Joan of Arc spoke with conviction and authority, and she was burnt at the stake바카라so goes the legend. That was in a context when several of the male-domineering figures refuÂsed to speak, lest they pay a price. While several of the acts in the name of God need be looked with a critical eye, more devastating is the silence of the faith community in contexts where they should have been prophÂetic voices. They claim to be the voice of the voiceless, but end up robbing them of whatever little mumbles that are left. When biblical illiteracy is celebrated and, in the name of God, crusaders keep lashing haraÂngues at the neighbour, the appÂalling silence of the faith communities is deafening. So is it when digital distancing makes real-Âtime people-to-people interaction lesser and lesser, when marriage and sexuality are being constantly redeÂfined, where hyper and pseudo intellectualisms are being defiÂned by strange allegiances that blind people to harsh life realities around, where creation, care and wiping the tear of the neighbour become lesser and lesser of a priority. This silence becoÂmes unbearably painful when the evil of caste still makes itsÂelf manifest within the structures and systems of faith, when gender discrimination, exclusivity and injustice continue to be the order of the day, when violence of the elderly and violations of the vulnerable become rampant, when economic injustice and power dynaÂmics make life harsher and harder for the poor and the marginalised.