Malabar Rites

A conventional term for certain customs or practices of the 
natives of South India, which the Jesuit missionaries allowed 
their neophytes to retain after conversion, but which were 
afterwards prohibited by the Holy See. The missions concerned are 
not those of the coast of southwestern India, to which the name 
Malabar properly belongs, but those of inner South India, 
especially those of the former "kingdoms" of Madura, Mysore and 
the Karnatic. The question of Malabar Rites originated in the 
method followed by the Jesuits, since the beginning of the 
seventeenth century, in evangelizing those countries. The 
prominent feature of that method was a condescending accommodation 
to the manners and customs of the people the conversion of whom 
was to be obtained. But, when bitter enemies asserted, as some 
still assert, that the Jesuit missionaries, in Madura, Mysore and 
the Karnatic, either accepted for themselves or permitted to their 
neophytes such practices as they knew to be idolatrous or 
superstitious, this accusation must be styled not only unjust, but 
absurd. In fact it is tantamount to affirming that these men, 
whose intelligence at least was never questioned, were so stupid 
as to jeopardize their own salvation in order to save others, and 
to endure infinite hardships in order to establish among the 
Hindus a corrupt and sham Christianity. 

The popes, while disapproving of some usages hitherto considered 
inoffensive or tolerable by the missionaries, never charged them 
having adulterated knowingly the purity of religion. On one of 
them, who had observed the "Malabar Rites" for seventeen years 
previous to his martyrdom, the Church has conferred the honour of 
beatification. The process for the beatification of Father John de 
Britto was going on at Rome during the hottest period of the 
controversy upon the famous "Rites"; and the adversaries of the 
Jesuits asserted beatification to be impossible, because it would 
amount to approving the "superstitions and idolatries" maintained 
by the missioners of Madura. Yet the cause progressed, and 
Benedict XIV, on 2 July, 1741, declared "that the rites in 
question had not been used, as among the Gentiles, with religious 
significance, but merely as civil observances, and that therefore 
they were no obstacle to bringing forward the process". (Brief of 
Beatification of John de Britto, 18 May, 1852.) There is no reason 
to view the "Malabar Rites", as practised generally in the said 
missions, in any other light. Hence the good faith of the 
missionaries in tolerating the native customs should not be 
contested; on the other hand, they, no doubt, erred in carrying 
this toleration too far. But the bare enumeration of the Decrees 
by which the question was decided shows how perplexing it was and 
how difficult the solution. 

Father de Nobili's work 

The founder of the missions of the interior of South India, 
Roberto de Nobili, was born at Rome, in 1577, of a noble family 
from Montepulciano, which numbered among many distinguished 
relatives the celebrated Cardinal Roberto Bellarmine. When 
nineteen years of age, he entered the Society of Jesus; and, after 
a few years, the young religious, aiming at the purest ideal of 
self-sacrifice, requested his superiors to send him to the 
missions of India. He embarked at Lisbon, 1604, and in 1606 was 
serving his apostolic apprenticeship in South India. Christianity 
was then flourishing on the coasts of this country. It is well 
known that St. Francis Xavier baptized many thousands there, and 
from the apex of the Indian triangle the faith spread along both 
sides, especially on the west, the Malabar coast. But the interior 
of the vast peninsula remained almost untouched. The Apostle of 
the Indies himself recognized the insuperable opposition of the 
"Brahmins and other noble castes inhabiting the interior" to the 
preaching of the Gospel (Monumenta Xaveriana, I, 54). Yet his 
disciples were not sparing of endeavours. A Portuguese Jesuit, 
Gonsalvo Fernandes, had resided in the city of Madura fully 
fourteen years, having obtained leave of the king to stay there to 
watch over the spiritual needs of a few Christians from the coast; 
and, though a zealous and pious missionary, he had not succeeded, 
within that long space of time, in making one convert. This 
painful state of things Nobili witnessed in 1606, when together 
with his superior, the Provincial of Malabar, he paid a visit to 
Fernandes. At once his keen eye perceived the cause and the 
remedy. 

It was evident that a deep-rooted aversion to the foreign 
preachers hindered the Hindus of the interior, not only from 
accepting the Gospel, but even from listening to its message. But 
whence this aversion? Its object was not exactly the foreigner, 
but the Prangui. This name, with which the natives of India 
designed the Portuguese, conveyed to their minds the idea of an 
infamous and abject class of men, with whom no Hindu could have 
any intercourse without degrading himself to the lowest ranks of 
the population. Now the Prangui were abominated because they 
violated the most respected customs of India, by eating beef, and 
indulging in wine and spirits; but much as all well-bred Hindus 
abhored those things, they felt more disgusted at seeing the 
Portuguese, irrespective of any distinction of caste, treat freely 
with the lowest classes, such as the pariahs, who in the eyes of 
their countrymen of the higher castes, are nothing better than the 
vilest animals. Accordingly, since Fernandes was known to be a 
Portuguese, that is a Prangui, and besides was seen living 
habitually with the men of the lowest caste, the religion he 
preached, no less than himself, had to share the contempt and 
execration attending his neophytes, and made no progress whatever 
among the better classes. To become acceptable to all, 
Christianity must be presented to all, Christianity must be 
presented in quite another way. While Nobili thought over his 
plan, probably the example just set by his countryman Matteo 
Ricci, in China, stood before his mind. At all events, he started 
from the same principle, resolving to become, after the motto of 
St. Paul, all things to all men, and a Hindu to the Hindus, as far 
as might be lawful. 

Having ripened his design by thorough meditation and by conferring 
with his superiors, the Archbishop of Cranganore and the 
provincial of Malabar, who both approved and encouraged his 
resolution, Nobili boldly began his arduous career by re-entering 
Madura in the dress of the Hindu ascetics, known as saniassy. He 
never tried to make believe that he was a native of India; else he 
would have deserved the name of imposter; with which he has 
sometimes been unjustedly branded; but he availed himself of the 
fact that he was not a Portuguese, to deprecate the opprobrious 
name Prangui. He introduced himself as a Roman raja (nobleman), 
desirous of living at Madura in practising penance, in praying and 
studying the sacred law. He carefully avoided meeting with Father 
Fernandes and he took his lodging in a solitary abode in the 
Brahmins' quarter obtained from the benevolence of a high officer. 
At first he called himself a raja, but soon he changed this title 
for that of brahmin, better suited to his aims. The rajas or 
kshatryas, being the second of the three high castes, formed the 
military class; but intellectual avocations were almost 
monopolized by the Brahmins. They held from time immemorial the 
spiritual if not the political government of the nation, and were 
the arbiters of what the others ought to believe, to revere, and 
to adore. Yet, it must be noted, they were in no wise a priestly 
caste; they were possessed of no exclusive right to perform 
functions of religious cult. Nobili remained for a long time shut 
up in his dwelling, after the custom of Indian penitents, living 
on rice, milk, and herbs with water, and that once a day; he 
received attendance only from Brahmin servants. Curiosity could 
not fail to be raised, and all the more as the foreign saniassy 
was very slow in satisfying it. When, after two or three refusals, 
he admitted visitors, the interview was conducted according to the 
strictest rules of Hindu etiquette. Nobili charmed his audience by 
the perfection with which he spoke their own language, Tamil; by 
the quotations of famous Indian authors with which he interspersed 
his discourse, and above all, by the fragments of native poetry 
which he recited or even sang with exquisite skill. 

Having thus won a benevolent hearing, he proceeded step by step on 
his missionary task, labouring first to set right the ideas of his 
auditors with respect to natural truth concerning God, the soul, 
etc., and then instilling by degrees the dogmas of the Christian 
faith. He took advantage also of his acquaintance with the books 
revered by the Hindus as sacred and divine. These he contrived, 
the first of all Europeans, to read and study in the Sanskrit 
originals. For this purpose he had engaged a reputed Brahmin 
teacher, with whose assistance and by the industry of his own keen 
intellect and felicitous memory he gained such a knowledge of this 
recondite literature as to strike the native doctors with 
amazement, very few of them feeling themselves capable of vying 
with him on the point. In this way also he was enabled to find in 
the Vedas many truths which he used in testimony of the doctrine 
he preached. By this method, and no less by the prestige of his 
pure and austere life, the missionary had soon dispelled the 
distrust and before the end of 1608, he conferred baptism on 
several persons conspicuous for nobility and learning. While he 
obliged his neophytes to reject all practices involving 
superstition or savouring in any wise of idolatrous worship, he 
allowed them to keep their national customs, in as far as these 
contained nothing wrong and referred to merely political or civil 
usages. Accordingly, Nobili's disciples continued for example, 
wearing the dress proper to each one's caste; the Brahmins 
retaining their codhumbi (tuft of hair) and cord (cotton string 
slung over the left shoulder); all adorning as before, their 
foreheads with sandalwood paste, etc. yet, one condition was laid 
on them, namely, that the cord and sandal, if once taken with any 
superstitious ceremony, be removed and replaced by others with a 
special benediction, the formula of which had been sent to Nobili 
by the Archbishop of Cranganore. 

While the missionary was winning more and more esteem, not only 
for himself, but also for the Gospel, even among those who did not 
receive it, the fanatical ministers and votaries of the national 
gods, whom he was going to supplant, could not watch his progress 
quietly. By their assaults, indeed, his work was almost 
unceasingly impeded, and barely escaped ruin on several occasions; 
but he held his ground in spite of calumny, imprisonment, menances 
of death and all kinds of ill-treatment. In April, 1609, the flock 
which he had gathered around him was too numerous for his chapel 
and required a church; and the labour of the ministry had become 
so crushing that he entreated the provincial to send him a 
companion. But then fell on him a storm from a part whence it 
might least have been expected. Fernandes, the missioner already 
mentioned, may have felt no mean jealousy, when seeing Nobili 
succeed so happily where he had been so powerless; but certainly 
he proved unable to understand or to appreciate the method of his 
colleague; probably, also, as he had lived perforce apart from the 
circles among which the latter was working, he was never well 
informed of his doings. However, that may be, Fernandes directed 
to the superiors of the Jesuits in India and at Rome a lengthy 
report, in which he charged Nobili with simulation, in declining 
the name of Prangui; with connivance at idolatry, in allowing his 
neophytes to observe heathen customs, such as wearing the insigna 
of castes; lastly, with schismatical proceeding, in dividing the 
Christians into separate congregations. This denunciation at first 
caused an impression highly unfavourable to Nobili. Influenced by 
the account of Fernandes, the provincial of Malabar (Father 
Laerzio, who had always countenanced Nobili, had then left that 
office), the Visitor of the India Missions and even the General of 
the Society at Rome sent severe warnings to the missionary 
innovator. Cardinal Bellarmine, in 1612, wrote to his relative, 
expressing the grief he felt on hearing of his unwise conduct. 

Things changed as soon as Nobili, being informed of the 
accusation, could answer it on every point. By oral explanations, 
in the assemblies of missionaries and theologians at Cochin and at 
Goa, and by an elaborate memoir, which he sent to Rome, he 
justified the manner in which he had presented himself to the 
Brahmins of Madura; then, he showed that the national customs he 
allowed his converts to keep were such as had no religious 
meaning. The latter point, the crux of the question, he elucidated 
by numerous quotations from the authoritative Sanskrit law-books 
of the Hindus. Moreover, he procured affidavits of one hundred and 
eight Brahmins, from among the most learned in Madura, all 
endorsing his interpretation of the native practices. He 
acknowledged that the infidels used to associate those practices 
with superstitious ceremonies; but, he observed, "these ceremonies 
belong to the mode, not to the substance of the practices; the 
same difficulty may be raised about eating, drinking, marriage, 
etc., for the heathens mix their ceremonies with all their 
actions. It suffices to do away with the superstitious ceremonies, 
as the Christians do". As to schism, he denied having caused any 
such thing: "he had founded a new Christianity, which never could 
have been brought together with the older: the separation of the 
churches had been approved by the Archbishop of Cranganore; and it 
precluded neither unity of faith nor Christian charity, for his 
neophytes used to greet kindly those of F. Fernandes. Even on the 
coast there are different churches for different castes, and in 
Europe the places in the churches are not common for all." 
Nobili's apology was effectually seconded by the Archbishop of 
Cranganore, who, as he had encouraged the first steps of the 
missionary, continued to stand firmly by his side, and pleaded his 
cause warmly at Goa before the archbishop, as well as at Rome. 
Thus the learned and zealous primate of India, Alexis de Menezes, 
though a synod held by him had prohibited the Brahmin cord, was 
won over to the cause of Nobili. And his successor, Christopher de 
Sa, having thought fit to take a contrary course, remained almost 
the only opponent in India. 

At Rome the explanations of Nobili, of the Archbishop of 
Cranganore, and of the chief Inquisitor of Goa brought about a 
similar effect. In 1614 and 1615 Cardinal Bellarmine and the 
General of the Society wrote again to the missionary, declaring 
themselves fully satisfied. At last, after the usual mature 
examination by the Holy See, on 31 January, 1623, Gregory XV, by 
his Apostolic Letter, " Romanae Sedis Antistes", decided the 
question provisionally in favour of Father de Nobili. Accordingly, 
the codhumbi, the cord, the sandal, and the baths were permitted 
to the Indian Christians, "until the Holy See provide otherwise"; 
only certain conditions are prescribed, in order that all 
superstitious admixture and all occasion of scandal may be 
averted. As to the separation of the castes, the pope confines 
himself to "earnestly entreating and beseeching (etiam atque etiam 
obtestamur et obsecramus) the nobles not to despise the lower 
people, especially in the churches, by hearing the Divine word and 
receiving the sacraments apart from them". Indeed, a strict order 
to this effect would have been tantamount to sentencing the new-
born Christianity of Madura to death. The pope understood, no 
doubt, that the customs connected with the distinction of castes, 
being so deeply rooted in the ideas and habits of all Hindus, did 
not admit an abrupt suppression, even among the Christians. They 
were to be dealt with by the Church, as had been slavery, serfdom, 
and the like institutions of past times. The Church never attacked 
directly those inveterate customs; but she inculcated meekness, 
humility, charity, love of the Saviour who suffered and gave His 
life for all, and by this method slavery, serfdom, and other 
social abuses were slowly eradicated. 

While imitating this wise indulgence to the feebleness of new 
converts, Father de Nobili took much care to inspire his disciples 
with the feelings becoming true Christians towards their humbler 
brethren. At the very outset of his preaching, he insisted on 
making all understand that "religion was by no means dependent on 
caste; indeed it must be one for all, the true God being one for 
all; although [he added] unity of religion destroys not the civil 
distinction of the castes nor the lawful privileges of the 
nobles". Explaining then the commandment of charity, he inculcated 
that it extended to the pariahs as well as others, and he exempted 
nobody from the duties it imposes; but he might rightly tell his 
neophytes that, for example, visiting pariahs or other of low 
caste at their houses, treating them familiarly, even kneeling or 
siting by them in the church, concerned perfection rather than the 
precept of charity, and that accordingly such actions could be 
omitted without any fault, at least where they involved so grave a 
detriment as degradation from the higher caste. Of this principle 
the missionaries had a right to make use for themselves. Indeed 
charity required more from the pastors of souls than from others; 
yet not in such a way that they should endanger the salvation of 
the many to relieve the needs of the few. Therefore Nobili, at the 
beginning of his apostolate, avoided all public intercourse with 
the lower castes; but he failed not to minister secretly even to 
pariahs. In the year 1638, there were at Tiruchirapalli 
(Trichinopoly) several hundred Christian pariahs, who had been 
secretly taught and baptized by the companions of Nobili. About 
this time he devised a means of assisting more directly the lower 
castes, without ruining the work begun among the higher. 

Besides the Brahmin saniassy, there was another grade of Hindu 
ascetics, called pandaram, enjoying less consideration than the 
Brahmins, but who were allowed to deal publicly with all castes, 
and even hold intercourse with the pariahs. They were not excluded 
from relations with the higher castes. On the advice of Nobili, 
the superiors of the mission with the Archbishop of Cranganore 
resolved that henceforward there should be two classes of 
missionaries, the Brahmin and the pandaram. Father Balthasar da 
Costa was the first, in 1540, who took the name and habit of 
pandaram, under which he effected a large number of conversions, 
of others as well as of pariahs. Nobili had then three Jesuit 
companions. After the comforting decision of Rome, he had hastened 
to extend his preaching beyond the town of Madura, and the Gospel 
spread by degrees over the whole interior of South India. In 1646, 
exhausted by forty-two years of toiling and suffering, he was 
constrained to retire, first to Jafnapatam in Ceylon, then to 
Mylapore, where he died 16 January, 1656. He left his mission in 
full progress. To give some idea of its development, we note that 
the superiors, writing to the General of the Society, about the 
middle and during the second half of the seventeenth century, 
record an annual average of five thousand conversions, the number 
never being less than three thousand a year even when the 
missioners' work was most hindered by persecution. At the end of 
the seventeenth century, the total number of Christians in the 
mission, founded by Nobili and still named Madura mission, though 
embracing, besides Madura, Mysore, Marava, Tanjore, Gingi, etc., 
is described as exceeding 150,000. Yet the number of the 
missionaries never went beyond seven, assisted however by many 
native catechists. 

The Madura mission belonged to the Portuguese assistance of the 
Society of Jesus, but it was supplied with men from all provinces 
of the Order. Thus, for example, Father Beschi (c. 1710 - 1746), 
who won so high a renown among the Hindus, heathen and Christian, 
by his writings in Tamil, was an Italian, as the founder of the 
mission had been. In the last quarter of the seventeenth century, 
the French Father John Venantius Bouchet worked for twelve years 
in Madura, chiefly at Trichinopoly, during which time he baptized 
about 20'000 infidels. And it is to be noted that the catechumens, 
in these parts of India, were admitted to baptism only after a 
long and a careful preparation. Indeed the missionary accounts of 
the time bear frequent witness to the very commendable qualities 
of these Christians, their fervent piety, their steadfastness in 
the sufferings they often had to endure for religion's sake, their 
charity towards their brethren, even of lowest castes, their zeal 
for the conversion of pagans. In the year 1700 Father Bouchet, 
with a few other French Jesuits, opened a new mission in the 
Karnatic, north of the River Kaveri. Like their Portuguese 
colleagues of Madura, the French missionaries of the Karnatic were 
very successful, in spite of repeated and almost continual 
persecutions by the idolators. Moreover several of them became 
particularly conspicuous for the extensive knowledge they acquired 
of the literature and sciences of ancient India. From Father 
Coeurdoux the French Academicians learned the common origin of the 
Sanskrit, Greek, and Latin languages; to the initiative of Nobili 
and to the endeavours of his followers in the same line is due the 
first disclosure of a new intellectual world in India. The first 
original documents, enabling the learned to explore that world, 
were drawn from their hiding-places in India, and sent in large 
numbers to Europe by the same missionaries. But the Karnatic 
mission had hardly begun when it was disturbed by the revival of 
the controversy, which the decision of Gregory XV had set at rest 
for three quarters of a century. 

The Decree of Tournon 

This second phase, which was much more eventful and noisy than the 
first, originated in Pondicherry. Since the French had settled at 
that place, the spiritual care of the colonists was in the hands 
of the Capuchin Fathers, who were also working for the conversion 
of the natives. With a view to forwarding the latter work, the 
Bishop of Mylapore or San Thome, to whose jurisdiction Pondicherry 
belonged, resolved, in 1699, to transfer it entirely to the 
Jesuits of the Karnatic mission, assigning to them a parochial 
church in the town and restricting the ministry of the Capuchins 
to the European immigrants, French or Portuguese. The Capuchins 
were displeased by this arrangement and appealed to Rome. The 
petition they laid before the pope, in 1703, embodied not only a 
complaint against the division of parishes made by the bishop, but 
also an accusation against the methods of the Jesuit mission in 
South India. Their claim on the former point was finally 
dismissed, but the charges were more successful. On 6 November, 
1703, Charles -Thomas Maillard de Tournon, a Piedmontese prelate, 
Patriarch of Antioch, sent by Clement XI, with the power of 
legatus a latere, to visit the new Christian missions of the East 
Indies and especially China, landed at Pondicherry. Being obliged 
to wait there eight months for the opportunity of passing over to 
China, Tournon instituted an inquiry into the facts alleged by the 
Capuchins. He was hindered through sickness, as he himself stated, 
from visiting any part of the inland mission; in the town, besides 
the Capuchins, who had not visited the interior, he interrogated a 
few natives through interpreters; the Jesuits he consulted rather 
cursorily, it seems. 

Less than eight months after his arrival in India, he considered 
himself justified in issuing a decree of vital import to the whole 
of the Christians of India. It consisted of sixteen articles 
concerning practices in use or supposed to be in use among the 
neophytes of Madura and the Karnatic; the legate condemned and 
prohibited these practices as defiling the purity of the faith and 
religion, and forbade the missionaries, on pain of heavy censures, 
to permit them any more. Though dated 23 June, 1704, the decree 
was notified to the superiors of the Jesuits only on 8 July, three 
days before the departure of Tournon from Pondicherry. During the 
short time left, the missionaries endeavoured to make him 
understand on what imperfect information his degree rested, and 
that nothing less than the ruin of the mission was likely to 
follow from its execution. They succeeded in persuading him to 
take off orally the threat of censures appended, and to suspend 
provisionally the prescription commanding the missionaries to give 
spiritual assistance to the sick pariahs, not only in the 
churches, but in their dwellings. 

Examination of the Malabar Rites at Rome 

Tournon's decree, interpreted by prejudice and ignorance as 
representing, in the wrong practices if condemned, the real state 
of the India missions, affords to this day a much-used weapon 
against the Jesuits. At Rome it was received with reserve. Clement 
XI, who perhaps overrated the prudence of his zealous legate, 
ordered, in the Congregation of the Holy Office, on 7 January, 
1706, a provisional confirmation of the decree to be sent to him, 
adding that it should be executed "until the Holy See might 
provide otherwise, after having heard those who might have 
something to object". And meanwhile, by an oraculum vivae vocis 
granted to the procurator of the Madura mission, the pope decree, 
"in so far as the Divine glory and the salvation of souls would 
permit". The objections of the missionaries and the corrections 
they desired were propounded by several deputies and carefully 
examined at Rome, without effect, during the lifetime of Clement 
XI and during the short pontificate of his successor Innocent 
XIII. Benedict XIII grappled with the case and even came to a 
decision, enjoining "on the bishops and missionaries of Madura, 
Mysore, and the Karnatic " the execution of Tournon's decree in 
all its parts (12 December, 1727). Yet it is doubted whether that 
decision ever reached the mission, and Clement XII, who succeeded 
Benedict XIII, commanded the whole affair to be discussed anew. In 
four meetings held from 21 January to 6 September, 1733, the 
cardinals of the Holy Office gave their final conclusions upon all 
the articles of Tournon's decree, declaring how each of them ought 
to be executed, or restricted and mitigated. By a Brief dated 24 
August, 1734, Clement XII sanctioned this resolution; moreover, on 
13 May 1739, he prescribed an oath, by which every missionary 
should bind himself to obeying and making the neophytes obey 
exactly the Brief of 24 August, 1734. 

Many hard prescriptions of Tournon were mitigated by the 
regulation of 1734. As to the first article, condemning the 
omission of the use of saliva and breathing on the candidates for 
baptism, the missionaries, and the bishops of India with them, are 
rebuked for not having consulted the Holy See previously to that 
omission; yet, they are allowed to continue for ten years omitting 
these ceremonies, to which the Hindus felt so strangely loath. 
Other prohibitions or precepts of the legate are softened by the 
additions of a Quantum fieri potest, or even replaced by mere 
counsels or advices. In the sixth article, the taly, "with the 
image of the idol Pulleyar", is still interdicted, but the 
Congregation observes that "the missionaries say they never 
permitted wearing of such a taly". Now this observation seems 
pretty near to recognizing that possibly the prohibitions of the 
rather overzealous legate did not always hit upon existing abuses. 
And a similar conclusion might be drawn from several other 
articles, e.g. from the fifteenth, where we are told that the 
interdiction of wearing ashes and emblems after the manner of the 
heathen Hindus, ought to be kept, but in such a manner, it is 
added, "that the Constitution of Gregory XV of 31 January, 1623, ' 
Romanae Senis Antistes ', be observed throughout ". By that 
Constitution, as we have already seen, some signs and ornaments, 
materially similar to those prohibited by Tournon, were allowed to 
the Christians, provided that no superstition whatever was mingled 
with their use. Indeed, as the Congregation of Propaganda explains 
in an Instruction sent to the Vicar Apostolic of Pondicherry, 15 
February, 1792, "the Decree of Cardinal de Tournon and the 
Constitution of Gregory XV agree in this way, that both absolutely 
forbid any sign bearing even the least semblance of superstition, 
but allow those which are in general use for the sake of 
adornment, of good manners, and bodily cleanness, without any 
respect to religion". 

The most difficult point retained was the twelfth article, 
commanding the missionaries to administer the sacraments to the 
sick pariahs in their dwellings, publicly. Though submitting 
dutifully to all precepts of the Vicar of Christ, the Jesuits in 
Madura could not but feel distressed, at experiencing how the last 
especially, made their apostolate difficult and even impossible 
amidst the upper classes of Hindus. At their request, Benedict XIV 
consented to try a new solution of the knotty problem, by forming 
a band of missionaries who should attend only to the care of the 
pariahs. This scheme became formal law through the Constitution 
"Omnium sollicitudinum", published 12 September, 1744. Except this 
point, the document confirmed again the whole regulation enacted 
by Clement XII in 1734. The arrangement sanctioned by Benedict XIV 
benefited greatly the lower classes of Hindu neophytes; whether it 
worked also to the advantage of the mission at large, is another 
question, about which the reports are less comforting . Be that as 
it may, after the suppression of the Society of Jesus (1773), the 
distinction between Brahmin and pariah missionaries became extinct 
with the Jesuit missionaries. Henceforth conversions in the higher 
castes were fewer and fewer, and nowadays the Christian Hindus, 
for the most part, belong to the lower and lowest classes. The 
Jesuit missionaries, when reentering Madura in the 1838, did not 
come with the dress of the Brahmin saniassy, like the founders of 
the mission; yet they pursued a design which Nobili had also in 
view, though he could not carry it out, as they opened their 
college of Negapatam, now at Trichinopoly. A wide breach has 
already been made into the wall of Brahminic reserve by that 
institution, where hundreds of Brahmins send their sons to be 
taught by the Catholic missionaries. Within recent years, about 
fifty of these young men have embraced the faith of their 
teachers, at the cost of rejection from their caste and even from 
their family; such examples are not lost on their countrymen, 
either of high or low caste. 

JOSEPH BRUCKER 
Transcribed by Joseph P. Thomas 

In Memory of Roberto de Nobili S.J.