This is precisely what has been happening in Mizoram since the time it was colonized by the Christian Mission.

In this video[1], Deepanshu Sangwan, the young ‘vlogger’ from Delhi, travels to Lunglei in Mizoram province of India, where he gets to talk with a local called ‘Andrew’ about the influence of ‘Christianity’ in Mizoram.

The conversation is prompted by Deepanshu’s discovery that the Mizo ‘Christians’ are ‘powerful’ enough to shut everything down on Sundays — no commerce, no transport, nothing… eateries don’t serve food, even private taxis aren’t available.

I understand missionaries were able to ‘Christianize’ the majority of the Mizo population in a matter of few decades in the 20th century, destroying in the process the great ethnic diversity of the land. (Thousands of people of the Bru tribe[2] were ethnically cleansed from the same province towards the end of the 20th century.)

It’s common to find a missionary raider accosting an unsuspecting evening walker in a park and starting a conversation whose ultimate purpose is to trap their victim into the Jesus cult.

Andrew tells Deepanshu that the Church has a decisive influence in all matters social and ‘political’ in Mizoram; no local election can be won without having church connections.

Paraphrased, he says: “You cannot have any influence or authority among people unless you are a member of the Church; even if you are an IAS officer, people won’t listen to you unless you derive your authority from the authority that the Church has.”

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What Andrew tells Deepanshu delineates the insidiously mafia-like manner in which the Christian Mission takes control of a community or society and chokes off its cultural autonomy, freedom and diversity.

Christian Mission justifies its existence by instilling in people’s mind the falsehood that Christianity was necessitated by the mutual conflicts between various communities — that it was Christianity which unified the mutually incompatible communities/cultures. False ‘sociology/anthropology’ has always been the basis of church planting and ethnocide in a targeted community.

A mafia or crime syndicate works by manipulating to become the main source of ‘protection’ for the targeted community from real or imagined dangers, and then holding the entire community hostage by asking for ‘protection money’ in return for safety. That’s precisely what Christian church does in Mizoram, as can be inferred by Andrew’s description of its influence.

Christianity is the world’s most evil ‘ethnocidal’ (i.e. ‘culture killing’) force because it openly rejects ‘cultural syncretism’ and works on a massive scale to destroy it.

Christianity supplants cultural autonomy and diversity by heteronomy and dreary homogeneity brought about by clerical bureaucracy.

That is precisely what has happened to Mizoram since the time it was colonized by the Christian Mission.

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Christian missionary predators are increasingly a nuisance in the locality of Noida city where I live.

Their primary target: the ‘Hindu’ people.

It’s common to find a missionary raider accosting an unsuspecting evening walker in a park and starting a conversation whose ultimate purpose is to trap their victim into the Jesus cult.

I overheard one such conversation between a Christian converter and a woman (sporting a bindi on her forehead) with her very young child in a public park this Saturday afternoon and intervened (successfully, I think).

The Jesus salesman was giving the woman a long (and pretty improbable) spiel on how pandits/jyotishis ‘exploit’ innocent people. I realized then I’d seen the creep earlier – on the prowl in public parks and spinning similar yarns about the evilness of ‘Hindu’ pandits and ultimate saviourship of Jesus.

I ask him which church he has come from.

“Phase two (Noida),” he answers, hoping perhaps he has another potential prey.

I then turn to the woman and tell her (among other things) that the man you’re chatting with wants you to convert to Christianity — that’s the whole purpose of the improbable tale he’s telling you.

The woman seems to understand and nods and smiles to convey her understanding — while the man shtums up.

Shortly thereafter the woman stands up to leave the park — and the man slinks off without saying another word.

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That’s nothing compared to the missionary raid we had at our home last August.

I’d posted the following account of this missionary invasion of our home in early September in the comments section of YouTube.

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I do feel that unless the people labelled ‘Hindu’ build better defences, they are easy prey to the missionary raiders.

In late August 2019, I found that a middle-aged woman has entered our home after ringing the doorbell that my 10-year-old answered. She said smilingly she wanted to meet ‘aunty’ (my elderly mother who’s mostly bed-ridden).

Thinking she might be known to my mother, I didn’t say anything. Also because this woman kept saying that she often meets ‘uncle’ (my father) in the park.

I offered her water while she sat with my mother in her room, started a chat, and sounded concerned about her health and well-being.

Thinking she must be one of those people who want to earn some punya by going out of their way to be nice to the elderly, I proceeded to make tea for her and my mother, all the while catching some words and phrases of her chat coming from my mother’s room.

Ten minutes into her chat, I realized she was talking about things like how ‘Parameswar is concerned about you’ and how much ‘Parameswar loves you’.

That made me agog and a bit perturbed by the possibility that I might inadvertently have allowed a Christian missionary inside our home, even though (I thought) it was also possible that she belonged to the Brahma Kumaris sect which I am well acquainted with and one of whose centres we have near our residence.

So I made greater effort to overhear what she was telling my mother and soon realized she was indeed a Christian missionary.

It was a disturbing thought that a stranger is inside my home trying to ensnare my mother into the evil cult of Jesus! It had never happened in my life before. I felt as if the missionary predators had finally been able to breach our defences.

I realized at that point that this stranger was not previously known to my mother and her refrain that she often met my father in the park was her pretext for this raid at our residence. (I learnt later that she did meet my father in the park once or twice and gave him a pocket Bible.)

Not that I was entirely unprepared to confront a Christian missionary — having spent a lot of time in the last few years thinking and reading up on the ethnocidal ways of Christianity and writing about it.

Within about five minutes of her ‘Parameswar-loves-you’ humbug, I decided to turn off the gas-stove (no tea for a missionary raider!) and confront her.

I interrupted her chat calmly by asking her whether she has come from the church which is at a stone’s throw away from our housing society.

She: No, no, no… I have not come from the church… I have just come here to meet aunty… I live nearby and often meet uncle in the park; so I felt like meeting aunty…

Me: So you go regularly to the church or only on Sundays…?

She: I have not come from the church… I am actually a Sharma brahmin… but I do believe in Jesus… One can go to the church… for developing fellowship…

Me: You are brahmin and you go to the church…?

She: Who said I am a brahmin?

Me: You said you are a Sharma brahmin only about five seconds ago…

She: Does one cease to be a brahmin if one goes to the church?

Me: So what’s the point of going to a church and still calling oneself a brahmin? Won’t your God love you and be concerned about you if you don’t go to the church? Doesn’t your God have a presence in this room? Or is this room completely devoid of your God’s influence and reach? Won’t those like us who don’t go to a church for “fellowship” have the benefit of God’s love and concern?

And what kind of “fellowship” is this that demands that you leave your natural fellowship or community in which you were given birth by your mother bearing incredible pain and brought up by your parents and you had all kinds of loving relations – brothers, sisters, grandparents, uncles, aunts, cousins, nephews and nieces, friends, acquaintances…?

Your entire being is because of this natural fellowship in which you were born and brought up to be a sensible human being with sanskars? When you already have this fellowship, what does a “church fellowship” mean and what can it give you?

What kind of fraud is this “church fellowship” that claims to give you something that you already have and gives you a “fellowship” that you can get only by abandoning your natural fellowship?

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This is part of the whole exchange I had with the woman, reproducing which would take up another 600 words.

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Overall I think I had this ‘debate’ well under control and this woman had hardly anything sensible to say to defend what she had sneakily been intending to achieve by raiding our home.

So she tried to shame me on my invoking of the concept of ‘sanskars’ (with me arguing that our natural fellowship or community gives us absolutely everything that we need: loving care, socialization, relationships, physical comforts, and most importantly ‘sanskars’.)

She: The way you are talking to me, I can see very well what kind of sanskars you have…

Me: I still must have better sanskars than someone who is deluded enough to think there is some stupid thing called “fellowship” of a church that one can get by abandoning one’s natural community which gave one everything one needed? Enough now, please get out of my home at once!

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I told her twice or thrice to leave my home. She continued stubbornly to sit with my mother for another 7-8 minutes and then proceeded to leave.

While she left, she tried some more virtue signalling and trying to make me feel how savage I have been to a messenger of Godly love and compassion, but I didn’t allow her any more conversation — and even shouted a few slogans as she made her way out of my house!

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That’s how I handled a missionary raider, but I do feel that unless the people labelled ‘Hindu’ build better defences, they are easy prey to the missionary raiders. We do need all-India legislation against the ‘conversion’ fraud.

References:

[1] HOW CHRISTIANITY SPREAD IN MIZORAM? Feb 07, 2020, YouTube.com

[2] Ground Zero | Being Bru in Mizoram Dec 15, 2018, TheHindu.com