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MARCH 9, 1994
Contact
Joseph Kung
TESTIMONY
BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON
INTERNATIONAL OPERATIONS AND HUMAN RIGHTS
OF THE HOUSE COMMITTEE ON INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS
By
JOSEPH M.C. KUNG
PRESIDENT
CARDINAL KUNG FOUNDATION
MARCH 9, 1994
Mr. Chairman, I would like to thank you for
the opportunity to testify before this subcommittee on the issue
of a serious violation of one important human rights element by
the government of the People's Republic of China. I refer to the
freedom of religion and its persecution in China.
My testimony is limited to the Roman Catholic
Church to which I belong. I know that other religious communities
also suffered greatly under the Chinese Communist Government.
Their situations, I understand, will be covered by other guests.
Mr. Chairman, the "freedom of
religion" is not open to the free choice and conscience of
an individual in China; rather, it must be submitted according to
the Government's choice. In the case of the Catholic Church, the
choice of the government is "The Catholic Patriotic
Association". The Roman Catholic Church is illegal. In
effect, there is no "freedom of religion" in China.
Permit me to briefly touch on the difference
between the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association and the Roman
Catholic Church in China.
The Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association was
founded by the Chinese Communist Government and is, therefore,
regarded as the official Catholic Church in China. It takes
instruction from the Religious Bureau of the Government. It
rejects the authority of the Pope, appoints its own bishops and
ordains them without the permission from the Pope. There is, of
course, no persecution in this official church.
In accordance with the Roman Catholic Church's
basic doctrine, a Roman Catholic must accept the authority of the
Pope who is the successor of St. Peter and is Christ's
representative on earth. A Roman Catholic cannot accept just any
other church as a substitute without abandoning his faith and
status as a Roman Catholic. A Roman Catholic in China, therefore,
cannot follow the government's instruction to reject the Pope's
authority as the spiritual leader of the Church in spite of
persecution. By remaining loyal to the Pope, the Roman Catholic
Church is outlawed in China and is known as the underground
Church.
There is no true "religious freedom"
when a person cannot worship according to his conscience. Tens of
thousands of Catholic laymen, priests and religious who chose to
follow their conscience and faith were incarcerated nationwide.
Thousands gave their lives for the Church. Many of them were
executed in public. His Eminence Cardinal Kung was imprisoned for
thirty years, His excellencies Archbishop Dominic Tang, S.J. for
24 years, the late Bishop Joseph Fan for 34 years are a few
examples. But, the persecution is not history regardless of the
significant economic progress of China in recent years. The
persecution of the Roman Catholic Church continues.
Two months ago, I made a personal visit to
China and also met with Congressman Smith and his delegation in
Beijing. While in Beijing, I was invited by the Congressman to
participate in two conferences. We were repeatedly assured by the
Director of Religious Bureau that there was freedom of religion
in China as guaranteed by its constitution and that there were no
religious prisoners being held in China. However, one day later
on January 6, 1994, Bishop Julius Jia Zhiguo, underground Bishop
of Zhengding of Hebei Province, was arrested and put in jail.
Bishop Su Zhimin, auxiliary Bishop of Baoding
in Hebei, agreed to offer a Holy Mass for Congressman Smith and
his delegation. That is all there is to it - celebrating the Holy
Mass. The Mass was said in a private apartment in Beijing. The
apartment is very small, run down and with bare-concrete floor.
After we left China, while the Secretary of the Treasury, Mr.
Lloyd Bentsen, was still visiting in China, Bishop Su was picked
up by Security Bureau on January 20th and disappeared. No one
knew where he was detained. I received an urgent message
notifying me of Bishop Su's arrest and requesting immediate
assistance. I reported this arrest immediately to Congressman
Smith who released the news to the media and to his colleagues in
the Congress. Largely due to Congressman Smith's effort, Bishop
Su was released few days later unharmed. During his 10 days
detention, Bishop Su was thoroughly interrogated about his
meeting with the Congressman.
That a Bishop was arrested in the midst of The
Secretary of Treasury's visit because the Bishop had said Mass
for a Congressman is not only tantamount to a grave insult to the
United States, but also clear proof that there is no freedom of
religion and no improvement in China's human rights situation. In
fact, there is a regression in human rights in China.
Arrested together with Bishop Su was a young
underground priest, Father Wei Jing-Yi. He is 36 years old and is
the Secretary of the underground Bishop's Conference. He is being
held in Ging Yuan Xian. Because of his position in the Bishop
Conference, he is a very important person in the underground
Catholic church. I have been informed that for his refusal to
disclose any information on the underground Church, he is hand
cuffed and his feet are chained with weights day and night. I
plead with you, Mr. Chairman, to look into the arrest of Father
Wei at your earliest convenience so that he will not be tortured
further for his knowledge on the underground Roman Catholic
Church.
News has just reached me very recently that
Father Liu Jin Zhong of Yi Xian, Hebei was arrested on February
26, 1994 while celebrating Holy Mass. He is now detained in Gu An
Xian.
There was also Bishop Johannes Han Dingxiang
of Yong Nian, Hebei. He was arrested in December 1993 and still
has not been released.
Bishop Li Side of Tianjin was released from
jail about three years ago, but was shortly confined thereafter
to a small village on top of a hill. He is under surveillance and
is forbidden to come down from the hills to his diocese to
perform his apostolic works. As there is no paved road to the top
of this hill, he is effectively cut off from his flocks.
There was also the case of Father Chu Tai,
arrested in November 1993 while celebrating Mass. He is serving
sentence in Zhangjiakuo, Heibei province.
Mr. Chairman, you may have noticed that the
Chinese Government has a habit of arresting priests while they
are celebrating Mass. The Mass is held most sacred to a Roman
Catholic. The arrests during the celebration of the Mass
constitutes an act of sacrilege to our religion.
Then, there was Bishop Joseph Fan Zhongliang
in his seventies, auxiliary Bishop of Shanghai's underground
Church. He had been jailed many times. The security police
frequently took him away for extended interrogation and searched
his apartment. In 1992, the government took away the entire
treasury of the Shanghai underground Church and many of his
personal articles including his Bishop's ring. They are still
retained by the Government. Bishop Fan very much wanted these
monies and other articles returned to him.
There are many others who are either detained,
under house arrest, restricted in movement, or under police
surveillance.
Puebla institute has documented a month ago
more than sixty cases. Undoubtedly, there must be hundreds more
cases of which we have not been informed.
The United States Government has in many
instances served notices to the Chinese Government indicating its
concern of the jailing of all religious believers. May I appeal
to you, Mr. Chairman, that, through your influence, a visit to
Father Wei Jing-Yi and other selected prisoners of conscience is
to be arranged by one of your embassy personnel or by Red Cross
to assure their well- beings. As Father Wei was arrested with
Bishop Su in connection with Congressman Smith's visit and also
during Mr. Lloyd Bentson's visit in China, it will be most
effective for Mr. Warren Christopher to intercede during his
visit in China at present. I appeal to you, Mr. Chairman, that
you make this recommendation to Mr. Christopher.
During our visit in January, 1994, we also
attended a Holy Mass of the underground Church held in an open
field in the countryside. The weather was freezing and windy. At
least 450 Catholics attended the Holy Mass in spite of the
inclement weather. All knelt on the frozen ground. The occasion
was an invaluable lesson of faith to us.
The Government confiscated all the properties
of the Catholic Church in the early 1950's and have now mostly
given ownership back to the Patriotic Association, leaving the
underground Church without facilities and funds for subsistence.
That is one of the reasons why the underground Roman Catholics
still have to attend Mass outdoors like the Roman days of
centuries ago.
However, hope still persists. The underground
Baoding Diocese recently built four churches. One of these
churches was bulldozed by the Government. When the Government
went to tear down the second church, many underground Catholics
appeared and protected the church by forming a human chain. When
the bulldozers came, the situation became a case of bulldozers
against human beings. Remember the scene of the Tiananmen Square
when one man stood against a column of tanks? Though not
reported, history repeated itself in Baoding. It was a case of
the bulldozer, the armed police against the innocent unarmed
villagers. One small incorrect move would have become a tragedy.
The Bishop pleaded with the Government that there would be lots
of blood flowing if the government pulled down the church. After
a long standoff, the Government backed down. Another Hebei
diocese was not as lucky. A local Bishop built eight small houses
for the villagers. All were destroyed by the Government.
On January 31, 1994, Premier Li Pang signed
two decrees (# 144 and # 145) into law. Briefly, it prohibits
foreigners from undertaking missionary works, prohibits
unauthorized religious ceremonies in any churches, and prohibits
involvement in any financial activities with overseas parties.
Although the new decrees permit foreign believers living in China
to conduct private religious ceremony, it does not permit any
oversees Chinese to conduct any religious activities in China.
Decree # 145 further forbids any activities by the underground
churches.
This law has already been enforced. The recent
arrest, as reported by Christian Solidarity International, of
American Pastor Dennis Balcombe and his delegation for three days
and his expulsion from China speaks for itself. These laws
legitimize the authorities to arrest anyone whom they dislike in
the name of illegal religious activities. It also could allow
local authorities to blackmail underground Catholics with
exorbitant fines or bail under the threat of arrests since
religious activities in private homes are also against the law.
These laws and actions amount to self-confession by the Chinese
Government that there is no freedom of religion.
Moreover, the constitution of the Chinese
Government guarantees freedom of religion. Although Premier Li
Pang may have the power to sign these two decrees into law, these
laws are, in my opinion, unconstitutional.
Occasional releases of religious prisoners,
particularly those who are aged and seriously sick, are hardly
evidence of improvement in human rights and in religious freedom
in China. Most of these releases usually happen when China is
under great pressure from foreign Governments on human rights
issue or needed an injection of goodwill on special occasions,
such as during some senior U.S. officials' visits, campaigning
for the bid of Olympic 2000, renewal of MFN status, etc. Lately,
contrary to their usual practice, they stepped up the pressure by
making more arrests and by passing new laws to restrict further
the practice of religion. These regretful events happened before,
during, or as the result of the visits of Congressman Smith, Mr.
Lloyd Bentsen, Mr. John Shattuck, and Mr. Warren Christopher.
They are occurring a few months before the renewal decision of
the MFN status to China. It appears that China is so confident
that the United States government will eventually ignore the
principles of human rights and base the MFN status decision on
potential trade profits that China is, in effect, daring the
United States government to do anything to improve human rights
situation in China. These events are concrete proof of the
regression of human rights including religious freedom in China.
I, therefore, appeal to the United States
Government not to trade the principle of freedom and human rights
on which our nation was founded for commercial profits. We must
insist on proof of significant improvement of human rights
including religious freedom in China as a sign of China's sincere
dialogue and friendship with the United States. From this
platform, the United States can then form the basis of a decision
for the MFN status.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
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