hidden image

‘We are of Jesus Clan; We Work for the Poor’

P. A. Chacko P. A. Chacko
02 Aug 2021

(The following is a response to the article titled “Marxist Jesuits are not for tribal welfare. India and Indian Catholics both must realise that” by Jaithirth Rao which appeared in the news portal The Print)


Jaithirth Rao has his saffron axe to grind, it appears! His article is drenched in saffron. His views are meant not just to tarnish the Jesuits but to subvert any humanitarian solidarity shown to the victims of exploitation. It is part of an orchestrated high decibel game the Sangh Parivar is playing to liquidate the Church in India. 

Rao should know that Jesus was born much before Marx. Jesuits are followers of Jesus. If Marx highlights the plight of the downtrodden, that does not mean that no one did it before him. Jesus did it. We follow Jesus. We stand with the victims of exploitation, be they Dalits, be they Adivasis or be they those exploited in a caste-ridden society. That does not make us carry the tag of ‘Marxists.’ Are you trying to resurrect Hitler and Mussolini on Indian soil?  

What is wrong with liberation theology? It spoke of Jesus’ liberative work to cure the sick, to release unjustly incarcerated prisoners, to free the oppressed. What is wrong with it?  No wonder, RSS objected to Mother Teresa being declared a saint. Because she took out a human being, half eaten by rats and vermin, and brought him back to life. Many such miracles, she did. Would Rao or the likes of him ever touch a leprosy patient and say ‘be cured’? Jesus did it. So did Mother Teresa. So do Christ’s followers all over the world. 

No wonder Rao picked on late Fr. Stan Swamy because he had the courage to stand with the victims of exploitation. How many of Rao’s Satgurus, or women Sadwins, would stand with the Dalits and the Adivasis to uphold their cause for rightful space in human society? You would torture them, skin them, and lynch them because they buy a cow and carry it to their farm. 

To shoot from behind mock screen is an easy escape by picking quotes at random and dish out for public consumption thinking that the public would swallow lies and distortions. Having studied in a Jesuit school does not mean that one knows all facts. Nor does it qualify one to talk about Christianity. Many with selfish motive passed through our portals to get qualified for climbing the ladder of power and pelf. Some have turned anti-Christ. So did Judas. Many have become ministers, bureaucrats and politicians. The genuine ones did profit and are doing good humanitarian work as alumni.

Jesuit education aims at making people ‘Men and women for others’. Some miss the boat. Rao seems to have missed out the gist. We never teach people to spit venom at others. 

Take note Mr. Rao. We are for tribal welfare. We do not belong to the Marxist clan or the Parivar Clan. We are of the Jesus Clan. As long as there is breath in us, we will show our solidarity not only with the Adivasis for their welfare, but also with those Dalits whom you downgrade as subhuman. 

Tribal welfare does not mean conniving with those who loot the resources of tribal areas. Nor does it mean rolling out red carpet to business lobbies to invade tribal areas and cause displacement and emigration of the poor landholders. We speak of justice. We swear by the Constitution of India. We stand with those unjustly treated. Our Master Jesus did so. 

Post Script: Rao’s is seemingly one of the strategies to tarnish and demolish the Church in India. We have seen many such attempts in central India and Eastern India. Now, the latest are incidents such as the Church demolition in Delhi, the recently reported RSS Chitrakoot resolution to eliminate ‘chadar and father’ (Operation minorities), and the attack on Nazareth Hospital at Mokama in Bihar. 
 

Recent Posts

Burial disputes involving Christians in parts of India raise profound constitutional questions on posthumous dignity, religious freedom, and equality. Denial of burial rites in public grounds is not a
apicture Adv. Rev. Dr. George Thekkekara
23 Feb 2026
History is replete with men who mistook endurance for integrity. Do not join their ranks. The office you hold is larger than any individual, and the nation's reputation is more precious than any caree
apicture A. J. Philip
23 Feb 2026
Recent political trends, parliamentary practices, institutional pressures, and majoritarian policies indicate an accelerating drift toward total electoral autocracy and a Hindu-majoritarian state, rai
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
23 Feb 2026
A botched AI Summit exposed the troubling gap between spectacle and substance. Rushed planning, opaque agendas, and borrowed showcases overshadowed real research. It reflects deeper systemic issues in
apicture Jaswant Kaur
23 Feb 2026
Minority activists engaging Western institutions report an expanding global network of RSS-linked diaspora organisations, lobbying, funding channels, and cultural fronts that promote a counter-narrati
apicture John Dayal
23 Feb 2026
As the world marks Social Justice Day, India's widening inequality, environmental decline, curbs on press freedom, precarious labour conditions, and marginalisation of vulnerable groups reveal a dange
apicture Cedric Prakash
23 Feb 2026
Anitha's AI-enabled home kitchen shows technology's double-edged sword: it creates income and autonomy for informal workers, yet algorithmic visibility, ratings, and the lack of contracts deepen preca
apicture Jose Vattakuzhy
23 Feb 2026
I have two hundred and six bones, Like any human being; Some are born with more. Three hundred at the beginning. Then fusion, growth, becoming, Numbers change, Caste doesn't.
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
23 Feb 2026
If a society cannot protect its women, cannot honour its brave, and cannot respect its talented, then it is not merely losing law and order.
apicture Robert Clements
23 Feb 2026
Communal hatred, seeded by colonial divide-and-rule and revived by modern majoritarianism, is corroding India's syncretic culture. Yet acts of everyday courage remind us that constitutional values and
apicture Ram Puniyani
16 Feb 2026