War of words breaks out between CPI(M), Church leadership in Kerala over ‘Sangh Parivar affinity'
The current battle centres around the CPI(M)'s repeated accusation that certain bishops broadcast a predilection towards Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah, while 'expediently turning a blind eye to' spiralling attacks against Christians and the clergy by Hindu right-wing organisations in Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-ruled States in north India.
CPI(M) State secretary M.V. Govindan singled out Archbishop Mar Joseph Pamplany of Thalassery for criticism at a public meeting in Thaliparambu on Monday (August 11, 2025).
Mr. Govindan said he was intentionally naming Bishop Pamplany to spotlight the prelate's 'vacillating positions' vis-à-vis the Sangh Parivar.
He stated that Bishop Pamplany mooted a rethink of the Church's relationship with the Central government after 'the Sangh Parivar-controlled BJP government' in Chhattisgarh arrested and incarcerated two Kerala nuns after Bajrang Dal activists accused them of human trafficking for conversion to Christianity.
'When the court belatedly released the nuns on bail, the Bishop praised Modi and Shah, conveniently papering over the BJP's culpability in the nuns' ordeal', he stated.
Mr. Govindan alleged that Church representatives went with cakes to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) office in Kannur. 'Such brazen opportunism does not augur well for secularism, democracy or minority rights,' he said.
Earlier, Democratic Youth Federation of India (DYFI) State secretary V.K. Sanoj said 'the fate of Martin Niemöller' awaited Bishop Pamplany. He said the German protestant pastor and self-declared anti-semite backed Adolf Hitler, only to be jailed by the Nazi leader after the priest served the fascist regime's purpose.
Bishop Pamplany's expression of gratitude to the Centre had come in for sharp reactions on social media platforms, with the netizens pooh-poohing the gesture using memes and satirical remarks.
Last week, CPI(M) leader and former Minister A.K. Balan had accused Bishop Pamplany of pursuing a transactional mode of politics by promising the BJP a parliamentary toehold in Kerala if the Centre raised the floor price of rubber to ₹300 per kg in the run-up to the 2024 General Elections.
Thalassery Archdiocese pushes back
Meanwhile, the Thalassery Archdiocese has pushed back firmly. In a statement, the bishopric termed Mr. Govindan's words 'second-rate.'
It said Bishop Pamplany did not require 'AKG Centre's writ' to expound the Church's position. The Church had ignored the DYFI's attempt to disparage the prelate. However, attacks against the Bishop had escalated, it pointed out.
The Archdiocese said the Bishop had thanked parties across the political spectrum, including the Central government, for their respective interventions to 'ensure justice' for the nuns.
'Opportunism has become a byword for Mr. Govindan's political vacillations. His condemnable statements have exposed the party secretary's fascist nature. Mr. Govindan's distortion of the Bishop's words is aimed at putting the Chief Minister and CPI(M) on the defensive', the bishopric stated.

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The Hindu
an hour ago
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Tamil Nadu's history of political silence on murders driven by caste hatred
Two weeks ago in Tirunelveli, Kavin Selvaganesh — a Scheduled Caste youth and employee at a leading IT firm — was brutally murdered by the brother of a caste Hindu girl he was in love with. Chief Minister M.K. Stalin, who readily condemned the arrest of Kerala nuns in distant Chhattisgarh, has not yet spoken on this gory crime driven by caste hatred. Leader of Opposition Edappadi K. Palaniswami, who visited the family of Ajithkumar, a security guard killed in illegal police custody, has not met Kavin's family — he merely condemned the Stalin government for the 'honour' crime. Actor Vijay, the Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam founder and Chief Minister aspirant, who met protesting conservancy workers in Chennai, has maintained silence on the murder. Such studied silence by politicians is not new. While voters from socially marginalised communities are wooed, they are often used as political doormats. On the other hand, political parties display little hesitation in assiduously cultivating the dominant communities belonging to the Backward and Most Backward Classes. Although leaders such as former Chief Ministers M. Karunanidhi and Jayalalithaa had endeared themselves to all communities, they too were reluctant to stick their necks out and speak out against killing in the name of caste pride. Karunanidhi, personally, transcended caste barriers by performing several inter-caste weddings in his own extended family. On the electoral battlefield, Jayalalithaa had resorted to social re-engineering tactics like fielding Scheduled Caste candidates from general constituencies and getting them elected. Yet, the two leaders did not react in July 2003, when a young couple, Kannagi (a Vanniyar woman) and Murugesan (Scheduled Caste), were force-fed poison and set ablaze in front of a large gathering of villagers in Vriddhachalam in Cuddalore district. The murder itself came to light several days later when the Dalit Panthers of India (now Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi) and the Communist Party of India (Marxist) raised a red flag. This was the first time the term 'honour killing' was used in Tamil Nadu to describe a crime driven by caste hatred. 'If you thought, since Murugesan and Kannagi were killed openly in front of villagers, there would not have been any complication in delivery of justice, you are wrong,' writes senior journalist Ilangovan Rajasekaran, in the chapter 'Naththai Vegathil Neethi' (Justice at Snail's Pace) in his book 'Saathiyin Peyaraal – Aanava Kolaigalin Pathivu' (In the name of Caste – A Record of Honour Killings). It took 18 years for the trial court to deliver its verdict in the case and another four years for the Supreme Court to uphold justice. 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an hour ago
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