hidden image

We will continue to do good works even if case is filed, says Archbishop Machado

IC Correspondent IC Correspondent
01 Mar 2023
In a hard-hitting speech, the Archbishop challenged the government to come out with the data on the number of children converted in Christian educational institutions.

“Even if a case is filed against me, accusing me of indulging in conversion, for providing education and healthcare to the Dalits and the marginalised, I would continue with those good works,” Bangalore Archbishop Peter Machado has said.

Without mincing words, he said, “no government can stop us from doing good works; no one can challenge us.”

In a hard-hitting speech, the Archbishop challenged the government to come out with the data on the number of children converted in Christian educational institutions.

He was speaking at a function to felicitate Baselios Marthoma Mathews III, the Catholicos of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church, in Bengaluru.

With a few months left for the Assembly elections in Karnataka, the Archbishop’s speech is seen as a sign of the community’s approach to the ruling party and the government’s policies against Christians. 

Archbishop Machado slammed the fundamentalists for playing petty politics and spreading fake news that teaching Bible has been made compulsory at Clarence school in Bengaluru.

Earlier, the Archbishop, who is also the head of the All Karnataka United Christian Forum for Human Rights, had called the anti-conversion law “dangerous” and termed it a “sad chapter for the Christian community.”

He had also written to Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai appealing not to promote the “undesirable and discriminatory” Bill.

Recent Posts

True worship begins where suffering is seen. We are confronted by one question: can any temple, devotion, or nation claim holiness while the poor remain unheard, unseen, and unprotected?
apicture CM Paul
17 Nov 2025
Tragedy forces the mind to wander into uncomfortable parallels. If past governments were grilled for lapses, why does silence reign today? Imagination becomes our only honest witness when accountabili
apicture A. J. Philip
17 Nov 2025
Denied constitutional justice and ecclesial equality, Dalit Christians stand in perpetual protest. Their struggle exposes a nation that brands caste as "Hindu" while practising it everywhere, and a Ch
apicture John Dayal
17 Nov 2025
Rising atrocities against Dalits on the one hand and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and the Bharatiya Janata Party's (BJP) ongoing attempts to integrate the Dalit community into their broader H
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
17 Nov 2025
Skill India began as a bridge to opportunity but ultimately collapsed under its own pursuit of scale. Ghost trainees, fake centres and hollow certificates reveal a more profound crisis: a skilling eco
apicture Jaswant Kaur
17 Nov 2025
Political polarisation and the exportation of domestic exclusions have turned diaspora communities into flashpoints. Hindutva's global outreach and caste-based exclusion, which had long eroded India's
apicture Thomas Menamparampil
17 Nov 2025
Behind India's booming fisheries stand migrant workers—people who cross states and seas for survival, yet receive little safety, welfare, or recognition. Their resilience sustains our blue economy; ou
apicture Jose Vattakuzhy
17 Nov 2025
These are advertisements that we often read in our dailies and watch with interest on our Android TV. They really inject venom but make us dance, sometimes with our family members. We rush to those pa
apicture P. Raja
17 Nov 2025
Until our opposition stops treating elections as clever games of combinations, of hurried alliances stitched only to topple others, and instead treats voters as thinking individuals, the ballot box wi
apicture Robert Clements
17 Nov 2025
Zohran Mamdani's ascent to New York's mayorship signals a global shift towards compassion, inclusion, and social justice. His victory shows that we can still triumph over hate and authoritarianism and
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
10 Nov 2025