| From
Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 44, Dated Nov 08, 2008 |
|
| CURRENT
AFFAIRS |
|
church crisis |
|
Death In
The Nunnery
The suicide of a nun has shocked Kerala, leading
the state Women’s Commission to recommend
new laws to protect their rights, reports KA SHAJI
AFTER THREE decades of service,
Sister Jesmi decided to leave
the Congregation of the
Mother of Carmel (CMC), an
order of nuns under the Catholic Church
in Kerala. Citing mental harassment from
her superiors as the reason, she also took
voluntary retirement from the principal’s
post she held at St Mary’s College in
Thrissur, one of the state’s best institutions
of higher education. Sister Jesmi
preferred to leave even though she knew
she would have nowhere, apart from her
sister, to turn for survival. Ineligible for
benefits from the church, she is also debarred
from demanding the return of her
parental property, bequeathed to the
church when she joined the order.
Four months ago, a 37-year-old nun
from Alappuzha in southern Kerala was
found filmed in a pornographic clip circulating
via MMS, and was defrocked and
sent home. The nun, who worked as a
receptionist at a CMC mission hospital
near Kochi, was having an affair with the
hospital driver, but claimed she had no
idea he was filming her. Today, nobody
has a clue as to her whereabouts, or even
whether her home has accepted her. She,
too, has no claim over the property her
parents gave the church.
In August this year, Sister Anupa
Mary from Kollam in southern Kerala
hanged herself in her convent room,
leaving a suicide note blaming the
Mother Superior, Sister Albeena.
Anupa’s father, Pappachan, alleges that
Albeena subjected his daughter to sexual
abuse, and claims Anupa spoke of it
a few weeks before she died to her
mother and sister, though they kept
quiet about it. There is now a police investigation
against Albeena, but it is
moving at a grinding pace.
Nuns who give up their vows,
whether from choice or compulsion,
have a bleak future in Kerala as there is
no mechanism for their rehabilitation.
The faithful and the Church view them
with contempt; often, so do their families.
Survival becomes extremely difficult
leaving, in many cases, suicide as the
only solution, one that has claimed the
lives of 15 nuns over the last 14 years.
It was in this context that the Kerala
Women’s Commission approached the
CPM-led state government, requesting it
to enact legislation prohibiting girls
under 18 from taking the veil, and prosecuting
parents who forcibly send their
daughters to nunneries. It also wanted
protection of a nun’s share in family
property and legal provisions to retrieve
property bequeathed to the church, at
least for those who leave their orders on
grounds of harassment.
“When a Kerala girl becomes a nun,
her share of her parental property is
normally given to her to cover her living
expenses. But should she decide to
renounce her vows, she gets nothing.
Such girls are in urgent need of a
rehabilitation programme,” says Kerala
Women’s Commission chairperson Justice
D Sreedevi.
But the church leadership is not ready
to listen, and is attacking the entire
Commission for its ‘anti-minority’ demand,
even terming its members ‘Marxist
devils’. “The Commission is trying to
effect changes in a universal Catholic
norm, which is based on canonical law,”
says Father Paul
Thelakkat, spokesperson
of the
Syrio-Malabar
Church. “As everywhere
else, only a girl who completes
Class XII is admitted to a Kerala convent.
She then goes through a minimum five
years training, meaning that she does
not become a full-fledged nun until she
is at least 22. So the question of inducting
a minor into the nunhood does not
arise.” As per figures available from the
church, Kerala has more people turning
to religious life than anywhere else in
India. The state has 33,226 nuns.
THE ISSUE took a serious turn after
the opposition Congress joined
the bandwagon, calling the Commission’s
demand a challenge to religious
freedom and demanding
Sreedevi’s ouster. Unwilling to antagonise
the church, with which it is already
at loggerheads, the state government is
now soft-pedaling the issue. “It is just a
wish of the commission,” says CPM state
secretary Pinarayi Vijayan. “Everyone
can express their wish. Neither the party
nor the government have taken a decision
on the issue so far.”
“We are not against a religion
or their legitimate rights,” counters
Sreedevi. “The Commission has received
several complaints of torture in convents,
on which we based our recommendation
to the state government.”
Not all Kerala Christians are opposed
to the Women’s Commission’s efforts,
however. Joseph Pulikunnel, a prominent
Catholic thinker and social activist, says
Church officials neither admit to problems
within the community, nor try to
understand the reasons that drive nuns
to suicide. “They always try to hush up
such cases; they blame the victims and
their families and protect the guilty,” he
alleges. Pulikunnel welcomes the legislation
the Commission is demanding, and
says there is no question of its constituting
an interference with religious freedom.
“They are only trying to protect the
basic human rights of those entering
nunhood. The church ought to welcome
the recommendation and try its best
to get the proposed legislation implemented,”
he says.
The death last year of Sister Lisa,
whose body was found in the guest room
of her convent near Kottayam in central
Kerala, is now snowballing into an avoidable
controversy for the Kerala church.
Sister Lisa is said to have consumed
poison; a suicide note claimed “disappointment
in life” as the reason for the
34-year-old nun’s extreme step. Her
father, Joseph Thottathil, says she was
unhappy with her impending transfer to
another convent; but when the Women’s
Commission sought details, they were
stonewalled. The same unresponsiveness
greeted their request for information
about the mysterious death of another
nun five years ago.
Skirting the requirements of justice is
something, however, that the Church in
Kerala has long witnessed. The state High
Court has come down heavily on the Central
Bureau of Investigation (CBI) for its
poor progress in an over-15-year inquiry
into the murder of Sister Abhaya at a convent
in Kottayam. Two priests and a nun
are under the CBI scanner, but the agency
refuses to arrest them “for want of evidence”.
Abhaya was allegedly murdered
for accidentally witnessing the priests in a
compromising position with the nun.
Sister Alice Lukose, a former proponent
of liberation theology, says unless
the church is able to offer women a ‘new
vision’ and a ‘new way‘ of committed
life, religious congregations for women
will face a crisis of existence. “Today, in
every field, women are equal; in every
field women have come up, except in
the church. The moment the church
acknowledges and allows women to be
different, the church would be different,”
she says. •
WRITER’S EMAIL:
shaji@tehelka.com |