Arson attack on cathedral compound frightens Nepal's Catholics
Friday, April 28, 2017
"From time to time we Catholics here feel discriminated against, and, even though we are Nepalese citizens, we are treated [by a small minority of Nepalese] like foreigners."
By
Maria Lozano
NEW YORK—An arson
attack on the cathedral Church of Apostolic Vicariate of Nepal has left the
country’s small Catholic community in a state of shock.
The April 18, 2017 incident attack also
damaged the rectory attached to Church of the Assumption, on the outskirts of
the capital city of Kathmandu. No one was injured. Nonetheless, the vicar
general of the vicariate, Father Silas Bogati, told international Catholic
charity Aid to the Church in Need that the attack “has harmed the tiny Catholic
community, which is now afraid. We are trusting in God, but what has happened
is a call to be vigilant.”
The attack happened as Nepal is
experiencing a very delicate political situation, with local elections slated
for May 14, 2017—the first such vote in 20 years. Parliamentary elections are
scheduled to take place in January 2018.
Father Bogati
reported that at least three individuals entered the church compound during the
night, using gasoline to set fire to two motorcycles and a car. Ten people were
sleeping in the rectory building that night. The priest said: “Thank God the
vehicle they set on fire did not explode while the people were being evacuated,
but it could well have been a tragedy.”

He continued: “We still don’t know who
was behind it, nor the motives for the attack. The police are investigating the
event and attempting to identify the three people seen on the security cameras.
Once we know more about the perpetrators, we will be clearer about their
motives. For now everything would be speculation.”
The Nepalese priest did however
acknowledge that “from time to time we Catholics here feel discriminated
against, and, even though we are Nepalese citizens, we are treated [by a small
minority of Nepalese] like foreigners, based on the mere fact of being
Christians. [For that reason], in some sectors of society there are feelings of
hostility towards the Christian community.”
In May 2009 a bomb exploded inside the
cathedral just as Father Bogati was saying Mass. Three people were killed and
more than a dozen sustained injuries. Responsibility for that attack was
claimed by a Hindu fundamentalist group calling itself the Nepal Defense Army.
The Catholic Church in Nepal, despite
comprising just some 8,000 faithful, is very active in the area of social
services and development. For example, the Church is involved in the rebuilding
of 5000 homes that were badly damaged in the major earthquake that struck the
country two years ago; another project aims to restore water supply to various
neighborhoods. The vicar general said that the Church is “helping people
regardless of their religious affiliation. Our vocation is to help the most
needy, as we are helping the victims of the earthquake today.”
A former Hindu kingdom, Nepal formally
became a secular state in 2007 after a decade of conflict between the
government and Maoist rebels. A new constitution was adopted in summer 2015
that affirms the secular character of Nepal, while still safeguarding the
primacy of Hinduism at the expense of religious minorities, including the
sizeable Muslim and Buddhist communities. The number of Protestants in Nepal is
close to 1 million; the total population is approx. 28 million. The upcoming
elections will be crucial for strengthening the country’s still fragile
political stability.
Damage done by the arson attack; ACN photo
|