Another day, another exposé of a covert Christian conversion racket. This time, the location is Chilhati village in Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh. On November 16, 2025, a “prayer meeting” held in a private residence was disrupted by vigilant members of a local Hindu organization. What they found was not a simple prayer, but a systematic operation targeting vulnerable Hindu women and children, allegedly luring them into Christianity.

This incident is not an isolated one. It is the latest flashpoint in what can only be described as a systematic, well-funded, and aggressive war against India’s indigenous faith. The Bilaspur case peels back the curtain on a nationwide apparatus that uses deception, inducement, and foreign money to prey on the poor and the vulnerable.
An FIR has been registered under the Chhattisgarh Freedom of Religion Act, 2021, naming Pastor Vishnu Kosaria and Prateek Goyal. But these individuals are merely foot soldiers. The real story lies in the vast, insidious network that funds and directs them.
The Bilaspur Blueprint: An Epidemic of Deception
What happened in Chilhati village is a textbook example of the missionary modus operandi. Hindu activists, arriving with loudspeakers to warn attendees of “brainwashing,” uncovered a gathering specifically targeting the most susceptible segments of society.
This is not a new phenomenon for Bilaspur. This single district is reeling from an explosion of such activities, with a staggering 38 FIRs filed in the last six months alone.
On November 12, just days earlier, two separate cases were lodged in Sarkanda and Pachpedi involving the same tactic: prayer meetings targeting Hindu women and children.
In Vasant Vihar colony, an SECL driver named Rajendra Khare was accused of luring locals with Christian books.
In Kukurdi Khurd village, another house-based meeting was found targeting Hindu families.
This is a full-scale offensive. The conflict has already spilled over into public life, with disputes raging over Christian burials in Hindu cremation grounds—a clear sign of a demographic and cultural assault designed to erase local traditions.
The Missionary Modus Operandi: A Strategy of Subversion
Based on reports from OpIndia, Organiser, and whistleblowers, the missionary strategy is a multi-pronged attack that relies on psychological manipulation and financial power.
1. Target the Vulnerable
The primary targets are always the same: impoverished tribal (Janjati) communities, Dalits, the sick, and marginalized women. These groups are systematically isolated and told their suffering is a result of their Hindu faith.
2. The Lure of “Miracles” and Money
This is not about faith; it’s a transaction. Rackets operate by offering:
Financial Inducements: Reports from a similar racket in Meerut (October 2024) alleged that families were offered Rs 2-5 lakh to convert.
“Miracle Healings”: Pastors promise supernatural cures for illnesses, offering “miracle water” or prayers in exchange for renouncing Hindu deities.
“Humanitarian Aid”: Free education, healthcare, or food is offered, but it comes with a condition: conversion. This is the “Rice Bag” tactic in modern form.
3. Cultural Appropriation and Erasure
As exposed by researchers, this is a “war by other means.” Missionaries engage in what is called “Tantaka Tantra”—systematically appropriating and corrupting Hindu symbols, rituals, and terms to make Christianity appear indigenous, all while secretly gutting its Sanatana core.
4. Covert Operations
The use of private homes, like the one in Bilaspur, is a deliberate strategy. These “house-churches” are unregistered, operate under the radar, and function as illegal hubs for proselytization, far from the scrutiny of law enforcement.
Following the Money: The Foreign-Funded War
How is this massive, nationwide operation funded? The answer lies in the billions of dollars flowing into India under the guise of “charity.” The Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) is meant to regulate this, but for decades, it has been used as a smokescreen. Critics allege that $100-200 million annually flows from U.S. and European-based evangelical and Catholic groups to Indian NGOs. This includes an estimated $50-100 million from U.S.-based evangelical groups like World Vision India and Compassion International, $20-50 million from European Catholic charities such as Caritas Internationalis, and another $30-50 million from various Gulf and Protestant networks like Gospel for Asia.
This money, documented as “humanitarian aid” or “disaster relief,” is allegedly laundered to fund the salaries of pastors, print conversion literature, and offer the very financial lures used to trap vulnerable Hindus.
Thankfully, the government has begun to act. In November 2024, the Ministry of Home Affairs explicitly blocked FCRA licenses for several Christian organizations, citing “illegal religious conversion activities.” This crackdown is a long-overdue admission of a problem that patriotic groups have been highlighting for years.
The “Persecution” Defense: A Calculated Smokescreen
Predictably, every time a racket is exposed, the global missionary-media complex cries “persecution.” They deploy a well-worn script:
They claim anti-conversion laws (now in 18 states) are “tools for harassment.”
They highlight isolated cases where an FIR is quashed (like a UP case from November 14), painting the accused as innocent victims.
They flood global forums with reports of “anti-Christian violence,” conflating the disruption of illegal conversion rackets with genuine religious persecution.
This is a deliberate smokescreen.
This “victim card” is a calculated strategy to silence critics, tie the hands of law enforcement, and provide cover for their operatives to continue their demographic assault. The claim that this is about “kindness” or “freedom of religion” is a farce. Freedom of religion is not the freedom to buy, bribe, or defraud someone into changing their faith


