Krist Kiran
Parivar, which means "Family of
the Rays of Christ," is a
covenant community located in
Pune which is located in the
western part of India. It is 70
miles west of Mumbai. Luke Lobo,
the senior coordinator for Krist
Kiran Parivar explains how the
community began and gives a
brief description of community
life and mission. |
Our community came into being in March 2000.
Many of its members originally belonged to a
charismatic prayer group, St. Patrick’s Prayer
Fellowship, which had started in 1988. From
October 1999, for a period of about three
months, the members of the prayer group felt
the need to pray and wait on the Lord to
discern the future course of the group. On the
basis of prophecies received during these
weeks of prayer, the leaders of the group felt
that the Lord was moving them to some form of
community life. These messages were also
confirmed by others outside the prayer group
who were in some way associated with the
group.
In November 1999, a few members of the
Community of Jesus, Light of the World,
Mumbai, were invited to share their experience
of community life at the prayer group’s annual
family camp. In March 2000, members of the
community in Mumbai were asked to give further
input on community life to those members of
the prayer group who felt called to form
community. Following that weekend, about 30
people felt this call, and Krist Kiran Parivar
was born. The community in Mumbai
continued to support us by regular visits from
their senior coordinator and others, leading
us in our first faltering steps in community
life. Henry Fernandes, then president of
the Asian Region of the Sword of the Spirit,
also visited and gave us input.
Our formation received a new impetus in 2005
when Ken Noecker, who was part of the Joy of
the Lord community in Manila and a member of
the Servants of the Word brotherhood, was
appointed by the Sword of the Spirit as our
outside coordinator and began visiting us
regularly. We became an initial underway
member of the Sword of the Spirit in November
2009, after a team of six members of other
Sword of the Spirit communities conducted a
visitation of the community to verify that we
had the basics of our common life in place.
We are now nearing the end of our formation
program as a Sword of the Spirit community and
look forward to standing shoulder to shoulder
with other fully-formed communities. We are
thankful for the support we have received in
our effort to build community, and the
relationships we share internationally have
been a blessing.
The name “Krist
Kiran Parivar” means the Family of the Rays of
Christ. The name was chosen after all the
members gave their prayerful suggestions. The
members felt that the community was being
called to be the rays of Christ in the world
and especially in the city of Pune, while
Christ himself remains the centre and source
of our light.
The logo was designed keeping this in mind,
incorporating the cross, the rays and the
lotus, India’s national flower. The inner ring
of its petals stand up together, signifying
our solidarity and close relationships, and
the outer ring spreads outwards, signifying
our mission to bring Christ to others.
Members of the community come from different
parishes of the city. Living closely together
in neighbourhoods is challenging in India,
since investment in a house is for most people
a one-time affair, and one cannot afford to
buy and sell houses at will. Most of our
members come from middle class backgrounds.
Pune is a university and manufacturing city
of almost six million people. As in most
cities, we have a mixed population of people
who have migrated from different parts of the
country. Members of the community are from
different cultural and linguistic backgrounds.
Members come also from varied educational and
professional backgrounds – we have many
teachers, some IT professionals, businessmen,
retired army officers, a tailor, domestic
helpers, homemakers, and so on. The community
has about 100 embers in all, including the
single professionals, young adults and
children. Our oldest member is 82 years old
and our youngest is 1 year old. Most of us are
Catholics. Christians in India are a very
small minority – less than 3% of the total
population and less than 1% of the population
of the city.