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To: Gengis Khan

It helps if someone could get the exact law in question here...I'll decide once I see it.


15 posted on 05/20/2006 9:20:40 AM PDT by CarrotAndStick (The articles posted by me needn't necessarily reflect my opinion.)
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To: CarrotAndStick
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1539521.cms

There’s no fundamental right to convert: SC TIMES NEWS NETWORK[ SATURDAY, MAY 20, 2006 02:11:15 AM]

NEW DELHI: The Vatican’s stand that the fundamental right to practice and propagate religion includes the right to convert was an issue considered and rejected by the Supreme Court.

In a 1977 judgement in the Rev Stanislaus versus the State of Madhya Pradesh, the court had upheld the constitutional validity of conversion-prohibiting laws enacted by Madhya Pradesh and Orissa.

The two states, which were then controlled by the Congress, had passed anti-conversion laws in 1967 and 1968, respectively. “What the Constitution grants is not the right to convert another person to one’s own religion, but to transmit or spread one’s religion by an exposition of its tenets,” the court had ruled.

According to the SC, organised conversion, whether by force or fraud or by providing help or allurement to persons, taking undue advantage of their poverty and ignorance, is anti- secular.

The court had said respect for all religions was the essence of our secularism, whereas religious intolerance constituted the basis of planned conversion. Given this, conversion cannot be a secular activity.

Besides Orissa and MP, three other states have anti-conversion law in the statute. They include Chhattisgarh — which retained the law after the bifurcation — Arunachal Pradesh and Gujarat.

Tamil Nadu, too, had passed a law in 2002, but repealed it when the AIADMK succeeded in projecting the law as one aimed at minorities in the state.

16 posted on 05/20/2006 10:56:45 AM PDT by lyonesse
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To: CarrotAndStick; Gengis Khan
It helps if someone could get the exact law in question here...I'll decide once I see it.

Quite right. If the law says "you should not hold a sword to someone's head and force him to conert" -- I'll support it (and so would all Catholics -- we have too much experience of persecution in Muslime lands), If the law says you should not bribe or give money to force a person to convert: the question that comes to mind is how do you prove it? If I give a person a book or a medal as a gift when he/she converts, is that bribing?
95 posted on 05/21/2006 9:04:46 AM PDT by Cronos (Remember 9/11. Restore Hagia Sophia! Sola Scriptura leads to solo scriptura.)
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