Bishops pledge to protect local environment

Bishops in the northeast of India have pledged to fight climate change in the region at their regional conference. The North Eastern Regional Bishops’ Council (NEIRBC) covers the area of…

The Lohit River in Arunachal Pradesh, in North Eastern India. Photo: Pixabay

WelCom October 2022

Bishops in the northeast of India have pledged to fight climate change in the region at their regional conference.

The North Eastern Regional Bishops’ Council (NEIRBC) covers the area of India that is north and east of Bangladesh, forming a panhandle. The region is less densely populated than most of India, with only 25 million people. It also has a large Christian population – over 17 per cent, compared with a national average of 2.3 per cent.

Care of creation was the theme of the September Annual Regional Pastoral Conference held in Guwahati.

‘One part of the country is going through severe drought and other parts are experiencing flood. This is happening because of our greed and the kinds of choices we have made,’ said Bishop James Thoppil of Kohima.

The president of NEIRBC and Archbishop of Guwahati, John Moolachira, pointed to how the environment has changed in the region during his lifetime.

‘As a young priest, I used to travel through dense forests to reach some of our centres. Now after 35–40 years, when I travel through the same roads, there is no trace of a forest. Settlements have sprung up. Timber is cut off and sold outside the region by unscrupulous elements with either the connivance or negligence of government machinery,’ the archbishop said.

‘As a result of this, the hills and plains have become barren and rivulets dried up, rains have become either too much or too little. When it rains the fertile soils are washed away due to flood, garbage is everywhere and life in towns is unhygienic, pollutants in the cities and towns flow freely into our rivers and water ways, pesticides and fertilisers are used widely and the water in the rivers has become dangerous for use for man, birds, fish and animals,” he continued.

Bishop Allwyn D’Silva, an auxiliary Bishop from the Archdiocese of Bombay, called on the participants to restore ecological relationships.

‘We can see and are living through a time of increasing crisis of humanity. The reality of North East India is proof of the dangerous climate change reality in the country. We can ill afford to disregard this ecological crisis and climate change,’ Bishop D’Silva said.

Source: Crux