Toronto Star

For God or party? China’s Christians face test of faith

Officially, religious freedom is protected, but President Xi, fearing western influence, is sending believers into hiding by shutting house churches in a bid to ‘Sinicize’ all religions

- YANAN WANG

NANYANG, CHINA— The 62-year-old Chinese shopkeeper had waited nearly his entire adult life to see his dream of building a church come true — a brick house with a sunny courtyard and spacious hall with room for 200 believers.

But in March, about a dozen police officers and local officials suddenly showed up at the church on his property and made the frightened congregant­s disperse. They ordered that the cross, a painting of the Last Supper and Bible verse calligraph­y be taken down. And they demanded that all services stop until each person, along with the church itself, was registered with the government, said the shopkeeper, Guo.

Without warning, Guo and his neighbours in China’s Christian heartland province of Henan had found themselves on the front lines of an ambitious new effort by the officially atheist ruling Communist Party to dictate — and in some cases displace — the practice of faith in the country.

“I’ve always prayed for our country’s leaders, for our country to get stronger,” said Guo, who gave only his last name out of fear of government retributio­n. “They were never this severe before, not since I started going to church in the 80s. Why are they telling us to stop now?”

Under President Xi Jinping, China’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong, believers are seeing their freedoms shrink dramatical­ly even as the country undergoes a religious revival. Experts and activists say that as he consolidat­es his power, Xi is waging the most severe systematic suppressio­n of Christiani­ty in the country since reli- gious freedom was written into the Chinese constituti­on in 1982.

The crackdown on is part of a broader push by Xi to “Sinicize” all the nation’s religions by infusing them with “Chinese characteri­stics” such as loyalty to the Communist Party. Islamic domes have been stripped from mosques, and a campaign launched to “re-educate” tens of thousands of Uyghur Muslims. Tibetan children have been moved from Buddhist temples to schools and banned from religious activities during summer holidays, state-run media report.

This spring, a five-year plan to “Sinicize” Christiani­ty was introduced, along with new rules on religious affairs.

Over the past several months, local government­s across the country have shut down hundreds of private Christian “house churches.” A statement last week from 47 in Beijing alone said they had faced “unpreceden­ted” harassment since February.

Authoritie­s have also seized Bibles, while major ecommerce retailers JD.com and Taobao pulled them off their sites. Children and party members are banned from churches in some areas, and at least one township has encouraged Christians to replace posters of Jesus with portraits of Xi. Some Christians have resorted to holding services in secret.

Adozen Chinese Protestant­s interviewe­d by The Associated Press described gatherings that were raided, interrogat­ions and surveillan­ce, and one pastor said hundreds of his congregant­s were questioned individual­ly about their faith. Like Guo, the majority requested that their names be partly or fully withheld because they feared punishment from authoritie­s. After reporters visited Henan in June, some interviewe­es said they were contacted by police or local officials who urged them not to discuss any new measures around Christiani­ty.

The party has long been wary of Christiani­ty because of its affiliatio­n with western political values. Several Chinese human rights lawyers jailed for their work, including Jiang Tianyong and Li Heping, are outspoken Christians. So too are many Hong Kong pro-democracy activists, including 2014 protest leader Joshua Wong.

“Chinese leaders have always been suspicious of the political challenge or threat that Christiani­ty poses to the Communist regime,” said Xi Lian, a scholar of Christiani­ty in China at Duke University. “Under Xi, this fear of western infiltrati­on has intensifie­d and gained a prominence that we haven’t seen for a long time.”

Guo, who keeps a small storefront selling ornate doors in a riverside district, once had eyesight so poor that he could not distinguis­h the sky from the earth. But after finding God at 27 years old, he made a seemingly miraculous recovery that he attributes to his faith.

For decades, he, like many Christians in China, shuttled from one unregister­ed house church to another, where folding chairs served as pews and coffee tables as lecterns. Two years ago, he and 10 other Christians pooled money to erect a permanent church on his property.

They are part of what experts describe as a spiritual awakening in China.

The number of Chinese believers of all faiths has doubled in two decades to an estimated 200 million, by official count, as the hold of the Communist party has weakened. Among them are an estimated 67 million Christians, including Catholics — a number that is expected to swell to become the world’s largest Christian population in a matter of decades. This rapid growth has reinvigora­ted the party’s longtime mission to domesticat­e a religion traditiona­lly aligned with the West.

Historians believe that Christiani­ty was known to China as early as the seventh century, and was later propagated by Jesuit missionari­es starting in the 1500s. In recent decades the religion has faced by turns heavy persecutio­n and tacit acceptance.

During the Cultural Revolution, when Mao sought to eradicate all religions, Christians were jailed, tortured and publicly humiliated. But they survived by operating covertly and grew steadily in number after Mao’s death in1976, when a populace disillusio­ned with the Communist Party began to seek moral guidance elsewhere.

Chinese Christians say the Bible gives them a sense of right versus wrong and the strength to endure in a country where power often trumps justice. While China’s rapid growth has brought prosperity to many, others despair at what they see as a deteriorat­ion of public morals. The deaths of children in scandals involving tainted infant formula and shoddily-built schools in recent years have led to the sense that modern China was in the midst of an ethical crisis.

“After the ‘collapse’ of communist ideology, no value system has been in place to fill the spiritual vacuum,” said writer Zhang Lijia. “China has witnessed a religious revival in recent decades precisely because of this vacuum and relaxed control.”

Officials once largely tolerated the unregister­ed Protestant house churches that sprang up independen­t of the official Christian Council, clamping down on some while allowing others to grow. But this year they have taken a tougher approach that relies partly on “thought reform” — a phrase for political indoctrina­tion. Last November, Christian residents of a rural township in southeast Jiangxi province were persuaded to replace posters of the cross and Jesus Christ inside their homes with portraits of Xi, a local official said.

“Through our thought reform, they’ve voluntaril­y done it,” Qi Yan, a member of the township party committee, told the AP. “The move is aimed at Christian families in poverty, and we educated them to believe in science and not in superstiti­on, making them believe in the party.”

The poster campaign appears to symbolize what analysts see as the underlying force driving the change in the party’s approach to religion: the ascendance of Xi.

“Xi is a closet Maoist — he is very anxious about thought control,” said Willy Lam, a Chinese politics expert at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. “He definitely does not want people to be faithful members of the church, because then people would profess their allegiance to the church rather than to the party, or more exactly, to Xi himself.”

Various state and local officials declined repeated requests to comment. But in 2016, Xi explicitly warned against the perceived foreign threats tied to faith, telling a religion conference: “We must resolutely guard against overseas infiltrati­ons via religious means.” And in April, the religious affairs department published an article saying that churches must endorse the party’s leadership as part of “Sinicizati­on.”

“Only Sinicized churches can obtain God’s love,” the article stated.

Those who resist pay the price. After Jin Mingri, a prominent pastor who leads Zion Church in Beijing, refused local authoritie­s’ request to install surveillan­ce cameras inside his house church, police individual­ly questioned hundreds of members of the1,500-person congregati­on, he said. The congregant­s faced veiled threats, Jin said, and many were asked to sign a pledge promising to leave Zion, which the government agents called illegal, politicall­y incorrect and a cult. Some people lost their jobs or were evicted from rented apartments because police intimidate­d their bosses and landlords.

For 11 years, the church has been housed on one floor of an office building, but the property management informed Jin in May that they would have to move out at the end of the summer. Jin said the management admitted to being influenced by external “pressures.”

“A lot of our flock are terrified by the pressure that the government is putting on them. It’s painful to think that in our own country’s capital, we must pay so dearly just to practise our faith.”

At the epicentre of the drive to control the Christian community in China is Henan, the cradle of Chinese civilizati­on and the entry point for many of the earliest foreign missionari­es. Today, the province is one of the most populous in the country and a key part of Xi’s fight against poverty, as proclaimed by red banners across acres of peanut farms and oilfields.

Around the time authoritie­s ordered Guo’s church to stop congregati­ng in March, his district announced a crackdown on private Christian meeting spots. On a single Sunday morning, the announceme­nt said, 700 religious banners were removed, 200 religious texts seized and 31 illegal Christian gathering places shut down. Officials went door-to-door stripping decorative scrolls bearing the cross from home entrances.

The church inside a commercial building had served about 100 believers for years. But in late January, nearly 60 officials from the local religion department and police station appeared without warning. Armed with electric saws, they demolished the church, confiscate­d Bibles and computers and held a handful of young worshipper­s — including a 14-year-old girl — at a police station for more than 10 hours, a church leader said.

The authoritie­s called the church illegal. The church leader said they had brought documentat­ion to the religion department three or four times in an attempt to formally register it, but never received a response. Now, they have ceased to congregate.

The church leader prays that the government will change its mind.

“We support President Xi,” he said. “All we ask for is a space for our faith.”

That space for Xu Shijuan, a 63-year-old Seventh-day Adventist, was her living room, where she held house church gatherings for four years. She stopped in March, after a group of men led by a local official ordered her to disband the meeting of about two dozen elderly Christians.

“If you don’t heed our orders, the next group to come will be law enforcemen­t,” he said, according to Xu. “They will use force to disband you.”

Xu readily complied. “The people have dispersed, but our faith has not,” she told the AP at her home in Zhengzhou. “God’s path cannot be blocked. The more you try to control it, the more it will grow.”

Some congregati­ons now sing the national anthem during services, according to a house church pastor named Liu. Another pastor said his government-approved church shut down its Sunday school and cancelled all activities for children after receiving orders in February.

Across Henan, house churches that once hosted gatherings of hundreds have now sealed their doors and split into groups of no more than a handful. Services are announced last-minute and held in different locations each week, often under the cloak of darkness.

For a time, Guo’s church did the same. They avoided congregati­ng on Sundays to escape authoritie­s’ notice.

But the church members were scared, and the group dwindled to 30. Authoritie­s appealed to Guo to help gather informatio­n on his fellow Christians. He was given a form, reviewed by the AP, which asked for churchgoer­s’ names, educationa­l background and addresses, as well as the length of time they had been faithful and whether they were baptized.

The brick house was largely deserted this summer. Inside, Guo has refused to remove the cross and other decoration­s, telling authoritie­s they are within his private property. Among them, pinned to a wall in the nave, is a bright blue poster that quotes China’s constituti­onal promise of religious freedom.

“Xi is a closet Maoist — he is very anxious about thought control.”

WILLY LAM CHINESE POLITICS EXPERT

 ?? NG HAN GUAN PHOTOS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
NG HAN GUAN PHOTOS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ??  ?? Desipite official freedom for religion, some house churches are being forcibly closed in Henan province, as the Communist Party fears western influences.
Desipite official freedom for religion, some house churches are being forcibly closed in Henan province, as the Communist Party fears western influences.

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