Riot In India
We had just spent two weeks in Russia in freezing cold weather
and now found ourselves on a plane heading for Bombay, India,
and its 100-degree sweltering heat. Now, my partner Bryan and
I are no thrill seekers, but what lay ahead of us on this trip
could be characterized as nothing less. Our assignment was to
document huge numbers of Indians who were becoming Christians...
and were being persecuted for their faith.
India grabs your nose the moment you step off the plane, and
within minutes mosquitoes were swarming Bryan and me. "Better
get some repellent on!" an American living in India warned us.
"These are the nasty ones that will give you malaria!" That was
typical of India. It seemed you just couldn't get comfortable.
Nothing felt familiar, the food, the weather, the bedsā the only
reassurance we gave ourselves was "We can endure anything for
a couple of weeks."
We spent a lot of time on trains, crammed like sardines in overcrowded
cars filled with the sick and infirmed. Our first assignment was
a crusade held out in a huge field in the village of Rajahmundry
in Andhra Pradesh State. The sea of humanity that we witnessed
was indescribable. An Indian version of Woodstock if you will.
Some nights the crowd was estimated at 60,000 people.I was responsible
for producing a show that could air later on American TV. Shooting
video in this dusty place was a real challenge: power differences,
lights for night shooting that were strung on shoestrings and
protesters - radical Hindu that were not glad we were there. Little
did we know that this would be the best part of the trip.
Our next visit was to Orissa State, a state that is notoriously
anti-Christian with a reputation of killing and persecuting Christians.
We were to travel to the high mountain village of Badapada where
we heard that over 30,000 people had gathered waiting for a crusade
to begin.
The day of our departure we received a warning that some were
plotting violence against the Christians there. I remember gathering
with other Indians and Americans in a hotel room to discuss these
accounts and to provide an opportunity for anyone who wanted to
back out. There was no way that we were going to back out. Bryan
and I had a job to doā we were going to get it done.
After an all night drive on the worst roads on earth with trucks
and cars whizzing by within inches of our van, we arrived at our
location tired and exhausted. Needless to say we were a little
nervous when we arrived, and for good reason as we learned that
the mayor had other ideas. He was an educated radical Hindu and
was bent on stopping our activities at all cost.
A lot of preparation had gone into this event by the Christians
who were coordinating it, including the erection of a huge tent
covering acres that could accommodate 30,000 people. However,
when we arrived at the location the first day, orders had gone
from the mayor's office to the police to break up this gathering.
When we arrived we learned that the crowd had been badly beaten
with batons by the police and many had fled into the hills.
After a day of negotiating with an official on site we
left frustrated and tired. However, we did conduct the most difficult
interview I've ever done. We met the Paul James family, a pastor
who had been hacked to death, cut into six pieces in front of
his wife and kids just because he was a Christian pastor. It had
been less than a year since the incident and at the end of our
interview I hugged the family and they asked for prayer. Their
15-year-old son wanted to follow in his daddy's footsteps and
be a pastor, too. That night Bryan and I were scheduled to leave
so we grabbed a Jeep and drove all night to the coast to begin
our trip out. For our team, things would only get worse.
The next day, our party sent a delegation to the mayor's
office to appeal for help. Our delegation included Indians, an
American doctor, a U.S. Special Ambassador on AIDS, and several
businessmen. Discussions were cordial and polite, but again our
group was lied to.
Our team returned to the crusade site to find an increasingly
restless crowd. With no permission to hold a large scale meeting
a smaller effort to train pastors in a small building got underway,
until late in the afternoon when police showed up with riot gear
and arrested our entire team. By now the anxious crowd had re-gathered
and wanted the crusade to begin. The police marched our entire
team in handcuffs under the large circus-like tent. Then the worst
began to happen.
The crowd, many of whom had traveled hundreds of miles, became
increasingly angry with the police. Suddenly rocks started flying
and soon a full-scale assault on the police was underway. Several
of the crowd grabbed a policeman and almost beat him to death.
Some of our team jumped up and ran toward the crowd in an effort
to restore order with rocks flying toward them. Their efforts
worked and almost certainly saved many of the policemen's lives.
Behind them the police began loading their guns. Then the unthinkable
happened. The police had crawled into the safety of their armored
trucks and through small metal slits pushed their rifles out and
started firing into the crowd. When it was over several people
had been shot including a 24-year-old deacon of a church who was
shot twice in the upper leg. The police dropped him bleeding in
front of our team and both of our doctors tried to numerous times
to treat the man, but the police thrust their batons into our
doctors' stomachs and would not allow them to help. The wounded
man laid there for over two hours in the dirt and eventually bled
to death.
That evening our team was thrown into prison on trumped up charges.
All alone and not knowing if anyone in the outside world knew
our fate, life got real lonely. Eventually, through an amazing
set of circumstances, word reached to the US of the false arrests.
A short story even appeared on CNN, and in the hometowns of our
team it became front-page news. Eventually, the U.S. State Department
got involved and a deal was struck. A special American plane was
flown in to pick our team up and get them out.
After returning to the comfort of my home, I can't help but be
thankful for the freedoms as Americans we enjoy. "Will you ever
go back to India?" friends always ask. "Probably" I normally respond,
but I think Bryan and I have had enough thrills for now.
Monkey on my back...
Few cultures I've seen are as different from my own in the U.S.
And few are as interesting as this nation of almost one billion
people.
When videotaping religious sights there's always a fine line
between sensitivity and getting a good shot. I was in the outer
area of a Hindu temple filming worshippers, incense, and statues
being as non-intrusive as I could. At one point I knelt on the
ground to get a nice shot of an older woman burning incense when
suddenly I felt sharp claws digging into my back. I let out a
yell and jumped up in obvious shock only to see a monkey running
away and dozens of Indians laughing.
I always do my best to provide some cross-cultural entertainment.
How am I going to explain this to your wife?
The Indian Railroad is the largest employer in the world, and
one of the only ways to get around that huge country. India is
sometimes hard to describeā incredibly beautiful, wonderfully
friendly people, many incredibly poor, and sometimes the sick,
afflicted, and deformed leave you feeling sick to your stomach.
My colleague Bryan and I were on our way to film a leper colony,
working for an organization which was helping to relieve some
of the suffering. In a small way we felt good to be helping some
of the problems in the country. Our host was a manager in the
Indian Railway system. He had made arrangements with the train
engineer to stop the train at an undesignated stop out in the
middle of what seemed like nowhere, so we could jump off the train
and be a little closer to the leper colony. It seemed like a good
plan...
The sun was starting to set when the squeal of metal indicated
the trail was slowing. "We will be getting off here," our host
mentioned and so we readied our cases of gear and our luggage
to disembark. "Bryan, I'll jump down off the train with our friend
Rajeev and you quickly hand the baggage to me." Well after quickly
off-loading about half of our cases, the train started moving.
"What!? We're not unloaded yet!"
"Quick, Bryan, give me the other cases!" At this point the train
started moving forward and gaining speed. It was dusk as I continued
to jog alongside of the train, tripping over rocks around the
tracks and catching cases as they came off. All of a sudden, to
my horror I heard Bryan scream, "Steve, the camera!" Here was
our $30,000 camera in a soft case falling off the train. My only
thought was, "save it!" At that point I dove to cushion its fall
and I hit the rocks hard. Looking to my right I saw the grind
of steel train wheels on the tracks and felt the brush of steps
as they brushed passed my head in ever increasing speed. "Roll,
left," I remember thinking to myself. "Stay low - if one of those
steps hits you in the head, it will drag you under the train and
you'll be a goner!"
About the same time an incredible wail of cries went out as the
Indian passengers on the train saw what was happening. They were
certain I had been dragged under the train to an untimely death.
My colleague Bryan did, too. What death is timely? Well, I was
fineā a little bruised, a little scuffed up, but fine. "What was
I thinking?" I said to myself as I dusted myself off and went
ahead to the leper colony. When Bryan finally arrived, I was sipping
a Pepsi in the veranda. "I'm so glad you're alive!" he said, thinking
I had been killed. "I've spent the last 45 minutes wondering how
I was going to explain this to your wife, Nelly."

Well, you never know where this video work will take you. Sometimes
it's better not to know.
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