moved to
donate, while others drop the comforts of their daily lives and run
into the eye of the storm -- to dig, to bury, to serve, and to
rebuild. But how do we react to another response -- one that comes
from deeply held notions of religious exclusivity. The trending
#SoulVultures provides a snapshot of what that can look
like:
[email protected] Praying 4
the lost souls in Nepal. Praying that not a single destroyed pagan
temple will b rebuilt & the people will repent/receive
Christ.
Praying for the
people of Nepal. The 10 -- 40 window to share Jesus is opening
greater than ever #sharethegospel
Pray that the
primarily HINDU and BUDDHIST people of Nepal come to SAVING FAITH
in the Lord Jesus Christ. What is the "world" praying
for?
Pray and give in
Jesus' name. #KathmanduEarthquake #Nepal via these great orgs.
@SamaritansPurse @WorldVision @compassion
This kind of religious exclusivism is not new, unfortunately.
Throughout history, it has manifested as crusades, conquests, and
the annihilation of countless peoples through imperialism. European
pagan, African, Polynesian, Native American, and Aborigine are just
a few of the indigenous traditions that have essentially been wiped
out of existence thanks to religious exclusivism. While methods for
such cleansings were overt and violent in the past, in modern
times, they're far more sophisticated and covert.
Christian exclusivism, as what we are seeing in some parts of
social media, undeniably thrives. In practice, it exhibits
as predatory
proselytization and
through initiatives such as The Joshua
Project,
which seeks through research to "highlight the ethnic people groups
of the world with the fewest followers of Christ." This "research,"
in turn, provides a battle map for evangelicals from around the
globe, and in particular, the U.S. and other "western" nations, to
pioneer their church-planting movement and do their part for
the Great
Commission targeting
the 10-40 Window.
Of course, all Christians are not exclusivists, but just like the
extremists of other religious traditions, those who are, are too
often the ones with the louder voice, carrying the bigger stick --
a stick which is not only beating down on the rights of others to
retain their religion, but also all those who fundamentally believe
in religious pluralism and mutual respect. This stick is also
constantly trying to institutionalize their particular religious
vision into legal, political, and educational infrastructures. This
can be observed in the active campaigns against marriage equality
and access to abortion here in the U.S., the push
to criminalize
homosexuality in
a number of African nations, as well as the global proliferation of
AIDS and family planning programs that preach abstinence and refuse
to provide birth control.
Because international law and many governments, including the
U.S.,
choose to deflect the issue of religious exclusivism into one of
religious freedom, wholesale license is given to some faith-based
groups and their members to propagate their narrow visions of the
saved versus the damned, without thought to the rights of those who
are on the receiving end of false damnation. Some of these
faith-based organizations have gone further than just
church-planting -- they have chosen to actively engage in
proselytization alongside their "relief work."
Earthquakes, tsunamis, or hurricanes in places
like El Salvador, Haiti,
India, Indonesia, and Sri Lanka --
all of these natural disasters have brought out the best of
faith-based humanitarian work and the worst. We see the worst when
ostensible aid workers denigrate local
beliefs, conduct
healings of
victims needing real medical attention, target
children through
child ministries, or even kidnap
children so
they can be "saved" by being raised Christian. This type of
predatory behavior must be called out for what it is -- a form of
violence and a serious human rights violation.
Religious exclusivism is the antithesis of religious pluralism,
mutual respect, and dignity. Especially in the wake of tragedy,
those who believe that the world's religious diversity is also part
of the world's mystique and beauty, must work together to ensure
that predatory tactics do not re-victimize victims.
Host countries must do a better job of
monitoring immigration
fraud as
many missionaries, to carry on their work undetected, are known to
enter countries like Nepal and India using visitor or student
visas, rather than the appropriate religious worker or missionary
visas.
As American taxpayers, we should insist that agencies such as USAID
monitor more closely the activities of implementing partners to
ensure that they are not participating in inherently religious
activities. And if they are, that such activities are conducted at
a separate time or place as U.S. laws require. Aid recipients
should be made aware of what U.S. government funded aid providers
can and cannot do vis a vis religious activities.
And as global citizens, we should join esteemed religious
leaders such
as the Dalai Lama and Rev. Desmond Tutu, in demanding that the
United Nations amend the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to
include "the right to retain" in the definition of religious
freedom so that the same protections that are afforded to those who
wish to propagate their views, no matter how expansive or narrow,
are also afforded to those who wish to keep their own.
Nepal clearly needs help, and the hue of race, color, or religion
matters not to the entrapped and the desperate. But even as we
revel in the stirring and fearless work people are doing inspired
by their faith, we must also ensure that the victims of Nepal's
earthquake are not victimized all over again by those conflating
the need for bread with the need for a book of another's
faith.