Franco Mulakkal heads the Jalandhar diocese, a powerful body that promotes all Catholic Christian activities in several districts of Punjab and Himachal.
Chandigarh: Jalandhar Bishop Franco Mulakkal, who is accused of raping a Kerala nun, is among the most powerful Christians in Punjab. Wooed by political parties across the board, the 54-year-old bishop commands great spiritual influence over Catholic Christians in the state.
Christians constitute slightly more than one per cent of Punjab’s population, with the majority settled in Amritsar, Jalandhar and Ludhiana.
The bishop offered to “step aside” from his position Monday following the controversy.
In June, a nun in Kerala had alleged that the Jalandhar-based bishop had raped her 13 times between 2014 and 2016 during his visits to the southern state.
The bishop has denied the charges claiming that “anti-church” forces were bent upon bringing a bad name to the institution. He alleged that that nun was involved in an “illicit relationship” with her relative and he had ordered action against her.
The bishop arrived in Kochi for questioning by the Kerala police Wednesday. He had handed over the administration of the diocese to another priest before heading for Kerala.
Also read: These are the Christian priests accused of rape across Kerala churches
A powerful diocese
Before Partition, Jalandhar was under Lahore diocese and remained abandoned for years after Independence. In 1952, Rome declared the ‘Jalandhar Prefecture’ and put a British national in charge. In 1971, the unit was upgraded to a diocese.
The Jalandhar diocese is a powerful body that promotes all Catholic Christian activities in Amritsar, Faridkot, Ferozepur, Gurdaspur, Hoshiarpur, Jalandhar, Kapurthala, Ludhiana, Moga, Muktsar, Nawanshahr, Tarn Taran in Punjab besides Chamba, Hamirpur, Kangra and Una in Himachal Pradesh.
As its head, the bishop commands control over the hundreds of institutions — educational and charitable —spread across the two states.
Catholic church-run schools are the most sought-after in Punjab. In 2016, the bishop tried to promote “course sheets” to replace heavy school bags in the schools the diocese runs. He also rooted for eco-friendly Diwali and Christmas celebrations in schools run by the the diocese.
Apart from the schools and colleges run by the diocese, it also directs all spiritual activities of the Church, patronising several convents, seminaries and houses in the state.
Humble beginnings
Bishop Mulakkal belongs to Thrissur in Kerala. His father was a headmaster in a local school. Mulakkal studied at St Mary’s Petit Seminary there.
Impressed with the work of Bishop Keeprath (of Jalandhar diocese from 1971 to 2007), Mulakkal decided to shift his base to Punjab. He was first ordained as a priest in Jalandhar in April 1990.
He did his Master’s in English and sociology from Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar, and earned a doctorate degree in moral theology from Alphonsian Academy of Lateran University, Rome. He remained international treasurer of the Priest Union of India while he was there.
In 2001, he authored A theological investigation into the moral teachings of Guru Nànak from a catholic perspective, his doctoral work. He remained head of the department and professor at Holy Trinity Regional Major Seminary in Jalandhar and member of the diocesan College of Consulters. He also served the Jalandhar diocese as its spokesperson.
Also read: Bishop Franco Mulakkal steps down, to face interrogation by Kerala police
Mulakkal was appointed auxiliary bishop of Delhi and Titular Bishop of Culla in 2009. He held vital positions in the organisation of the church. He remained the regional chairman of Northern Regional Youth Commission, secretary of the regional bishops’ conference of North India and consulter of the Pontifical Council for Inter-Religious Dialogue, Rome.
Pope Benedict XVI appointed the bishop as the consulter for the pontifical council of inter-religious dialogue in Rome.
In June 2013, Pope Francis appointed him the Bishop of Jalandhar. He paid obeisance at the Golden Temple in Amritsar soon after his coronation in the first week of August. The event was attended by almost 25,000 people, including over 700 sisters, 400 priests, 27 bishops and a cardinal.
Politicians flocked to him
In August 2014, then deputy chief minister of Punjab Sukhbir Singh Badal met the bishop at Trinity College in Jalandhar where a sarv dharma prayer had been organised by the diocese. Then chief minister Parkash Singh Badal and Akal Takht jathedar Giani Gurbachan Singh too attended the prayer.
Punjab’s former education minister Daljit Singh Cheema was the chief guest at the silver jubilee celebrations of the bishop’s baptism as a priest in May 2015.
The elaborate celebrations took place at the bishop’s native place in Thrissur in Kerala. Apart from the senior Akali leader, former union minister Oscar Fernandes, Thrissur MP C.N. Jayadevan, members of the minority commission were also present at the celebrations.
According to some reports, he is considered to be ‘close’ to the Akalis.
Slammed Sikh holy book desecration
Before the 2009 parliamentary elections, Mulakkal made it clear that the Christian community will show its resentment against riot-accused BJP candidates in Odisha by not voting for “tainted persons”.
Last year, he led a delegation to meet former Akal Takht jathedar Giani Gurbachan Singh to express dismay over the desecration of the Guru Granth Sahib at Bhangawa village, for which a Christian was arrested.
You have started degrading yourself. What is the great influence you are talking about? That a few people have attended his meetings? No anecdotes. All this shit is available with school kids too. Grow up.
Why don’t you say something about his spiritual powers too?