Two Gospel for Asia (GFA) missionaries and several members of a GFA–affiliated church were targeted in by anti–Christian radicals in what is viewed as increase in persecutions against Christians in India throughout the recent Easter season.
According to GFA report, missionaries Chandan Chhinchhadi and Dinesh Toppo were attacked in their home around 2 p.m. on Easter Sunday. The two men had conducted Easter services at a GFA–affiliated church earlier in the day and were resting at their home when five anti–Christian extremists stormed in and began harassing them. The attackers beat the pastors for more than an hour while accusing them of forcing people to convert to Christianity and various other crimes.
The attackers even dragged the missionaries to the market at the center of the village in an attempt to humiliate them.
The next day, the GFA missionaries tried to report the incident to the local authorities, but the extremists prevented them from entering the police station. The extremists even filed a false report against them. That same day, the police approached Chandan and Dinesh and suggested that, for their own safety, they should come to the police station. Believing the police, the missionaries went to the police station taking along with them three believers from the church. However, once they reached the police station, all of them were arrested and they were put in jail.
Later, GFA leaders from a nearby office came to the police station and pleaded with the police officials to release the missionaries and the believers, who were innocent of any crime. The police agreed to release them, but for their own safety would not let them go that night. During the time the missionaries and the believers languished in jail, two truckloads of anti–Christian extremists had gathered outside the police station and were waiting to attack the Christians. A few hours later the situation calmed down and the missionaries and the believers were released and taken to a regional GFA facility for their own safety.
The following day, the GFA leaders once again attempted to file a police report about the beatings, but the police refused to accept the report.
Complicating matters for the five who were arrested is the fact that one of them, a woman who is a government employee, is being singled out for threats – the extremists are trying to have her fired from her job.
The extremists are also inciting the villagers, telling them to kill the believers and to burn down their homes.
This incident comes just one week after children in a Gospel for Asia Bridge of Hope center in Manipur, India, were caught in the crossfire of a gun battle between opposing insurgent groups.
This is not the first time GFA missionaries have faced persecution during the Easter season. On Easter Sunday 2006, anti–Christian extremists stormed into a GFA–affiliated church in Karnataka, India, and attacked the GFA missionary who serves there. The extremists also attacked about 35 believers in the church, including the women and children. They even ransacked the church, the pastor's home and his vehicle.
Gospel for Asia missionaries and leaders in Madhya Pradesh have requested prayer for God's intervention and protection of the believers who were arrested on Easter and the days following. They have all now returned to their homes, but are living under threat of continued violence.
Gospel for Asia is a mission organization involved in evangelism and church planting in Asia's unreached regions. Currently Gospel for Asia supports more than 16,000 church planters in 10 countries. On average, these missionaries establish approximately 10 fellowships every day among unreached villages and people groups. Gospel for Asia is also committed to training native missionaries. The organization's 54 Bible colleges are preparing nearly 9,000 students to become full–time church planters.