NCCI echoes on the WCC assembly theme
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WCC pre-assembly conference in India
Human right activists working on social issues also addressed the consultation and reflected on the assembly theme from their perspectives of struggle for justice and peace. Bishop Dr Taranath Sagar, President of the NCCI said, “Justice and peace are to be established not for a life of comfort and prosperity but for the fullness of life of God’s entire creation”. “God’s call to be partners in his mission to establish peace with justice in the world is a call to uphold the human dignity and integrity of all God’s creation,” he added.
Rev. Dr Sunil M. Caleb, Principal of the Bishop’s College in Calcutta, said, “As we groan in the midst of multiple crises facing the world today, we at the grass roots are called to display new patterns of life and action.” The powers of evil, he continued, can only be resisted through deep spirituality and dependence on the God of life who seeks justice and peace for all people.
Dhirendra Panda, a human rights activist from Odisha State asked the churches to support people’s struggles against companies like Pohang Iron and Steel Company (POSCO) from South Korea, a corporation which is conducting a multibillion dollar steel and port project in Odisha. “Our lands are going to be taken away by the POSCO. The Odisha state is using all its machinery to acquire land for POSCO. Several human rights violations have taken place,” he explained. “Since, POSCO is a South Korean Company, we earnestly request the NCCI to campaign with the WCC and Korean churches to request that POSCO withdraw from the iron and mining project,” he added.
At the consultation an orientation session on the WCC assembly was conducted by Dr Mathews George Chunakara, Director of the WCC’s Commission of the Churches on International Affairs. He said that the theme of the assembly is “immensely relevant to the Asian contexts where peoples’ struggle for justice and peace is pertinent and a large number of Asians are denied peace with justice.”
Rev. Dr Roger Gaikwad, General Secretary of the NCCI, shared that the Indian participants will act in various capacities at the WCC’s assembly. They will be a contributing resource by speaking from their rich experiences and theological insights derived from Indian contexts, he added.
Among other speakers at the consultation were Fr. Jacob Joseph of the Malankara Syrian Orthodox Seminary, Udayagiri, Dr Awala Longkumer, Feminist Theologian, Rev. Chandramani Khanna, Pastor of the Church of North India Jammu-Ksahmir, Ms Sundari and Ms Milret, anti-nuclear power plant activists from fishing communities in Tamil Nadu, Rev.Christopher Rajkumar, Executive Secretary of the NCCI, and Rev. Dr Peniel Rajkumar, WCC Programme Executive for Inter-Religious Dialogue and Cooperation.
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