Six families of Gond tribal Christians have fled their village in the
 central Indian Chhattisgarh state after Hindu neighbors allegedly 
threatened to kill them if they didn't convert, their pastor has said.
Following a week of harassment and attacks, all 37 Christians fled 
Katodi village in Kanker district on April 29, Moses Annel told 
ucanews.com May 2.
They were "beaten up and their houses were destroyed" after they 
refused the majority Hindu tribal villagers' "demand to give up their 
Christian faith," Annel said.
Korar police officials confirmed tensions and said a Maoist insurgency has made it difficult for them to inspect the village.
Police inspector D.P. Shrivastava said tensions erupted April 25 
after Christians refused to "contribute" money to a village temple 
festival.
"It should not be seen as a religious issue. Both parties were tribal
 people and it was dispute over a donation and it was settled," the 
police officer said. However, he said he is not aware of the fleeing 
incident.
But Annel said the attack was based on religion. On April 25, a 
village meeting summoned six Christian families and directed them to 
quit Christianity. 
 "When they refused, they were beaten. Six 
of them suffered internal injuries and are still undergoing treatment in
 a government hospital," he said.
Following the Christians' complaints, district officials intervened 
and brokered a peace between the parties. All were sent back to the 
village with assurances from Hindu villagers that they would not harm 
the Christians.
But on April 29, the villagers demolished the houses of Christians 
and prevented them from fetching water from the common water source, the
 pastor said.
The attackers also threatened they would kill them if the Christian villagers did not remove the police complaint, Annel said. 
That threat forced the Christians to flee their village to a hill top forest at least 70 kilometers away. 
The state, ruled by the Bharatiya Janata Party, a Hindu-nationalist 
party, has become a hotbed of anti-Christian violence with right-wing 
Hindu groups attacking Christians with impunity. 
Christian leaders said police are indifferent to attacks on 
Christians and that the government tacitly supports violence on 
religious minorities. 
Father Sebastian Poomattam, vicar general of Raipur Archdiocese, said
 the situation has worsened after Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata
 Party came to power in New Delhi two years ago.
"Our life has become miserable" after Modi began to head the federal 
government, he said. "We see a sudden rise in the attacks against 
Christians in the past couple of years," he said, adding, "These are all
 organized attacks."
The Evangelical Fellowship of India has documented at least four 
verified incidents of hate crimes targeting Christians from January to 
March in the state. 
However, Chhattisgarh Christian Forum president Arun Pannalal said 
there were at least 20 cases of attacks on Christians this year so far.