Kolkata: Pall of Gloom down on the Jesuit of the city as the news of the death of a filtered booth father.
There are several Jesuit priests who do not only work with him but ideologically support the cause for Dalit and tribe and, therefore, relate to him.
They called the death of “intentional murder” from a man who worked throughout his life for tribal rights.
Even though most of his life, Father Stan lived and worked in Ranchi and belonged to Jamshedpur, he was very close to Jesuits in Kolkata and often became a guest at St Xavier’s College, a Jesuit institution, where he spoke to students about the needs of young people for Work for the tribal upliftment.
“Througheath 90s, we came and talked to our students.
He has a stack of research he did about how Jharkhand tribes lost their land, how they were exploited as cheap labor and how they lived in disease and starvation.
He shared his findings Among our students and priests, urging each of them to get out of the comfort zone and work for the poor.
Death is caused by intentionally, to serve the interests of the rich, for whom he is a big obstacle because they have to cross it to get to tribal land, “Felix Raj’s father said, Deputy Chancellor of the University of St Xavier, who led the movement in the city since the Elementary School of Pastor Stan was placed behind bars to incite violence against the country.
This was withdrawn by Jesuit in India.
Felix’s father led the protest procession which ended in Bust Mother Teresa after the arrest of October 2020 and wrote nonstop against “injustice” carried out at the savior of the tribes.
“I even wrote to PM, but nothing happened,” he said.
Father Jayraj, the Chancellor of St Xavier’s College, described the Swamy Stan Father as a gentle giant who walked miles with tribes for 60 years.
“His death only makes us stronger,” he said.
His death, ironically, came on the day the guarantee request must be heard.
“On July 3, when his guarantee did not come to hear, his heart went bankrupt,” said Father Jyothi, a Jesuit Imam from the city who was in the food movement he had touched close to the Father of Stan.
On Monday, when the request came to hear, the director of the hospital he was in a statement that Fr Stan had died.
The Jesuit priests said that by denying him basic human rights, the state has shown poor coercion for the people.
Dominic Savio’s father, St.
Xavier’s College’s headmaster, called him “martyr and holy”.
“He struggled and died for justice and became eternal,” he said.