The ongoing battle for religious freedom in India


The growing restrictions around religious freedom paint a seemingly bleak future for believers in India – please continue to lift them in your prayers.


The Indian flag
Persecution is on the rise for believers in India

Recent clashes and policy decisions indicate the difficult reality Christians in India are facing, and it seems that it will only get worse in the near future. Believers already endure the threat of allegations of forcing others to convert, whilst others are seeing their rights restrained when it comes to burying their loved ones. 

India is number 12 on the World Watch List and many of its citizens consider Hinduism the national religion, synonymous with Indian identity. Christians make up only 4.9% of the population and are routinely targeted by Hindutva extremists who uphold this view. How this looks in daily life varies across the country but indicates a growing pattern. 

Deprived of dignity 

The beginning of 2025 marked a significant moment for Christians in India, when the country’s Supreme Court intervened in the case of a Christian burial in a village’s cemetery in Chhattisgarh state. The Court ruled in favour of the believer who sought to lay his father to rest but was opposed by the state’s High Court. The individual was finally able to bury his father in a cemetery 20 kilometres away from his home. 

Almost one year later, in February 2026, the Supreme Court once again intervened to halt the forcible relocation of the bodies of tribal Christians who had been buried in a cemetery in the same state of Chhattisgarh. The affected Christian villagers made an appeal to the Supreme Court under their right to approach the Court if their fundamental rights are being violated. 

Such moments represent a glimmer of hope in the often-wearying circumstances of believers in India. It is also perceived by some to be a revolutionary step in the upholding of burial rights and religious freedom in general for Christians in the nation. 

“The recent incidents highlight the increasing challenges faced by the Christian community.”

Priya Sharma

“The recent incidents highlight the increasing challenges faced by the Christian community in practising their faith freely and even burying their dead with dignity in India,” Open Doors partner Priya Sharma* shares. “The intervention of the Supreme Court of India in the burial dispute is significant, as it protects the constitutional rights of every individual despite their religious identity.” 

But uncertainty and opposition remain. Later in February, a Christian woman named Sambai Mandavi passed away and her husband was kept from burying her in the village cemetery and their private farmland because of their faith. He filed a formal complaint and a week later was able to bury his wife in a Christian graveyard – 200 kilometres away from the village. 

Falsely accused 

Beyond complaints about burials, believers continue to face threats of arrest or worse under the notorious anti-conversion laws currently active across 12 states in India. Chhattisgarh is one of the 12 with these laws in place and its authorities are seeking to make punishments harsher for those labelled as guilty of forcing the conversion of others. The new bill was proposed on 10 March and awaits the approval of the State Governor.  

There have already been numerous instances of Christians being accused of forcible conversion as a means of attacking and dissuading believers from gathering. One instance of this was on 1 March in Karnataka state, southern India, when Hindutva extremists intruded into a meeting of Christians and branded them with accusations of alluring and bribing individuals to convert. The believers, 20 in number, were arrested by the police, interrogated, and released the next day on bail. 

West India has seen the Maharashtra cabinet approve a draft of their own anti-conversion law that proposes seven years imprisonment and a fine for unlawful religious conversion. If the bill is accepted by the State Governor, Maharashtra state will become the 13th state in India to have implemented anti-conversion laws. 

“There is concern that anti-conversion laws are being misused by extremists to intimidate or harass Christians.”

Priya Sharma

Priya Sharma says, “For believers in Karnataka, being accused of forced conversion reflects the growing pattern where prayer gatherings are misinterpreted and criminalized. The proposed anti-conversion bills in Maharashtra and Chhattisgarh add to the fear and uncertainty of the Christian community. While governments justify such laws as measures to curb forced conversions, there is concern that they are being misused by extremists to intimidate or harass Christians and other religious minorities.” 

Prayers for the future 

Whilst Christians make up only 4.9% of the population in India, their numbers amount to 72.3 million. Each believer needs your prayers as their freedoms continue to be encroached upon. 

“May there be justice, compassion and peace for all people.”

Priya Sharma

Priya Sharma requests, “Please pray for these toxic situations surrounding the Christians in India. Pray for freedom of religion to be upheld. May there be justice, compassion and peace for all people, and every individual to have the freedom to live and practise their faith with dignity.” 

*Name changed for security reasons



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