northeast india – The Commune https://thecommunemag.com Mainstreaming Alternate Sun, 28 Dec 2025 14:53:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://thecommunemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/cropped-TC_SF-1-32x32.jpg northeast india – The Commune https://thecommunemag.com 32 32 From Bibles To Bullets: How India’s Northeast Was Christianised And How It Continues To Be Weaponised By Vested Interests https://thecommunemag.com/from-bibles-to-bullets-how-indias-northeast-was-christianised-and-weaponised-by-vested-interests/ Sun, 28 Dec 2025 14:53:53 +0000 https://thecommunemag.com/?p=136141 Northeastern India stands out as a demographic exception within the country. While India as a whole is overwhelmingly Hindu with Christians accounting for about 2.3% of the population, several northeastern states have large and, in some cases, overwhelming Christian majorities. According to 2011 Census data, Christians constitute around 88% of the population in Nagaland, 87% […]

The post From Bibles To Bullets: How India’s Northeast Was Christianised And How It Continues To Be Weaponised By Vested Interests appeared first on The Commune.

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Northeastern India stands out as a demographic exception within the country. While India as a whole is overwhelmingly Hindu with Christians accounting for about 2.3% of the population, several northeastern states have large and, in some cases, overwhelming Christian majorities.

According to 2011 Census data, Christians constitute around 88% of the population in Nagaland, 87% in Mizoram, about 75% in Meghalaya, around 41% in Manipur, and roughly 30% in Arunachal Pradesh. Elsewhere in India, Christian communities remain small minorities when compared to the northeast. These figures make the Northeast unique in India’s religious landscape.

It is important to note that this data is based on the 2011 Census, the most recent official enumeration. Given migration, conversions, and demographic change over the past decade, ground realities today may differ, though no updated nationwide religious data has yet been released.

Missionaries, Education And Healthcare

Christian missionary expansion in Northeast India was inseparably linked to British colonial penetration of the region in the nineteenth century. Missions—particularly American Baptist, Presbyterian, and later Catholic—entered tribal societies with the explicit aim of conversion, often operating in coordination with colonial administrators.

Education, healthcare, language translation, and humanitarian work functioned less as neutral welfare activities and more as instruments of religious and cultural transformation. Schools and churches became parallel institutions of governance, reshaping tribal belief systems, weakening indigenous religions, and recasting social life around Christian norms. Concentrated missionary focus on hill tribes resulted in rapid and disproportionate Christianization, producing Christian-majority states such as Nagaland, Mizoram, and Meghalaya, while accelerating religious demographic shifts in Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh.

Most historians trace large-scale Christianisation in the Northeast to the 19th century, when American Baptist and Welsh Presbyterian missionaries began sustained work among tribal communities such as the Naga, Mizo, Khasi and Garo.

Missionaries established schools, churches and basic medical facilities in regions where colonial and later Indian state presence was limited. In Mizoram, for instance, Welsh missionary DE Jones and his colleagues set up educational and ecclesiastical institutions in the 1890s that later became the backbone of Christian society there.

Academic histories generally agree that education and healthcare were central tools of missionary expansion. However, mainstream scholarship does not record centrally mandated policies such as “no medicine unless you attend church” as formal missionary rules. Where coercion or pressure occurred, historians tend to describe it as localised, informal and uneven, rather than an officially documented system.

At the same time, oral histories and anecdotal accounts within tribal communities frequently recall a uniform social reality in which access to aid, schooling or medical help was perceived as being closely tied to church participation and conversion, even if this was not codified in written policy.

State Policy And Cultural Insulation

Post-Independence tribal policy was strongly influenced by British anthropologist Verrier Elwin, whose ideas were taken seriously by Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. Elwin argued that tribal societies should be protected from rapid cultural assimilation and external influence.

While some claim that Hindu ascetics were barred from entering tribal areas and missionaries were allowed free access, mainstream histories do not support the existence of a blanket legal ban on Hindu sadhus. Regulation of religious activity in “Excluded” and “Partially Excluded” areas varied by province and period, and applied at least formally to both Hindu and Christian groups.

Scholars nevertheless note that, in practice, missionary networks remained far more entrenched and institutionally influential, especially because they had already established schools and hospitals long before the Indian state developed comparable infrastructure.

Christianity And Separatist Politics

The Nagaland Case

While missionary activity brought literacy and political mobilization, it also disrupted indigenous cultural frameworks and traditional institutions. Missionary education promoted Western theological and social values that delegitimized tribal rituals, festivals, marriage customs, and ancestral belief systems, often branding them as superstition or moral backwardness. Conversion fractured community cohesion, altered identity formation, and aligned tribal elites with new religious hierarchies rather than indigenous authority structures. Over time, Christianity became a dominant identity marker, reshaping political mobilization and social organization in ways that distanced tribal societies from their pre-colonial cultural continuities. Thus, Christianization in Northeast India, emerging from a colonial-missionary nexus, produced enduring cultural dislocation and identity transformation whose consequences continue to shape the region’s social and political landscape.

The intersection of religion and separatism has been most visible in Nagaland. The National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN), the most prominent Naga insurgent organisation, articulates an ideology that combines evangelical Christianity and revolutionary politics.

Hebron functions as the central base for the NSCN (I-M) insurgent organization in Nagaland, about 110 km from Kohima, where they run a shadow administration known as the ‘Government of the People’s Republic of Nagalim,’ complete with departments and a force of around 15,000 fighters. This Baptist Christian-dominated zone, inspired by a biblical city, bars access to non-locals and non-Christians.

The NSCN’s legislative body, Tatar Hoho, convenes inside a Hebron church to pass regulations and enforce severe penalties.

The NSCN (Muivah) extended its operations beyond Nagaland into Assam’s North Cachar hills and nearby areas, targeting Zeliangrong Nagas for a ‘Greater Nagaland’ vision. These hills offer strategic corridors linking Nagaland, Meghalaya, Manipur, and Assam’s Barak Valley to Bangladesh. The NSCN fueled ethnic tensions and evangelical efforts amid church influence growth in the 1980s-1990s

Over time, this synthesis was institutionalised. Insurgent governance structures in Naga areas frequently overlapped with church authority, creating parallel systems in which religious discipline reinforced political loyalty. Training, social regulation, and ideological conditioning were often mediated through faith-based frameworks, blurring the boundary between spiritual obedience and insurgent command. This convergence strengthened organisational cohesion while also sacralising violence as a legitimate instrument of political struggle.

Its slogans and documents explicitly refer to “Nagaland for Christ”, framing faith in Jesus as central to its vision of political independence from India.

This ideological fusion had deep historical roots. Early Naga political mobilisation emerged through organisations led by Christian-educated elites, beginning with the Naga Club in 1918 and later the Naga National Council under A Z Phizo. Christianity functioned as the unifying framework that transcended clan and village divisions, transforming fragmented tribal identities into a single political imagination of nationhood. The invocation of Christ as a political symbol marked a decisive shift away from pre-colonial Naga social organisation, which had been decentralised and customary rather than ideological and centralised.

The Mizo Case

Insurgent activities in Mizoram emerged in the late 1950s and early 1960s, shortly after the severe Mautam famine concluded, when the area was still part of Assam. Central authorities dismissed reports of food scarcity linked to bamboo flowering and rat infestations as mere tribal myths, overlooking the crisis. Churches stepped in to aid the vulnerable hill residents during this hardship.

The Mizo National Famine Front (MNFF), led by Laldenga—still revered as a key figure—formed to tackle the shortages. By 1966, it evolved into the Mizo National Front (MNF), launching an underground campaign for Mizo independence. Government neglect during the 1958 famine distanced locals from the Indian state, allowing religious institutions to gain significant sway.

Early successes enabled rebels to seize towns like Aizawl and a radio facility, spreading fear across the Lushai hills. Pakistan’s withdrawal of aid post-1971 weakened them, prompting surrender talks by 1980. From the 1970s, Myanmar-based groups began training Northeast insurgents and supplying weapons. The conflict spanned 1966 to 1986.

The Assam Case

Assam saw insurgency rise through the United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA), initially protesting Bangladeshi immigration before turning to full militancy for independence. ULFA set up bases in Bangladesh from 1985 and Bhutan by 1990-1991, exploiting weak policing in wooded border zones. Groups like the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB) and Kamatapur Liberation Organisation (KLO) followed, using southern Bhutan as hideouts.

The National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB), a militant Christian group seeking an independent Bodoland north of the Brahmaputra in Assam, emerged in 1986 under Ranjan Daimary’s leadership. This sparked armed unrest in Bodo territories, often infringing on neighboring communities’ lands. During the 1990s, the group set up 12 camps near the Assam-Bhutan border, using Bhutan’s southern forests as secure retreats.

The Meghalaya Case

Signs of militancy appeared in Meghalaya around 1989 with the Meghalaya United Movement (MUM), pushing for an independent Khasi nation. In 1991, the Achik Liberation Matgrik Army (ALMA) formed to carve out Garo-land from Garo areas in Meghalaya, Assam, and Bangladesh. By 1992, groups like the Hynniewtrep Voluntary Council (HVC) and Hynniewtrep Achik Liberation Council (HALC) emerged, advocating armed separation from India.

The Coupland Plan And Colonial Legacies

British officials in the 1930s and 1940s proposed what came to be known as the Coupland Plan, envisioning a “Crown Colony” carved out of tribal areas of Northeast India and adjoining Burma (now Myanmar).

The plan framed these regions as culturally distinct tribal zones and as a strategic buffer between India and China/Burma. While missionaries were active in these areas, religion was not the sole or explicit organising principle of the proposal. Indian nationalists and several tribal leaders opposed the plan, and it was never implemented, though it influenced later debates on autonomy and special constitutional safeguards.

Manipur, Zalengam And Foreign Nationals

In Manipur and the India–Myanmar borderlands, some Kuki–Chin militant groups have articulated the idea of a transborder homeland, often referred to as “Zalengam”. These communities are largely Christian, but verifiable evidence directly linking the movement to organised American Evangelical funding remains patchy.

In Mizoram, insurgent mobilisation followed decades of missionary-driven social restructuring, particularly after crises such as the Mautam famine, which altered traditional authority relations. In Tripura and parts of Assam, armed groups similarly invoked religious identity alongside ethnic claims, using faith as a means of consolidation, recruitment, and moral justification. While the operational details vary, the recurring presence of religion as an organising force across multiple insurgencies points to a broader structural phenomenon rather than isolated coincidence.

Indian authorities do periodically deny visas or deport foreign nationals, including Americans, for violating visa conditions in sensitive border states. Official records, however, name only a limited number of cases. Broader claims that humanitarian aid is “mostly a cover” for militant financing go beyond what is publicly documented, even as security agencies continue to monitor such networks closely.

The Role of China and the United States

The crisis in India’s Northeast has been aggravated by sustained external interference. China has played a direct destabilising role by facilitating arms and narcotics flows through Myanmar-based networks into insurgent-held areas. The drug trade has funded militant groups while corroding local society through addiction and criminalisation, and weapons smuggled along the same routes have prolonged conflicts long after their political rationale faded. For Beijing, instability along India’s eastern frontier serves a strategic purpose—keeping a rival internally distracted and its border regions perpetually unsettled.

The American role has been more indirect but influential. During the Cold War and beyond, church networks emerged as powerful instruments of social organisation and ideological influence. While claims of formal CIA control over churches are often exaggerated, religious institutions aligned with Western worldviews functioned as durable soft-power channels, shaping education, leadership, and political consciousness in the region. Together, China’s material support to militancy and America’s long-term ideological imprint through church networks have contributed to a landscape where external interests intersect with local insurgencies—leaving India to confront a security challenge shaped as much from outside its borders as within.

A Complex Picture

The story of Christianity in India’s Northeast cannot be reduced to hymns, schools, and humanitarian slogans. It is a story of power—introduced through colonial patronage, entrenched through institutional dominance, and sustained by the systematic dismantling of indigenous belief systems. What began as religious conversion evolved into cultural re-engineering, and in several regions, into a political instrument capable of legitimising separation, disciplining populations, and sacralising violence. The convergence of scripture and the gun did not occur by accident; it emerged from decades of identity reconstruction in which faith was elevated from personal belief to a totalising framework of loyalty and resistance.

India’s post-Independence state bears its share of responsibility. By outsourcing welfare, education, and social authority to missionary institutions while insulating tribal societies from civilisational integration, the state ceded moral and cultural space it never fully reclaimed. This abdication allowed religious networks to harden into parallel power structures—some benign, others openly hostile to the idea of India as a civilisational whole. The consequences are visible in enduring insurgencies, fractured identities, and a frontier where allegiance is too often negotiated through faith rather than citizenship.

To confront this reality is not to demonise believers, nor to deny the agency of tribal communities. It is to reject the convenient myth that faith-driven transformation is politically neutral, or that religious absolutism can coexist indefinitely with national integration. If the Northeast is to move beyond cycles of grievance and militancy, India must shed its strategic amnesia and confront how belief systems were weaponised—first under colonial rule, and later through policy neglect. Anything less is not secularism or tolerance; it is willful blindness to a history that continues to bleed into the present.

The arc of the Northeast tells a hard truth—what entered as the Bible to remake belief systems did not always stop at faith, but in several cases evolved into the bullet, wielded by insurgents and foreign interests to fracture sovereignty and sustain conflict.

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The post From Bibles To Bullets: How India’s Northeast Was Christianised And How It Continues To Be Weaponised By Vested Interests appeared first on The Commune.

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