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'You are Indian, you can't say mass': Catholic priest stabbed in Australia

Reacting to the incident, EAM Sushma Swaraj tweeted that Indian Consulate officials met Father Mathew in the hospital and are in touch with the police authorities.

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In an apparent racist attack, an Indian-origin Catholic priest was stabbed in the neck at a church in Melbourne by a man who called him unqualified to say mass as he was an Indian, prompting the Indian consulate to take up the matter with the police.

A man armed with a knife approached Tomy Kalathoor Mathew, 48, in the church foyer moments before the Italian- language mass at St Matthew's Parish in Fawkner yesterday. Reacting to the incident, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj tweeted that Indian Consulate officials met Father Mathew in the hospital and are in touch with the police authorities. 

"The Police have arrested the attacker and charged him with attempt to murder. Our Consulate is in touch with the Police authorities and will keep us informed of the progress of the case," she further said. It's believed that the offender told the priest that because he was Indian, he must be a Hindu or a Muslim and therefore unqualified to say mass, local media reported. 

"There was some shouting and a lot of movement at the back of the church and then I saw Father Tommy coming to approach me. He waved me over and asked me if I could look at his neck because he said 'I've just been stabbed'," said Melina, one of the parishioners.

A 72-year-old man from Fawkner was arrested and charged with intentionally and recklessly causing injury. He was bailed to appear in Broadmeadows Magistrates' Court on June 13.
"At this stage, we believe the incident is isolated.

There's nothing to suggest he's a danger to anyone else," Detective Senior Constable Rhiannon Norton told reporters.Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne spokesman Shane Healy described the incident as "appalling".
"People should never be treated like this. This fellow is doing wonderful work for his parishioners and this is really a blight on the great work that many, many Catholic priests are doing," he said.
Father Mathew suffered minor upper-body injuries and remains in a stable condition at The Northern Hospital. 

Swaraj said, "Father Mathew was immediately taken to the hospital. The attacker had a problem with Father Mathew presiding over the church." Vicar General Monsignor Greg Bennet said the priest was doing well in the hospital and wanted to get back to work soon. 

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