On a cool and cloudless day in late May, a triple jubilee Mass
was celebrated at St. Mary's Church in Stamford, Conn. The
liturgy marked the 65th anniversary of Cardinal Ignatius Kung's
ordination to the priesthood, the 45th of his Episcopal
ordination and the 15th of his elevation to the College of
Cardinals. What made the occasion particularly memorable,
however, was the fact that the principal celebrant, Ignatius Kung
Pin-Mei, had undergone 30 years of incarceration, from 1955 until
1985. He was in prison when he was named a cardinal - in secret -
by John Paul II in 1979.
Equally remarkable was the presence of a number of others, both
priests and laypeople from as far away as Canada, California and
Taiwan, who had also spent years in China's prisons and labor
camps during the same period. At a dinner in the church hall
after the Mass, it was pointed out that the total years of
incarceration of those present from the Shanghai Diocese would
come to more than 300 years.
Speaking for the laypeople present, Philomena Hsieh said that
many among them, including herself, had spent their youth
"in dungeons and fields, performing hard labor. Our
education was terminated...Our families were broken." Facing
Cardinal Kung at the table where he was seated for the dinner,
she noted that it was his example that had given them the courage
to persevere.
The story of their courage goes back to 1949, when the Communist
Government assumed control of China. In the years that followed,
repressive measures were taken against a number of religious
groups; but the Catholic Church was a particular focus of the new
Government's attacks because of its ties with the Vatican -
regarded as a foreign power with dangerous influence over the
minds and hearts of the people. During the early 1950's, foreign
priests, brothers and nuns were expelled. Some who remained were
incarcerated, as were many of the native clergy.
The latter had been forewarned. At a retreat for priests, Bishop
Kung had told them: "You must not have any more illusions
about our situation....You have to face prison and death head-on.
This is your destiny. It was prepared for you because Almighty
God loves you. What is there to be afraid of?" Nor was it
only priests who were targeted. Many laypeople active in
organizations like the Legion of Mary, which the Government
regarded as subversive, were to be subjected to the same
treatment as those in religious life.
Given the tensions that prevailed as the repression became more
severe, it was with considerable boldness that Bishop Kung
declared 1953 a Marian year throughout his diocese. One of the
scheduled events was a special evening of devotion to the Sacred
Heart of Jesus for the young Catholic men of Shanghai. Just hours
before the event was to take place in the cathedral, Government
troops barricaded the main streets in the surrounding area. But
the men came by foot, assembling in the square outside and
packing the cathedral itself. As the bishop moved through the
crowd, some of them surrounded him as a protective escort. After
the devotions inside had concluded, he emerged to lead the
stations of the cross, followed by leaders of the youth groups
carrying a large wooden cross. The evening ended with the people
chanting their personal support, despite the presence of the
police.
Finally, two years later, on the night of Sept. 8, 1955, there
was a massive sweep by the Government that resulted in the arrest
of seven diocesan priests, two Carmelites, 14 Jesuits and 300
laypeople. Philomena Hsieh, then a university student active in
the Legion of Mary, was among them. Bishop Kung was arrested too.
Spotlights shone on the exterior of his residence as security
police climbed the surrounding walls. Others guarded the doors.
Handcuffed, he was taken away to jail. A second, larger raid on
Sept. 26 led to the arrest of another 10 parish priests, nine
more Jesuits, 38 seminarians, five nuns and 600 lay man and
women.
Like the others arrested, Bishop Kung was known by a number. He
had two of them. The first was 1423, then later 28234. Not until
five years had passed was there even a trial. Found guilty of
treason, he was sentenced to life in prison. His offense had been
two-fold. First, despite an offer of immediate freedom were he to
do so, he consistently refused to renounce his allegiance to the
Pope and to sever all ties with the Vatican. Second, he would not
recognize the validity of the Chinese Catholic Patriotic
Association, which the Government had by then established in an
effort to suppress the legitimate Catholic Church.
To join the Patriotic Association, priests had to sign a
statement relinquishing their ties with the papacy. Only after
this would they be allowed to function as priests. Though most
chose to remain part of what they refer to as the underground
church, some did acquiesce. Consequently, having established a
division in the Catholic Church, the Patriotic Association
remains a source of great difficulty for the Vatican. Adding to
the difficulty is the fact that the Government began appointing
bishops of its own, subject to the control of the National
Religious Affairs Bureau.
For 30 years, Bishop Kung - who remains to this day the Bishop of
Shanghai - was allowed no letters and no spiritual books, not so
much as a Bible. Nor was he allowed to celebrate Mass, receive
the sacraments or have visitors. Representatives of international
humanitarian organizations repeatedly requested to see him, but
were always refused. As the years passed, his incarceration
increasingly came to be seen as a universal symbol of the
struggle for human rights. But so complete was his isolation for
three decades that, following his eventual release and his
arrival in the United States in 1988, he told a reporter for a
Connecticut newspaper that the guards passing his cell were
ordered to look the other way; even that degree of contact with
other human beings was denied to him.
In a sense, however, he was not entirely alone. Others were
suffering with him. A main concelebrant at the May 27 liturgy was
Archbishop Dominic Tang Yiming of Canton (who died of pneumonia a
month later on June 28 in Stamford, Conn.) A Jesuit, he was
officially exiled by the Chinese Government after Pope John Paul
II appointed him archbishop in 1982. His own 22 years of
imprisonment coincided with Ignatius Kung's, as did the many
years behind bars of others arrested during the same period. Like
Bishop Kung, he had shared the sense that incarceration was to be
a part of his vocation.
In his memoirs, How Inscrutable His Ways! 1951-1981, Dominic Tang
writes of a Chinese nun who told him at the time of his
appointment as bishop: "Your vocation to be a bishop is a
vocation to be imprisoned." Her observation led him to
reflect: "I always asked God for the grace to realize this
vocation." As with Cardinal Kung, the grace was richly if
painfully granted. The two indeed had much in common.
Like Ignatius Kung, Dominic Tang, during the years of his
imprisonment, was not permitted to write or to receive letters,
nor was he allowed visitors until a few months before his release
in 1980. His separation from the outside world was complete to
the point that his family and friends presumed him dead, and his
Jesuit brothers in Hong Kong had Masses said for the repose of
his soul.
Dominic Tang's life in prison during these hidden years was
physically as well as psychologically hard. "We would shiver
all over with hunger," he wrote, and so low in nutrients was
the food he received that he developed beri beri. While at the
Wong Wah Road prison - one of several in which he was confined -
his cellmate was a deranged man. "Once he came over to me
and vigorously slapped me on the face, so that my glasses fell to
the ground." On another occasion during the night, the same
man "came over and walked on me and terrified me as he woke
me up."
Prayer was the primary sustaining force. The prayer he recited
most frequently was one composed by St. Ignatius of Loyola,
founder of the Jesuit order: "Take, O Lord, and receive all
my liberty, my memory, my understanding, and entire will, all
that I have and possess. You have given them to me; to you I
return them....Give me only your love and your grace, for these
are enough for me." For those in his position, with their
liberty and much else wrested from them, the prayer must have had
a particular significance.
In addition to Ignatius Kung and Dominic Tang, there were other
priests among the concelebrants at St. Mary's in Stamford who had
also been imprisoned for their faith. George Wong, S.J., for
example, who was ordained by Bishop Kung in 1951, spent seven and
a half years in prison and another eight in a labor camp.
Assigned to the rice fields, he worked barefoot in the water with
leeches clinging to his ankles. Traces of the scars still remain.
His crime? After Bishop Kung's arrest, he refused to sign a
statement accusing the bishop of being an "imperialist
stooge". "After I refused at the police station, they
told me I could go home," Father Wong said in a recent
interview. "But I knew it wasn't over, so I prepared a small
bundle of clothes and other necessities. That night, at 11:30,
they came and took me away."
During those years in prison, he was at one point in a cell with
22 others, so crowded together that when they lay down on the
floor to sleep at night, each had to keep his head to the wall,
with no space between one man and the next. When the guards
learned that he had been teaching the Hail Mary to a fellow
prisoner, he was punished by having his hands handcuffed behind
his back for 50 days. Although he tried to explain that it was
only a prayer, with no political ramifications, the prison
authorities believed, because of the name Mary, that the prayer
might be associated with the Legion of Mary. And in fact, at his
sentencing after seven years, one of the accusations against him
was that he had been working with the Legion of Mary as an
anti-revolutionary.
A further instance of Father Wong's ministry while incarcerated
occurred during the first year, when he was alone in a cell with
a former telegraph operator. The man expressed an interest in
Christianity. Although talking was forbidden, they managed to
whisper, and after three months, the cellmate asked to be
baptized. To provide instruction, Father Wong used the back of
the cell door as a blackboard, and with a wet rag he wrote on it
the prayers he felt essential for the man to know - including the
Hail Mary - so that he could memorize them. The actual baptism
took place in a corner of the cell, at a moment when they knew
the guard would not be watching.
For another concelebrant, Francis Xavier Ts'ai, S.J., the
sentence to prison and labor camp amounted to 35 years. Arrested
at the same time as Bishop Kung and convicted of the standard
charge of anti-revolutionary activities, he was initially
incarcerated in Shanghai with six other Jesuits. The
interrogations were especially wearing because, as he said during
a recent conversation at Our Lady of China Chapel in Queens,
N.Y., where he is associate pastor, the interrogators would call
for him at any hour of the day or night. His imprisonment
included torture. For two months he was kept in a subterranean
cell with no light except the faint light from the corridor. The
floor was covered with several inches of water, and was called,
in fact, the prison of water. He slept on a concrete platform in
the center.
Because any sign of prayer, such as movement of the lips, was
prohibited, his prayer was necessarily a prayer of the heart.
There were two that he used constantly. One he had learned in
French: Mon bon Jesus, glorefiez-vous, et le reste importe peu.
("My good Jesus, glorify yourself, and the rest counts for
little.") The second was from a Chinese poet: "God is
always Lord. There is no place that is not my home" - that
is, in prison as well as everywhere else. "With these two
prayers, constantly repeated in my heart," he said, "I
could endure everything." When at last he came to trial in
1960, he was judged with a group of 13 other priests and a bishop
- Ignatius Kung. Then followed the many years of labor camp,
working from 6 A.M. to 6 P.M. in a brick and tile factory.
Dominic Tang Yiming, George Wong and Francis Xavier Ts'ai are
Jesuits. Cardinal Kung has ties with the Society of Jesus that go
back to his youth, when he attended St. Ignatius High School in
Shanghai. After his ordination as a diocesan priest, he was
appointed principal of the Aurora High School and later of
Gonzaga High School. Both, like St. Ignatius High School, were
sponsored by the Jesuit order.
As for the situation of the Catholic Church in China today, the
persecution has continued. Joseph M. C. Kung, the Cardinal's
nephew, who was responsible for his coming to this country, spoke
in an interview of the ongoing efforts by the Chinese Government
to suppress the underground or unofficial church. He estimates
that there are approximately 50 bishops and 400 priests who have
resisted the pressure to join the Patriotic Association, and
whose lives have for this reason been made extremely difficult.
"In 1989, the underground bishops decided to organize
themselves openly into the National Conference of Roman Catholic
Bishops, in contrast to the Government-controlled Patriotic
Bishop's Conference," Mr. Kung said. "Their purpose was
to have a more effective ministry through the sharing of
information between them and the underground dioceses, and to
inform the world that the Roman Catholic Church in China was
growing in spite of the continuing persecution. They never
opposed the Chinese Government as such," he added.
"They only sought to have the religious freedom guaranteed
by the Chinese Government's constitution and by international
standards of human rights. Nevertheless, within a few months,
they were all arrested in different parts of China and held for
varying lengths of time".
Three of the arrested bishops died in custody: Shi Chunjie,
Auxiliary Bishop of Baoding; Fan Xueyan, Bishop of Baoding, and
Liu di Fen, Bishop of An Guo. According to Mr. Kung, other
bishops are being held in detention, for example, Bishop Lee
Hongye of the Diocese of Luoyang.
As president of the Cardinal Kung Foundation in Stamford- a group
that provides support for the underground church through
newsletters, financial aid to priests, seminarians and nuns, and
other projects - Mr. Kung is in regular touch with sources in
China. He was there last year accompanying a delegation headed by
Republican Congressman Christopher H. Smith of New Jersey.
During the course of that visit, Bishop Su Zhiman of Baoding
agreed to celebrate Mass for the group in a small apartment in
Beijing. Shortly after the delegation left China, the bishop was
arrested. In subsequent testimony before the Subcommittee on
International Security, International Organizations and Human
Rights of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Mr. Kung said that
Bishop Su Zhimin had been detained for nine days and was released
only after the intervention of Congressman Smith.
Unauthorized Masses outside Patriotic Association churches are
officially forbidden. Many, like the one celebrated by Bishop Su
Zhimin in the Beijing apartment, take place in homes or in the
open air. "Masses in homes are being raided more and more
often," Mr. Kung said. "The people who attend are
heavily fined - up to a month and a half's wages - and some are
placed in detention." He went on to describe a series of
arrests that took place this past Easter in the province of
Jingxi, when, over a four-day period in mid-April, between 30 and
40 people were arrested. At the time of our conversation in June,
he said that 12 key lay Catholics were still in jail there,
including a 60-year old blind man named Zhang Wenlin. During the
same series of arrests, two women were so badly beaten that they
were unable to feed themselves.
Some underground priests have simply disappeared at the hands of
the authorities. Father Chi Huitan who was scheduled to celebrate
an Easter Mass for 600 people in an open field near his home in
Hebei Province, had been ordered to cancel the Mass and to
transfer his con- gregation to the Patriotic Association. He
ignored the orders and went ahead with the liturgy as planned.
The next day his chalice, paten and other materials for Mass were
confiscated, his house sealed, and he himself was arrested. Mr.
Kung says his whereabouts remain unknown.
Despite such efforts at repression, however, large numbers of
Catholics continue to gather by the thousands at outdoor shrines
during the spring. One of the most important is the shrine of Our
Lady of Dong Lu, southwest of Beijing. An article in The
Washington Post for June 2 described an unauthorized Mass there
attended by 10,000 people. Mr. Kung said the number was in fact
considerably larger, and that people gather there from all over
the country to pray throughout the whole month of May, not just
on May 24, when the feast of Our Lady Help of Christians, the
high point of the season, is celebrated with the Mass described
in the Post article. "Last year as well as this year, the
Government blocked the main roads to the shrine, but people came
anyway, from long distances, using the smaller roads and even
mountain trails and paths."
With virtually all the churches controlled by the Patriotic
Association, some underground bishops have tried to build their
own churches. Government opposition can take dramatically
concrete form. Mr. Kung cited the example of a church one bishop
managed to build in the late 1980's.
"Soon after the church was finished, the Government sent in
bulldozers and razed it," he said. "But the bishop went
ahead and built another one, and this time the people were
prepared. They posted lookouts, and when the bulldozers appeared
again, they formed a human ring around the church, four deep. The
bishop told the security officers, 'if you want to destroy the
church, you'll have to kill these people.' After a long standoff,
the security officers backed down." Mr. Kung compared the
successful outcome of this incident to the much publicized one
during the military assault on Tiananmen Square in 1989, when a
student holding a flower stood in front of a tank. The tank came
to a halt rather than crush him beneath its treads.
Though the persecution of Catholics continues, it has in some
respects taken on a different form in recent times. "It's
not the way it was in the 1950's and 1960's, when people were
imprisoned for 20 or 30 years and more," Mr. Kung said.
"Now the tactic is to jail people for shorter terms and to
keep arresting them at irregular intervals. It's meant as
harassment, since you don't know when the next arrest might be
made. When it comes," he continued, "it's along the
lines of what might be called administrative detention, because
that way nothing is written up formally, as it would be if the
matter went through the courts. This is how they try to say that
there are no religious prisoners in China, which is simply
untrue."
Despite the continuing opposition, Mr. Kung said, the number of
women religious and seminarians in the unofficial church
continues to grow, though not without severe constraints. Most of
the underground seminarians, for instance, have to hold regular
jobs in order to support themselves. The Patriotic Association
seminaries, on the other hand, which are controlled by the
Chinese Government, have far greater financial resources. As a
result, their own seminarians are adequately supported both at
home and abroad. Some have come to the United States to study in
diocesan seminaries here. This apparent concession to the
Patriotic Association is troubling to supporters of the
underground church like Mr. Kung.
"When he was in Manila this past January," he said,
"Pope John Paul II broadcast a message to Catholics in China
saying that a true Catholic cannot reject the principle of
communion with the successor of Peter. And yet in this country
American Catholic priests concelebrate with Patriotic Association
priests. Recently, Catholic New York, the newspaper of the
Archdiocese of New York, reported that four Patriotic Association
priests studying here have been granted full faculties and are
therefore allowed to celebrate Mass and administer sacraments at
Transfiguration Church in the Chinatown area of the city.
Situations like these," he went on, "create confusion
for Catholics in China and cause enormous pain to the underground
bishops. It appears that the delicate circumstances regarding its
dealings with China make the Vatican hesitant to announce a clear
policy with respect to the Patriotic Association."
The confusions and lack of clarity in church policy are likely to
continue for a long time to come, given the ebb and flow of
tensions between the Chinese Government and the Vatican. No
diplomatic relations have existed between them since the
expulsion of the pro-nuncio in 1951. Officially, the Vatican is
willing to recognize only the legitimacy of the Chinese
Government in Taiwan.
It is certain, for the present, that the repression of religious
groups in China is far from over, and that imprisonment for
reasons of faith continues. Hence it was all the more moving to
be present at the gathering in Stamford, both for the liturgy
itself and then for the dinner that followed in the church hall,
with its tribute to Cardinal Kung by Philomena Hsieh. Though not
intended as such, it was also a tribute to her and the others
present - including Joseph Kung's sister, Margaret - who had
known in their flesh something of the experience of the Cardinal.
Ms. Hsieh herself spent a year in prison, only to be arrested
again in 1958, when she was sentenced to four years in a forced
labor camp. There she met her mother, a prisoner too, convicted
of not having properly indoctrinated her daughter into Communist
ideology.
The Cardinal's name in Chinese, Pin-Mei, means "the
character of a flower that blooms in the bitter winter." It
is a fitting name, both for him and for the many for whom his
example of constancy was a source of strength as they endured
their own bitter winters in the prisons and labor camps of China.
But the gathering had a chastening overtone too. The 300 years of
imprisonment represented by the men and women who had gathered
that day, whether as presider, concelebrants or laity, served as
an astringent reminder to Americans, who have always known
freedom of worship: We perhaps tend to take this freedom too much
as a given, almost casually. For the Catholics of the underground
church in China, it is a freedom yet to be won.