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Christian caste

Indian society
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Christianity
caste

Christian caste, inIndia, the social stratification that persists amongChristians, based uponcaste membership at the time of an individual’s own or of an ancestor’s conversion. Indian Christian society is divided into groups geographically and according to denomination, but the overriding factor is one of caste. Caste groups may dine together and worship together, but, as a rule, they do not intermarry.

The problem ofreconciling change in religious belief with existing social tradition has dominated the history ofChristianity in India. The Syrian Christians along theMalabar coast trace their origin to the legendary visit ofSt. Thomas the Apostle, early in the 1st centuryad. Many of the Syrian Christians were of high birth, and after conversion they continued to be accorded a mid-rank status by theHindu society that surrounded them.

With the arrival of Europeans from the 16th century onward, a second group of Christian converts emerged. The thousands of fisherfolkconverted by the Portuguese missionaries had little in common with the Syrian Christians. Missionaries took two approaches.Robert de Nobili (16th–17th century) was a Jesuit of noble birth who accommodated to the existing Indian social order. He learnedTamil andSanskrit and lived the life of asadhu (wandering ascetic). He also tried to disassociate himself from the Portuguese missionaries who were converting the fisherfolk of low rank. These practices gave him wide acceptance among the Indian upper classes, but they brought him into conflict with his own church.

In the 19th century, Protestant missionaries arrived in India in large numbers. They insisted on social reform along with religious conversion; the result was that most of theirconverts were from the lowest social classes.

Caste distinctions among contemporary Indian Christians are breaking down at about the same rate as those among Indians of other faiths. In some instances the old traditions persist, and there are Catholic churches where members of each caste sit apart for worship.

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