Commentary: Mumbai moves on after attacks

Bishop
E.P. Samuel, his wife, Monica (center), and M.V. Khristi cut a cake
celebrating the 28th anniversary of the Methodist Church in India.
UMNS photos by the Rev. Jacob Dharmaraj. |
A UMNS Commentary
By Jacob and Glory Dharmaraj*
Jan. 28, 2009
Not far from where terrorists staged attacks in Mumbai, the
Methodist Church in India celebrated its 28th year as an independent
Methodist denomination.
The call of the minaret, in the predominantly Muslim area where the
Methodist Center is situated, occasionally interrupted the Jan. 7
celebrations and reminded the worshippers of the interfaith matrix of
Mumbai.
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The Taj Mahal Palace and Tower, a luxury hotel in Mumbai, was a target of the November terrorist attacks.
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During our recent visits to the places where the terrorists had
acted, we observed the resilience of Mumbai as it came back to its
bustling routine life, gathering its teeming multicultural,
multi-religious, multilingual, and multiethnic mosaic in a
mega-embrace.
When we visited the three sites of the November terrorist acts, we
saw tourists haggling and shopping as effusive vendors beckoned on the
sidewalks and street corners of South Mumbai. Gun-toting national
guards and police bunkers, however, could be seen everywhere.
When we initiated a conversation with a few people near the Taj
Hotel and Leopold Restaurant about the attacks, it was clear the
residents have moved on. They were ready to talk about the present and
future, although some were displeased by the way the government
officials had handled the crisis.
The newspapers in India continue to analyze the impact of the
terrorist tragedy, while offering nonviolent options as a response to
the events. The Hindu, a leading newspaper, carried a Jan. 4 article by
Tabish Khair, who called for a celebration of the new year by “being
alive to the alternative experiences and realities” amid “specters of
economic crisis and terrorism” and being open to shaping a future that
would not be haunted by the nightmare of shrinking economic options in
the current global crisis.
Celebrate Methodist legacy
Against this backdrop, church leaders gathered in the Methodist
Center to affirm the church’s independence and celebrate the mission
legacy of William Butler, the first Methodist missionary to India. The
Methodist Church in India has affiliated autonomous status with The
United Methodist Church.
The Rev. Subodh Mondal, the denomination’s top executive, thanked
God in a special worship service for “all those missionaries, itinerant
evangelists (and) pastors who, like William Butler, with the Bible in
their hands and the cross in their hearts, have left the comfort of
their homes and have traveled to distant lands and places, to preach
the Gospel of Christ and to save us from ‘the second death.”
Bishop E.P. Samuel, presiding bishop of Mumbai Regional Conference,
spoke about the role of the church as a provider of “meaningful
intervention” and peace and reconciliation.
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Harriett Olson (left) is welcomed to
the Methodist Center.
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In the wake of the “hideous act of November 26, 2008,” though many
still felt insecure, he said, the church remembered that Jesus came “to
teach forgiveness, compassion, and peace.” Throughout Advent, the
church lit candles of peace in demonstration of this Christian witness.
Despite recent violence against Christians in other parts of India,
Samuel declared that the Methodist Church in India had grown in
strength, and its mission had always been to serve the less privileged,
the lost and the least.
Rather than bemoaning the loss of lives and property in recent
violence against the new Christians in India, he said, the church
should hail this as an opportunity to witness. “When you have been
through something, and when our Lord has been our comfort and joy
during these days, we will not be ashamed of the Gospel of Jesus
Christ,” he explained.
In times such as these, Samuel said, “God stretches us, like a rubber band. It does not break. It only stretches.”
Visible unity
Just like some of the missionaries who journeyed to India to convert
its people and who themselves were transformed by the encounters and
became mediators between the East and West, we were transformed by our
visit to the Methodist church in Bhandup, a town on the outskirts of
Mumbai.
We saw people chatting, smiling and enjoying each other’s company at
this newly built church. There was a sense of community. People in that
community knew each other, and there we witnessed a visible unity among
diversity. Their communal unity dispelled the negative image we form
sometimes about “slum dwellers.”
We noticed firsthand the joy of praying, sharing and rejoicing of a
minority Christian community surrounded by people of other faiths. We
were touched. The poor in the Methodist Church in India give joyfully,
willingly, for they all have a testimony. Every year, during the
anniversary celebration, they remember the missionaries sent by the
United Methodist Board of Global Ministries and renew their commitment
to serve and witness.
Our visit ended with celebrations of the opening of a woman’s center
by Samuel and his wife, Monica Samuel. Vijaya Deverjankar, a deaconess,
and Martha Peter Reed, president of the Women’s Society of Christian
Service in Mumbai Regional Conference, shared their ministries among
children in the slum areas of Mumbai and the work among the widows
respectively.
The poor continue to evangelize us.
*The Rev. Jacob Dharmaraj is pastor of the Shrub Oak (N.Y.) United
Methodist Church and a vice president with the National Federation of
Asian-American United Methodists. Glory Dharmaraj is a staff executive
with the Women’s Division, United Methodist Board of Global Ministries.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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Resources
BBC: Mumbai attacks
Methodist Church in India
Board of Global Ministries |