Ancients' blood runs cold, they freeze in fear To customs they adhere as mother's might unfolds Pantheons collapse with spark of confidence In eyes of personified Omnipotence worshippers
Omnipotence...
Firmly impacted lighting rod Not in bolt of cognition believer confides If triangles made up god Would it also have three sides?
Should true sacred book's pages Be scattered throughout all ages?
The light of science shines But still Crusaders are there to kill the mind's will
Will...
Delusion of God!
- How do you dare steal the hope of savior? - Like the one that st. Xavier brought to Gopakapattanam with disorderly behaviour - How do you dare disturb wish for eternal bliss? - Unseal value of mundane peace starting with obsolete perception to be dismissed - How do you dare deprive of sense of morality? - From mentality of inquisitional lethality
Xavier http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Xavier Spanish missionary and Jesuit who establish missionaries in Japan and Ceylon and the East Indies (1506-1552)
The non-Christian perspective is very different. Francis Xavier has been criticized for his responsibility in initiating the Goa Inquisition, and for his iconoclasty. According to Rao, "St. Francis Xavier made it a point not only to convert the people but also destroy the idols and ancient places of worship." [5]
In Japan, which like India allowed him the freedom to practise his faith, the uncompromising Xavier took to the streets denouncing, among other things, idolatry and homosexuality. Under his instigation, Kirishitan converts took part in destroying traditional temples and shrines.[citation needed] A Tokugawan law clearly stated that "Christians were bringing disorder to Japanese society and that their followers "contravene governmental regulations, traduce Shinto, calumniate the True Law, destroy regulations, and corrupt goodness".[citation needed]
...
In Europe , the Goa Inquisition became notorious for its cruelty and use of torture, and the French philosopher Voltaire wrote "Goa is sadly famous for its inquisition, which is contrary to humanity as much as to commerce. The Portuguese monks deluded us into believing that the Indian populace was worshiping The Devil, while it is they who served him."[6]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goa
The name Goa came to European languages from the Portuguese, but its precise origin is unclear. In the bygone days it came to be known by many names such as Gomanchala, Gopakapattam, Gopakapuri, Govapuri, Gomantak, etc.[5] The Indian epic Mahabharata refers to the area now known as Goa, as Goparashtra or 'Govarashtra"' which means a nation of cowherds. Gopakapuri or Gopakapattanam were used in some ancient Sanskrit texts, and these names were also mentioned in other sacred Hindu texts such as the Harivansa and the Skanda Purana. In the latter, Goa is also known as Gomanchala. Parashurambhoomi is a name that the region is referred to in certain inscriptions and texts such as the Puranas.[6]
disorderly behavior: any act of molesting or interrupting or hindering or disquieting or agitating or arousing from a state of repose or otherwise depriving inhabitants of the peace and quiet to which they are entitled