
Christians have been facing increasing opposition in the free practice of their religious customs in the Bastar region in recent times.
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement
In yet another episode of violence over the burial rights of Christians in Chhattisgarh’s Bastar region, a mob in Kanker district vandalised a prayer hall on Thursday (December 18, 2025). Several people, including police personnel, sustained injuries in intermittent clashes over the past three days.
According to eyewitnesses, tensions had been building over the past few days in Bade Teoda village in Antagarh tehsil of Kanker after the father of the village sarpanch, Rajman Salam, was buried on village land on Tuesday (December 16, 2025).
In a video released on Tuesday, a day after his father’s death, Mr. Salam said that he had converted to Christianity but his father had not. He further said that he had requested village elders to allow the burial, but they insisted that it could not be carried out in his presence. He then buried his father according to Christian rituals, triggering a backlash.
Another villager told reporters that the burial was opposed as the family wanted to perform the last rites according to Christian customs instead of following tribal customs.
Minor clashes were reported on Tuesday, followed by a more intense confrontation on Wednesday (December 17, 2025). A large contingent of police was deployed in the village, and efforts were made to defuse tensions. On Thursday morning, the body was exhumed and taken elsewhere, even as police attempted to broker peace between the two sides.
Despite these efforts and heavy police presence, angry villagers attacked a prayer hall located a short distance away.
Several visuals purportedly from the village surfaced online on Thursday, showing men running with bamboo poles and arguing with police personnel. Footage of vandalism and arson at the prayer hall also circulated. In one video, a group of men is seen attacking the prayer hall with bamboo poles, while another shows them entering the premises.
Senior police officers remained unavailable for comment despite repeated attempts.
Burials of deceased persons from families that have converted to Christianity remain a sensitive issue in Bastar, with several instances of violence and aggressive opposition by non Christians. Earlier this year, a man from Bastar district moved the Supreme Court seeking burial rights for his father on his own land after opposition from fellow villagers. The top court directed him to bury his father in a Christian burial ground in another part of the district. In its order, the court said it was pained that a person had to approach the Supreme Court for burial rights because authorities had failed to resolve the matter at the village level. Kanker and Bastar are among the seven districts of the Bastar division.
Published – December 18, 2025 09:53 pm IST
