A group of Catholics in the state of Karnataka in southern India are publicly demanding that the next bishop appointed in the state be a "pure Kannadiga," a native speaker of Kannada, the state's principal indigenous language.
Members of the Karnataka Catholic Christian Kannada Forum (KCCKF) carried large crosses as they held a dharna (sit-in) at the gates of Archbishop's House in Bangalore, the state capital. The protest was held on May 18, the 76th birthday of Archbishop Ignatius Pinto, who is due to retire soon and has submitted his resignation letter to Rome.
"There are eight [Catholic] dioceses in Karnataka. But, we do not have even a single Kannadiga bishop," KCCKF president J. R. Pereira said. "The Kannadigas are treated as second-class members in the church. And [the Kannada language] gets the least priority even in church services."
The forum wrote to the Vatican in April demanding "the appointment of a mother-tongue Kannada-speaking priest as the archbishop of Bangalore". The forum also staged a demonstration outside the office of the chief minister of Karnataka, S. M. Krishna, and asked him in a memorandum "to interfere" in a "question of injustice to local language, local culture and the life of the local people".
However, Pinto said that the Kannadiga campaign was the work of only a "handful of people". Despite media reports, there was "no language row" in the archdiocese, and 99 percent of the people "do not have any complaints".
The issue at stake was not about language, the archbishop said. Rather the campaign was "part of a power struggle" by some priests and other people "to pressure the Vatican" as it chooses a new archbishop.
Pereira said a majority of the one million Catholics in the state were Kannadigas, but Pinto said the figure was exaggerated. For example, of the 350,000 Catholics in the Bangalore archdiocese, not even 10 percent were Kannadigas. The Catholic communities speaking Tamil, Konkani and Malayalam as their mother tongue were bigger, Pinto said.
"What is most important is that all the bishops are from the state and Kannada speaking [even if is not their mother tongue]. We hold services in Kannada as well as in Konkani, English, Tamil and Malayalam, according to the ratio of the people in each parish speaking the language," said Pinto.
Describing the campaign for a Kannadiga bishop as "mischievous," he said: "It gives an impression to outsiders that local Catholics are being dominated by outsiders. There is no such divide here."
Pinto alleged that the protests were "instigated" by a few priests trying to make a "distinction that only those with Kannada as their mother tongue are 'Kannadigas.'"
"The church cannot accept such a parochial stand." However, he said he was "not against a Kannadiga bishop as and when the Vatican decides, but not under this kind of pressure tactics."
Father I. Anthappa, president of the Kannadiga Priest Council which supports the campaign, refused to comment on the issue. "When the matter is in the Supreme Court [the Vatican], I do not want to speak to the lower court [the media]," he said.