Christian school principal, staff booked for conversion
Christian school principal, staff booked for conversion
A principal and 55 members of the teaching staff at a Christian school have been booked by police under the stringent anti-conversion law in a northern Indian state.
Principal D S Dasan and his teaching staff at Eton English Medium School in Bansi in Uttar Pradesh’s Siddharth Nagar district have been accused of trying to convert people belonging to indigenous tribal and Dalit communities.
The case was registered at the Bansi police station on Oct. 30 under provisions of the Uttar Pradesh Prohibition of Unlawful Conversion of Religion Act, 2021.
“This is totally a fake case. We have not converted anyone,” said Dasan, who is a member of the Layman’s Evangelical Church and also doubles up as manager of the school. He told that the school has been running for more than three decades and has 2,000 students studying up to grade eight. "This is the first time such an allegation has been leveled against us,” he added.
The Sunday service on Oct. 29 was purportedly termed as a religious conversion activity to register a false complaint by Rakesh Kumar Gautam. He alleged that the principal and the teachers were trying to convert tribal people and Dalits who attended the prayer service.
"They were being forced to change their religion to get the benefits of healing," Gautam alleged in his complaint. Rakesh Kumar Gautam further claimed he was present for the prayer service and was told to convert to Christianity but refused to budge.
However, Dasan said Rakesh Kumar Gautam did not attend the prayer service and also added that he had never had any interaction with him. Following the police complaint, activists staged a protest in front of the school and sought action against the principal and the staff. The local sub-divisional magistrate set up a committee to look into the allegations against the school.
“We have been cooperating with the probe as we have nothing to hide. The truth will surely come out sooner or later,” Dasan said. The principal-cum-manager said he had also apprised the district collector, the highest official in the area, of the unsavory developments.