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MISSIONARY POSITIONS: CHRISTIANITY AND NEPALI SOCIETY John Whelpton HKAS 12/1/2012

RECENT EVENTS

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Page 1: RECENT EVENTS

MISSIONARY POSITIONS:

CHRISTIANITY AND NEPALI SOCIETY John Whelpton HKAS 12/1/2012

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`Go into the whole world and preach the gospel; those who believe and are baptised will be saved and those who do not believe will be damned’ (Mark 16: 15-16) (Illustration is the frontispiece of Satya Sakshi Parmesvarya Mahima (1740))

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RECENT EVENTS• 1990: Popular protests (`Janandolan I’)force re-introduction of parliamentary democracy after thr

ee decades of royal rule

• 1996: Start of Maoists’ `People’s War’

• 2001: `Royal Massacre’, accession of King Gyanendra and State of Emergency following Maoist attack on the national army

• 2005: Gyanendra’s imposition of direct royal rule leads to rapprochment between Maoists and the parliamentary parties

• 2006: Popular protests (`Janandolan II) force Gyanendra to restore parliament, followed by ceasefire and power sharing between Maoists and parliamentary parties

• 2008: Maoists emerge as largest single party (30% of popular vote, 37% of seats) in election for constituent assembly, followed by Congress and the United Marxist-Leninists (UML),the dominant parties in the 1990s, with 20% each.

• 2009: Maoist-led coalition government falls over attempt to assert greater control over the army, replaced by coalition of non-Maoists parties led by UML

• Feb 2011: Maoist-UML coalition government installed with UML premier

• Aug 2011: Maoist-led coalition with Tarai regionalist parties

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JOÃO CABRAL, S.J., 1599-1669

• First European known to have visited Bhutan, Tibet and Nepal

• After stays in Bhutan and Tibet, returned to India via the Nepal Valley in 1628 and recommended the route as superior to the more easterly one through Kooch-Behar he had previously used.

• His visit to Nepal is known only through a letter in the Jesuit archives published by Wessels in 1924, which gives no further details

• English text and a brief discussion available in Nancy M. Gettelman `Letter of the first westerner to visit Bhutan-Tibet-Nepal’ Kailas, vol.9, no. 1, 1982, pp. 97-110

http://himalaya.socanth.cam.ac.uk/collections/journals/kailash/pdf/kailash_09_01_04.pdf

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Kircher’s CHINA ILLUSTRATA (1667)

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FRS. GRUEBER AND DORVILLE IN THE KATHMANDU VALLEY, 1662

• …Rex insignem Patribus benevolentiam exhibuit, praesertim ob tubum Opticum, de quo nihil iis unquam innotuerat, aliamque curiosam Matheseos suppelictilem ipsi exhibitam, quibus adeo captus est , ut Patres prorsus apud se retinere constituerit, neque discedere inde passus sit, nisi ubi fide data illuc se reversuros spondissent; quod si facerent, domum inibi in nostrorum usum et exercitum se exstructuram amplissimis redditibus instructam, una cum plena ad Christi Legem in suum Regnum introducendam facultate concessa, pollicitus est.

• ..the King [of Kathmandu] showed remarkable kindness to the Fathers, especially because of the telescope, of which they had no previous knowledge, and other strange scientific equipment shown to him, by which he was so enthralled that he actually decided to keep the fathers with him and did not let them leave until they had solemnly pledged to return, if they did which, he promised he would construct a house for use by our people and assign a very large revenue to it, as well as giving full permission for the introduction of Christ’s Law into his Kingdom.

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IPPOLITO DESIDERI, S.J. (1684-1733), IN NEPAL

• Reaches Lhasa in March 1716• Leaves in April 1721 after Capuchins show him t

he decree of the Sacra Congregatio de Propaganda Fide giving them the exclusive right to missionary activity in Tibet.

• Reaches Kuti on Nepal-Tibet border in spring 1721and stays several months

• Travels south through the Kathmandu Valley and crosses the Tarai into India the following winter

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CROSSING THE TIBETAN MOUNTAINS

During the journey we crossed the high and difficult mountain called Langur. Everyone suffers from violent headache, oppression of the chest and shortness of breath during the ascent, and often from fever, as happened to me. Although it was nearly the end of May there was deep snow, the cold was intense and the wind so penetrating that, though I was wrapped in woollen rugs, my lungs and heart were so affected that I thought my end was near.

An Account of Tibet, pg.310

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THE ROAD TO KATHMANDU

During the journey from Kutti to Kattmandù…. [the] road skirted frightful precipices and we climbed mountains by holes just large enough to put one’s toe into, cut out of the rock like a staircase. At one place a chasm was crossed by a plank only the width or a man’s foot, while the wooden bridges over large rivers flowing in the deep valleys swayed and oscillated most alarmingly.

An Account of Tibet, pg.311

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HE WAS NOT EXAGGERATING!

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DESIDERI ON THE NEWARS – THE INDIGENOUS POPULATION OF THE KATHMANDU VALLEY

These Neuârs are active, intelligent and very industrious, clever at engraving and melting metal, but unstable, turbulent and traitorous. They are of medium height, dark skinned and generally well made, but nearly all bear deceit written on their faces, so that anyone knowing these countries would pick out a Neuâr from among a thousand Indians. They are cowardly, mean and avaricious, spend little on their food and are dirty in their habits.

An Account of Tibet, p.314

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THE CAPUCHIN MISSION, 1715-1769• The missionaries (mostly Italian but also some French) were

generally protected by the Kathmandu Valley rulers but made few converts

• They became unpopular during a plague which killed 20,000 in 1717 as they allegedly refused to treat those unwilling to convert.

• They initially enjoyed fairly cordial relations with Prithvi Narayan Shah of Gorkha, whose campaign to conquer the Valley lasted from 1743 to 1769, but were expelled in April that year because the failed British intervention to protect the Newar rulers had heightened his suspicions of all Europeans. The country was to remain closed to missionaries (and almost all Europeans) until 1950.

• Their correspondence, published by Luciano Petech as I missionary italiani nel Tibet e nel Nepal, is an important source for the period.

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DARJEELING – A `HILL STATION’ JUST EAST OF THE NEPAL-INDIA BORDER

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THE GROWTH OF DARJEELING• Area originally part of Sikkim but `gifted’ to the British in 1839• Migration from eastern Nepal both because of the availability of work on tea

plantations and because of exactions of Kathmandu government• Large number of `tribals’ and `low castes’ with a stronger tendency to amalg

amation into a single `Nepali’ or `Gorkha’ mainstream than in Nepal-proper• Missionary activity from 1842, with permanent Church of Scotland mission s

tation from 1870. Number of converts small (2000 census shows only 3% of the town’s population as Christians) but converts were particularly likely to switch to Nepali from their own `tribal’ language and missionaries had strong cultural influence.

• Higher levels of literacy than in Nepal – as a result both of missionary and government efforts – and development of an intellectual base for the Nepali nationalism that became the government-sponsored orthodoxy in Nepal itself after 1950-51.

• Currently still part of West Bengal but there is a continuing agitation for the area to be made into a separate state (`Gorkhaland’) within India. Pressure from the area secured the adoption of Nepali as one of India’s constitutionally recognised languages in 1992

• Movement of a number of Darjeeling intellectuals into Nepal, with King Mahendra’s encouragement, after 1951. At this time any Christians you found in Nepal were normally from Darjeeling.

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THE RETURN OF MISSIONARIES TO NEPAL

• November 1950: Rana regime invites Fr Moran, S.J., to establish a school at Godavari in the Kathmandu Valley – St. Xavier’s.

• Following the fall of the Rana regime in February 1951, various missionary groups, some of whom had previously been working in settlements just across the Indian border and hoping for such an opportunity, enter the country with a mandate to carry out medical, educational and other forms of social service.

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RELIGIOUS ADHERENCE IN NEPAL

1981 1991 2001

• Hinduism 89.5 86.5 80.6

• Buddhism 5.3 7.8 10.7

• Islam 2.7 3.5 4.2

• Christianity - 0.17 0.4

• The absolute rise over the last ten years was from 31,280 to 101,976 (i.e an increase of 226%). Adjustment for excluded areas would give a 2001 total of 103,914 and an increase of 232%. In view of the reports of large-scale conversion over the last ten years (e.g. amongst the Tamangs), the real figure may be even higher, though nowhere near the claim of a Christian taxi driver in Kathmandu (originally from the tarai) who (if I understood his Nepali properly) told me one third of Nepal’s population is now Christian. He also said there were now 100 churches in Kathmandu. Current estimates by the churches themselves range between 700,000 to over a million – probably about 3% of the population

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`LIES, DAMNED LIES AND STATISTICS’

• The boundary between Hinduism and Buddhism has always been a fuzzy one, though more distinct at higher levels in the status hierarchy – this is seen most clearly in the two-headed structure of Newar society in the Kathmandu Valley: distinctly Buddhist Bajracharyas and Shakyas and Hindu Rajopadhyaya Brahmans at the top and Hindu-Buddhist Jyapu peasantry at the bottom

• The figure for Hindusim (like the figure for those speaking Nepali rather than another mother tongue) was boosted in the past by the religion’s establishment status. Pressure now also the other way as Buddhist activists try to boost their own numbers.

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SYNCRETISM AT GRASSROOTS LEVEL AS SEEN BY 17th CENTURY FRANCISCANS IN THE

BALKANS

• Fra Cherubino reported disapprovingly after his visit to Kosovo that the Catholics were getting Muslims to act as godfathers for their children, and that they were letting the Muslims use holy chrism on their own children because it would guard them against diseases of the eye. In a village outside Gjakova he and his companion had been welcomed into one house with the words `Come in, Fathers; in our house we have Catholicism, Islam and Orthodoxy‘; in shocked tones, Fra Cherubino reported that `they seemed to glory in the diversity of religions.’ – Noel Malcolm, Kosovo – A Short History. London: Macmillan, 19

98, pg.130

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THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK• The Nepalese state from unification onwards legitimised itself in term of Hin

duism, with the king upholding the caste hierarchy and particularly the sacred status of Brahmans.

• This was made explicit in the 1962 constitution and, despite strong demands from some groups for a secular state, retained in the 1990 constitution. The latter implicitly removed a ban on individuals’ changing their own religion but stated there was no right to conduct active proselytisation (dharmaparivartan garaaune). Provisions against proselytisation in the existing criminal code have remained a dead letter, though a proposal to re-activate them in a revised form was made in 2011

• Nepal was declared a secular state in the aftermath of the protest movement which forced King Gyanendra to cede power in 2006 but some traditionalists continue to demand a referendum on the issue and small extremist groups such as the Shiva Sena Nepal have resorted to violent action to press for reversal of the change. Less extreme groups, but representing the Hindu `high castes’, have also recently become more assertive in response to ethnic activism directed against these castes’ traditionally dominance.

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THE THREE BLOCKS

• Catholic Church– Education – St Xavier’s and St Mary’s schools– Academic research (Human Resources Centre)

• Fr Ludwig Stiller (historian)• Fr. John Locke (Buddhologist)

• United Mission to Nepal– Medical services– Butwal Power Company

• The International Nepal Fellowship http://www.inf.org/ – Medical services – Development work in poor communities

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FR. MARSHAL MORAN, S.J.,1906-1992, IN HIS `HAM SHACK’

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LUDWIG STILLER, S.J.1928 - 2009

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Hong Kong delegation on a clandestine visit to a church in a Rai area of eastern Nepal (April 2007)

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SUMMER INSTITUTE OF LINGUISTICS

• American based organisation studying undeveloped languages as base for translations of the Bible

• December 1966: Nepal government signs contract for SIL to document Nepalese languages and train Nepalese linguists.

• Output includes Austin Hale & David Watters (eds) Clause, Sentence and Discourse Patterns (Kathmandu: SIL, 1973, 4 vols.) Full list in Alan C. Wores, Bibliography of the Summer Institute of Linguistics, 1979-1986 (2 vols, supplm.)

• June 1976: Government orders SIL to quit Nepal by September. No reason cited but suspected to be because of proselytizing activities or (less probably) support for the Free Tibet movement.

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Hvalkof, Søren and Peter Araby (eds). 1981. Is God an American? An anthropological Perspective on the missionary Work of the Summer Institute of Li

nguistics. Copenhagen; International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs http://www.iwgia.org/sw23651.asp

The Wycliffe Bible Translators (WBT)/Summer Institute of Linguistics (SIL), one of the largest missionary enterprises in the world, aims to bring »the Word« to the »Bibleless tribes«. In pursuit of converts, SIL missionaries have profoundly affected indigenous societies throughout the world. 

SIL's method of proselytising and its relationships with host countries have provoked many questions and criticisms. Especially in South America SIL has been accused of acting as a cover for CIA and US military activities, for drug trafficking, for uranium prospecting. But the precise impact of SIL on indigenous peoples has received much less attention. How has the SIL affected the lives and aspirations of native peoples? Have the benefits of literacy, better health care, etc. brought by the missionaries outweighed the damage wrought by the destruction of traditional belief?

– from the IWGIA website blurb (downloaded 25/4/2010)

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OTHER CRITIQUES OF MISSIONARY ACTIVITY

• Saubhagya Shah, `The Gospel Comes to the Hindu Kingdom’, Himal Sept/Oct 1993, on the tension created by conversions at village level.

• George van Driem, Languages of the Himalayas, Leiden: Brill, 2001 (2 vols.)– condemns missionaries for erosion of Chepang traditional culture and n

otes a 1993 attack (led by Chepang shamans) on Christian Chepangs. Refers particularly to work of one New Zealand missionary (p.790)

– corroborates from own experience stories of financial inducements to convert, payment of proselytizers, encouragement of young Christian Tamangs to make fun of traditional ones etc.

– Suggests parallelism or even causal relationship between the effects of Christian missionaries in the Kham Magar area of the western hills and subsequent development of Maoist insurgency there (p.791-20

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CLASHES BETWEEN CHRISTIAN AND NON-CHRISTIANS

• 1993 attack led by Chepang shamans on Chepang Christians

• Nepal News (web) 2/7/00: Buddhist villagers vandalise homes of 5 Christian families at Gumda district (Gorkha), claiming they’ve been trying to convert the village and have slaughtered animals in defiance of Buddhist tradition. Vice-chairman of District Development Committee has negotiated a compromise under which the Christians will be rehabilitated but will stop killing animals.

• Reports of tension in some Tamang villages north of the Kathmandu valley

• Murder of Fr. John Prakash, principal of Don Bosco school in Dharan in summer 2008

• Bomb explosion at a church in Patan kills 2 in May 2009

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SOCIAL WELFARE COUNCIL REPORT APRIL 2010

• Up to 15 percent of the 200 International Non-Governmental Organisations (INGO)s working in Nepal are engaged in preaching their religion in various ways.

• Informal reports received that some INGOs, which took permission from the SWC to carry out various developmental projects in Nepal, preach their religion in various ways like forcing them to convert religion to secure a job, conducting prayers during office hours and providing information about the religion during official training.

• No formal complaints received so no official action yet taken

http://www.nepalnews.com/main/index.php/news-archive/2-political/5162-15-percent-ingos-preaching-religion-swc-.html (downloaded 5April 2010)

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CHRIST AND MAO• Van Driem’s suggestion that missionary undermining of traditional beliefs prepared gr

ound for the Maoists. A Kathmandu-based American Jesuit was given a similar analysis for China by a third-generation Chinese Baptist who believes missionaries in China helped prepare the ground for communism.

• Story from one foreign resident of a church in Patan making voluntary donation to the Maoists during the 2008 election campaign as a means of ensuring a secular state.

• Government closing of a Christian funded development project listed by one analyst among the causes radicalising the area where Maoist insurgency first broke out

• The Indian parallel – killing by Maoists in Andhra Pradesh of a Hindu fundamentalist leader triggered violence against Christians because the Maoists’ recruits are often from Christianised tribes.

• But relations between Christians and Maoists are not as close as Hindu activists suggest

– Those in the Kham Magar area who actually converted generally didn’t become Maoists– Churches in Everest region under `donation’ pressure and not able to operate normally durin

g insurgency– A Protestant pastor’s survey of his own congregation in western Nepal before the 2008 elect

ion showed support for the Maoists as about the same level (30%) as their actual share of the national vote.

– A Maoist who was briefly Minister of Justice in 2011 spoke in favour of strengthened measure against proselytisation proposed for inclusion in a revised civil code

– This attitude may be widespread in Maoist ranks – a senior trade unionist complained to me last year about financial inducements to conversion though also thought trying to act against this would cause trouble with donor community

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PROPOSED PROVIONS ON CONVERSION IN DRAFT REVISED CRIMINAL CODE

(unofficial translation adopted from one supplied by Catholic journalist Chirendra Satyal – italics mine)

• Section 160.1:No person shall be entitled to convert, attempt to convert or incite others to convert anyone to another religion.

• Section 160.2: No person shall act or behave in a manner which may infringe upon the religion practiced by any caste, community from ancient times or conduct publicity for any religion with the intention to convert whether by inducement or not.

• Section 160.3: Anyone committing offences as specified in mention on sub-sections (1) and (2) will be liable to up to 5 years imprisonment and a fine of up to NPR.50000/- fine [about US$700].

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ARTICLE 23 (`RIGHT TO RELIGION’) OF THE 2007 INTERIM CONSTITUTION (UNDP

translation, italics mine)• (1) Every person shall have the right to profess, practise

and preserve his or her own religion as handed down to him or her from ancient times paying due regard to social and cultural traditions. Provided that no person shall be entitled to convert another person from one religion to another, and no person shall act or behave in a manner which may infringe upon the religion of others

• (2) Every religious denomination shall have the right to maintain its independent existence, and for this purpose to manage and protect its religious places and religious trusts, in accordance with law.

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THE CONTROVERSY

• 15 May: Proposal to include provisions against proselytisation in the revised Criminal Code made public

• Campaign by Christians, Buddhists and Mulsims with some liberal Hindu support, alleging the legislation inconsistent with Article 23 of the interim constitution and with article 18 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

• 23 June: Presented to parliament but not brought to a vote because of the fall of the UML-Maoist government at the beginning of August; outgoing prime minister Jhalanath Khanal reportedly makes a statement in support of non-Hindu concerns

• The dispute has throughout attracted little attention outside the groups affected because of concentration on the replacement of Khanal’s government.

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Conversation with a convertFrom a column by Niraj Aryal in a column in The Telegraph (right-wing Kathmandu newspaper), 6/4/10:

“Dai (brother) are you a Catholic or a Protestant?” “Thuuu (pooh-pooh)….it is better to be a Hindu than a Catholic”, the person replied. “Why” surprisingly (sic) I asked.He preferred not to reply (I felt he did not know the answer and I have no idea why Protestants hate Catholics or vice versa.)“What is your name”, I asked him again.“Jeevan,” he answered.“Is that your real name or….” I questioned him.“No, this is the name given to me by my pastor after I accepted conversion”, he told me.“Then what is your real name”, my question followed.(He remained silent for some time and awkwardly replied)Ram Bahadur B. K.(belongs to Dalit community), he finally answered.

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INTER-CHRISTIAN DISAGREEMENTS

• There is a general perception that Catholics are happy not to proselytise (the Justice Minister in 2011 explicitly excluded Catholics from criticism and said the problem was with some Protestant groups), the International Nepal Fellowship want to evade the ban and the United Mission to Nepal includes a range of views on the issue.

• Strong disapproval of Catholics by many evangelicals because of:– their non-proselytising approach

– the ritualism of Catholicism, seen as an adulteration of Christianity by elements of Graeco-Roman paganism (position articulated by Baptist Udi Gurung in his Tribhuvan university M.A. thesis)

– their willingness to participate in some rituals connected with Hinduism, particularly at Dasai

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Durga, the mother goddess whose victory over a buffalo demon is celebrated in Nepal’s most important festival, Dasai.

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`My fingers are still red from giving tika to the younger members of my fictive family in Lubhu. But I just mumble a thoroughly Christian benediction over them as I give tika.’ (American Jesuit missionary) (Photo: Nicole Farcough http://www.advocacynet.org/blogs/index.php/2007/11/07/the_great_festiveal_of_nepal_dashain_pro?blog=78)

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THE CATHOLIC TRADITION

• Willingness by some Catholics to compromise on forms of religious observance (Mattaeo Ricci, the later `Chinese rites’ controversy) but still with ultimate objective of conversion to Christian beliefs.

• Belief that `salvation outside the Church’ is possible in some circumstances

• Recent adjustment to abandonment of traditional proselytising altogether – in Nepal as legally required, but also in some other areas – Catholic schools in Indian `tribal’ areas no longer `missionising’, in contrast to the RSS, Hindu revivalist schools which , ironically adopt the Catholics’ old approach (Sundar 2010). A prominent Indian Jesuit sociologist has called for an abandonment of `aggressive’ attempts to promote conversion (Heredia 2007)

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Conversion and Religious pluralism

• `Go into the whole world and preach the gospel; those who believe and are baptised will be saved and those who do not believe will be damned’.

Mark 16: 15-16

• `My brother kneels (so saith Kabir) To stone and brass in heathen wise, But in my brother’s voice I hear

My own unanswered agonies. His God is as his fates assign – His prayer is all the world’s – and mine. Rudyard Kipling, The Prayer