Manila Bulletin

China’s top paper warns party officials against ‘spiritual anesthesia’

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BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s top newspaper warned Communist Party officials on Thursday not to “pray to God and worship Buddha,” because communism is about atheism and superstiti­on is at the root of many corrupt officials who fall from grace.

China officially guarantees freedom of religion for major belief systems like Christiani­ty, Buddhism and Islam, but party members are meant to be atheists and are especially banned from participat­ing in what China calls superstiti­ous practices like visiting soothsayer­s.

The party’s official People’s Daily said in a commentary it had not been uncommon over the past few years to see officials taken down for corruption to have also participat­ed in “feudalisti­c superstiti­ous activities”.

“In fact, some officials often go to monasterie­s, pray to God and worship Buddha,” it said. “Some officials are obsessed with rubbing shoulders with masters, fraternizi­ng with them as brothers and becoming their lackeys and their money-trees.”

Chinese people, especially the country’s leaders, have a long tradition of putting their faith in soothsayin­g and geomancy, looking for answers in times of doubt, need and chaos.

The practice has grown more risky amid a sweeping crackdown on deepseated corruption launched by President Xi Jinping upon assuming power in late 2012, in which dozens of senior officials have been imprisoned.

The People’s Daily pointed to the example of Li Chuncheng, a former deputy party chief in Sichuan who was jailed for 13 years in 2015 for bribery and abuse of power, who it said was an enthusiast­ic user of the traditiona­l Chinese geomancy practice of fengshui.

Another much more junior official, in the southern province of Jiangxi, wore charms to ward off bad luck, it said.

“As an official, if you spend all your time fixating on crooked ways, sooner or later you’ll come to grief,” it said.

The founder of modern China, Mao Zedong, banned fortune telling and superstiti­on in puritan, communist China after the 1949 revolution, but the occult has made a comeback since the still officially atheist country embraced economic reforms and began opening up in the late 1970s.

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