An Indian missionary charity falsely portrayed young Buddhist girls from Nepal as "orphans" of murdered Christians in a global fund-raising operation involving British and American churches.
Parents paid a child-trafficker more than £100 to take their daughters to good schools in Nepal's capital, Kathmandu, but instead they were taken more than 1,200 miles to Tamil Nadu, southern India.At the Michael Job Centre, a Christian orphanage and school in Coimbatore, they were converted to Christianity, given western names and told that its charismatic founder, Dr PP Job, was now their father.
On websites, the children were given serial numbers and profiles. The charity claimed they had been either abandoned by their parents who did not want the financial burden of raising girls, or orphaned after their "Christian" parents were murdered by Nepal's Maoist insurgents.The profiles were used to attract financial sponsors from around the world.
Many of the donors were in the United States, Holland and Britain, where Dr Jobs's sister organisation, Love in Action, is run from St Mary's C of E Church in Stoke-sub-Hamdon, Somerset.
The sick bastards!! :mad:
And they wonder why people hate missionaries in India.
I guess the Christians had to resort to such cheap methods (they have been for centuries...during colonial rule, they used to give out sacks of rice to people dying from famines(induced by the policies of the East Indian Trade Company) only if they converted. The derogatory term "rice convert" came to be because of this practice. Now they resort to kidnapping children!
even after 2 centuries of missionary activity, the % of Christians in India is only 2%. Maybe they ought to get the message and just shut up, but they wont...not when Evangelical nutcases are willing to funnels Billions to "save souls"
The good new is that this guy will now rot in Jail, and deservedly so. Having seen this, I totally understand why there is a huge push in many South Asian nations for a ban on missionaries. I hope they ban these asses.
Link
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/india/8856050/The-Indian-preacher-and-the-fake-orphan-scandal.html