Information Office of the State Council
of
the People's Republic of China
Beijing, October,
1997
I. The Present Conditions of Religion in
China
China is a country with a great diversity of
religious beliefs. The main
religions are Buddhism,
Taoism, Islam, Catholicism and Protestantism. Citizens
of China may freely choose and express their
religious beliefs, and make clear
their religious
affiliations. According to incomplete statistics, there are
over
100 million followers of various religious
faiths, more than 85,000 sites for
religious
activities, some 300,000 clergy and over 3,000 religious
organizations
throughout China. In addition, there
are 74 religious schools and colleges run
by
religious organizations for training clerical
personnel.
--Buddhism has a history of 2,000 years in
China. Currently China has
13,000-some Buddhist
temples and about 200,000 Buddhist monks and nuns. Among
them are 120,000 lamas and nuns, more than 1,700
Living Buddhas, and 3,000-some
temples of Tibetan
Buddhism and nearly 10,000 Bhiksu and senior monks and more
than 1,600 temples of Pali Buddhism.
--Taoism,
native to China, has a history of more than 1,700 years.
China now has
over 1,500 Taoist temples and more than
25,000 Taoist priests and nuns.
--Islam was introduced
into China in the seventh century. Nowadays in China
there are ten national minorities, including the Hui
and Uygur, with a total
population of 18 million,
whose faith is Islam. Their 30,000-odd mosques are
served by 40,000 Imams and
Akhunds.
--Catholicism was introduced into China
intermittently in the seventh century,
but it had not
spread widely until after the Opium War in 1840. At present,
China has four million Catholics, 4,000 clergy and
more than 4,600 churches and
meeting
houses.
--Protestantism was first brought to China in
the early 19th century and spread
widely after the
Opium War. There are about 10 million Protestants, more than
18,000 clergy, more than 12,000 churches and
25,000-some meeting places
throughout
China.
China has the following national religious
organizations: Buddhist Association
of China, Taoist
Association of China, Islamic Association of China, Chinese
Patriotic Catholic Association, Chinese Catholic
Bishops' College, Three-Self
Patriotic Movement
Committee of the Protestant Churches of China, and China
Christian Council.
Religious leaders and
leading organs of the various religious bodies are
selected and ordained in accordance with their own
regulations.
Religious organizations in China run
their own affairs independently and set up
religious
schools, publish religious classics and periodicals, and run
social
services according to their own needs. As in
many other countries, China
practices the principle
of separating religion from education; religion is not a
subject taught in schools of the popular education in
China, although some
institutions of higher learning
and research institutes do teach or conduct
research
into religion. The various religious schools and institutes
set up by
the different religious organizations teach
religious knowledge in line with
their own needs. All
normal clerical activities conducted by the clergy and all
normal religious activities held either at sites for
religious activities or in
believers' own homes in
accordance with usual religious practices, such as
worshipping Buddha, reciting scriptures, going to
church, praying, preaching,
observing Mass,
baptising, monkhood initiation, fasting, celebrating
religious
festivals, observing extreme unction, and
holding memorial ceremonies, are
protected by law as
the affairs of religious bodies and believers themselves and
may not be interfered with.
The "cultural
revolution'' (1966 to 1976) had a disastrous effect on all
aspects
of the society in China, including religion.
But in the course of correcting the
errors of the
"cultural revolution'' governments at all levels made
great
efforts to revive and implement the policy of
freedom of religious belief,
redressed the unjust,
false or wrong cases imposed on religious personages, and
reopened sites for religious activities. Since the
1980s, approximately 600
Protestant churches have
been reopened or rebuilt each year in China. By the end
of 1996 more than 18 million copies of the Bible had
been printed, with special
tax exemption treatment
speeding their publication. In addition, more than eight
million copies of a hymn book published by the China
Christian Council in 1983
have been distributed. From
1958 to 1995, a total of 126 Catholic bishops were
selected and ordained by the Chinese Catholic church
itself. In the past dozen
years more than 900 young
Catholic priests have been trained or consecrated by
Chinese Catholicism. More than 3,000 Protestants
attend the Sunday service at
Chongwenmen church in
Beijing each week. The Beijing Nantang Catholic Cathedral
observes Mass four times each week with an attendance
of more than 2,000. Of
these, one Mass is held in
English specially for foreigners in Beijing.
In the
course of the country's long history, the various religions
in China have
become part of the traditional Chinese
thinking and culture. It is traditional
for Chinese
religious believers to love their country and religions. The
Chinese
government supports and encourages the
religious circles to unite the religious
believers to
actively participate in the construction of the country. The
various religions all advocate serving the society
and promoting people's
well-being, such as the
Buddhists' "honoring the country and benefiting the
people,'' the Catholics and Protestants'
"glorifying God and benefiting the
people,"
the Taoists' "being benevolent, peaceful and
harmonious, saving the
world and benefiting the
people," and the Islam's "praying to allah to give
great reward in this world and
hereafter."
In China all religions have equal
status and coexist in tranquillity. Religious
disputes are unknown in China. Religious believers
and non-believers respect
each other, are united and
have a harmonious relationship. This shows, on the
one hand, the influence of traditional Chinese
compatibility and tolerance, and,
on the other, the
fact that since the founding of the People's Republic of
China
in 1949 the Chinese government has formulated
and carried out the policy of
freedom of religious
belief and established a politico-religious relationship
that conforms to China's national
conditions.
II. Legal Protection of the Freedom of
Religious Belief
Chinese citizens' right to the
freedom of religious belief is protected by the
Constitution and laws.
In the Constitution of
the People's Republic of China freedom of religious
belief is a basic right enjoyed by all citizens.
Article 36 of the Constitution
stipulates,
"Citizens of the People's Republic of China enjoy
freedom of
religious belief." It also goes on to
say, "No State organ, public organization
or
individual may compel citizens to believe in, or not to
believe in, any
religion; nor may they discriminate
against citizens who believe in, or do not
believe
in, any religion." Again, "the State protects
normal religious
activities," and "No one
may make use of religion to engage in activities that
disrupt public order, impair the health of citizens
or interfere with the
educational system of the
State." In addition, "Religious bodies and
religious
affairs are not subject to any foreign
domination."
China's Law on National Regional
Autonomy, General Principles of the Civil Law,
Education Law, Labor Law, Compulsory Education Law,
Electoral Law of the
People's Congresses, Organic Law
of the Villagers' Committees, Advertisement
Law, and
other laws stipulate that all citizens, regardless of their
religious
beliefs, have the right to vote and stand
for election; the legitimate property
of religious
bodies is subject to legal protection; education is separate
from
religion, and all citizens, regardless of their
religious beliefs, enjoy equal
educational
opportunities in accordance with the law; the people of all
ethnic
groups should respect each other's languages,
customs and habits, and religious
beliefs; citizens
shall not be discriminated against in terms of employment
because of different religious beliefs; and no
advertisements or trade marks
shall include
discriminatory contents against any ethnic group or
religion.
The Chinese government has promulgated the
Regulations on the Administration of
Sites for
Religious Activities so as to protect the lawful rights and
interests
of such sites. The Regulations specify:
Sites for religious activities shall be
run
independently by the administrative organizations thereof,
whose lawful
rights and interests and normal
religious activities at the sites shall be
protected
by law. No organization or individual may violate or
interfere with
such rights, interests or activities.
Anyone who encroaches on the lawful rights
and
interests of the sites for religious activities shall bear
legal
responsibilities. Religious activities
conducted at the sites, however, must
conform to laws
and regulations.
The Chinese government has
promulgated the Provisions on the Administration of
Religious Activities of Aliens Within the Territory
of the People's Republic of
China. China respects the
freedom of religious belief of aliens within Chinese
territory and protects their friendly contacts and
cultural and academic
exchanges with Chinese
religious circles with respect to religion. Aliens may
participate in religious activities at recognized
sites for religious activities
within Chinese
territory. They may also preach at the invitation of Chinese
religious bodies at or above the provincial level.
Aliens may hold religious
activities attended by
aliens at sites approved by people's governments at or
above the county level. They may invite Chinese
clerical personnel to conduct
such religious rituals
as baptisms, weddings, funerals and prayer meetings, and
may bring with them printed religious matter,
audio-visual religious material
and other religious
articles for personal use while entering Chinese territory.
Aliens who conduct religious activities within
Chinese territory shall abide by
Chinese laws and
regulations.
The legal protection of citizens' right
to the freedom of religious belief in
China is
basically in accordance with the main contents of the
concerned
international documents and conventions in
this respect. The following
stipulations in the
United Nations Charter, the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights, the
International
Convenant on Civil and Political Rights, theUnited Nations
Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of
Intolerance and of Discrimination
Based on Religion
or Belief, and the Vienna Declaration and Action Program are
all included in China's laws and legislation in
explicit terms and are being put
into practice: that
freedom of religion or belief is a basic human right; people
should enjoy freedom of religion or belief; no one
should be discriminated
against because of religious
affiliation or belief; people should enjoy freedom
of
religious service and assembly, and the freedom to set up
and maintain places
of worship; they should have the
freedom to compile and distribute printed
materials
pertaining to religion or belief; they should have the
freedom to
celebrate religious festivals and hold
religious rites based on their faiths and
morals; and
they should have the right to promote and protect the rights
pertaining to only a small number of people
ethnically, racially, religiously
and linguistically.
According to Chinese law, while all citizens enjoy the right
to freedom of religious belief they must also carry
out duties prescribed by
law. In China, all
individuals and organizations, including all religions, must
safeguard the people's interests, the sanctity of the
law, ethnic unity and
unification of the nation. This
is in conformity with the relevant clauses of
the UN
documents and conventions on human rights. The Declaration
on the
Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of
Discrimination Based on Religion
or Belief states:
"Freedom to manifest one's religion or belief may be
subject
only to such limitations as are prescribed by
law and are necessary to protect
public safety,
order, health or morals or the fundamental rights and
freedom of
others." The International Convenant
on Civil and Political Rights notes: "Any
advocacyof national, racial or religious hatred that
constitutes incitement to
discrimination, hostility
or violence shall be prohibited by law." Citizens who
believe in religion and those who do not believe in
religion are equal before
the law. This is a basic
requirement for modern civilization and nations subject
to the rule of law.
Each country has its own
history, culture and national conditions, which decide
that each country's protection of freedom of
religious belief has its own
characteristics. While
stressing the protection of freedom of religious belief
China pays equal attention to the protection of the
freedom not to believe in
religion, thus ensuring
freedom of religious belief in a complete sense. This is
a more complete and more comprehensive protection of
citizens' basic rights.
The Chinese government
maintains that religious belief is a citizen's personal
affair. However, the construction of a prosperous,
powerful, democratic modern
socialist country with
advanced culture, and the safeguarding of the country's
sovereignty and national dignity are the common goals
and in the fundamental
interest of Chinese people of
all ethnic groups, including those who believe in
a
religion and those who do not. Therefore the people who
believe in a religion
and those who do not can unite
and cooperate politically, and respect each
other's
beliefs.
Religion should be adapted to the society in
which it is prevalent. This is a
universal law for
the existence and development of religion. Now the Chinese
people are building China into a modern socialist
country with Chinese
characteristics. The Chinese
government advocates that religion should adapt to
this reality. However, such adaptation does not
require citizens to give up
religious belief, nor
does it require any religion to change its basic
doctrines. Instead, it requires religions to conduct
their activities within the
sphere prescribed by law
and adapt to social and cultural progress. This
conforms to the fundamental interests of religious
believers as well as to those
of the various
religions themselves.
Nevertheless, since the 1980s
some pernicious organizations have sprung up in
certain areas of China, which engage in illegal and
even criminal activities
under the signboard of
religion. Some of the heads of these pseudo-religions
distort religious doctrines, create heresies, deceive
the masses, refuse to obey
the State's laws and
decrees, and incite people to overthrow the government.
Some pretend to be supernatural beings, and have
killed or injured people;
others organize
promiscuity, or defraud people of money or property. They
are a
serious danger to the normal life and
productive activities of the people. The
broad masses
of the people and personages of the religious circles detest
this
phenomenon, and so, in order to safeguard the
public interest and the sanctity
of the law, and to
better protect the people's right to freedom of religious
belief and normal religious activities, China's
judicial organs punish
law-breakers and criminals who
severely endanger the society and the public
interest
in accordance with the law. The punishment of criminals by
China's
judicial organs in accordance with the law
has nothing to do with religious
belief. No one in
China is punished because of his or her religious belief.
But
no country that practices the rule of law in the
world today would tolerate
illegal and criminal
activities being carried out under the banner of
religion.
III. Judicial and Administrative
Guaranteesand Supervision of the Freedom of
Religious
Belief
With respect to judicial guarantee, China
stipulates clearly the penalties for
the infringement
of citizens' right to freedom of religious belief. For
instance, Article 251 of the Criminal Law states:
"State personnel who
unlawfully deprive citizens
of their freedom of religious belief and infringe
upon the customs and habits of minority ethnic
groups, when the circumstances
are serious, are to be
sentenced to not more than two years of fixed-term
imprisonment or criminal detention." In the
Decisions on the Standards for
Filing Directly
Received Cases of Infringement Upon Citizens' Democratic and
Personal Rights and Those of Malfeasance, it is
stipulated that a people's
procuratorate shall place
on file a case in which a State functionary illegally
deprives anyone of his or her legitimate freedom of
religious belief -- such as
by interfering in normal
religious activities, forcing a believer to give up
his/her membership of a religion or compelling a
citizen to profess a certain
religion or adherence to
a certain religious sect -- and in which the offense is
of an abominable nature and has brought about serious
consequences and
undesirable effects. A people's
procuratorate shall also put on record cases of
illegally closing or destroying lawful religious
sites and other religious
facilities. In recent years
the Chinese judiciary, in accordance with the law,
has tried several cases of infringing upon relevant
laws of the State and
seriously hurting the religious
feelings of certain believers, and has meted out
punishments to persons responsible for the
offenses.
With respect to administrative guarantee,
governments at different levels have
set up religious
affairs departments to administer and supervise the
implementation of the laws and statutes pertaining to
religion and to put the
policy ensuring the freedom
of religious belief into effect. These departments
shall not interfere in the internal affairs of
religious organizations and
sites.
In China
religious organizations and sites for religious activities
must
register with the government in accordance with
the law, which is the case in
some other countries as
well. Applications for such registration must meet the
following basic requirements: a permanent site and
name; regular attendance; a
management organization
composed of adherents to the relevant religion; clerical
personnel for officiating religious activities or
personnel with qualifications
stipulated in
regulations of various religions; management regulations and
lawful income. Government departments shall defer the
registration or only
approve temporary registration
of religious sites which cannot completely
satisfy
these basic requirements or have prominent management
problems.
Government departments shall not permit the
registration of, for example, sites
for religious
activities which illegally occupy land or violate the
statutes of
city planning, which have been set up
without authorization or which promote
superstitious
activities, such as exorcising evil spirits under the
pretext of
religious activities. Once a site for
religious activities is registered
according to law
it has legal status and its lawful rights and interests
shall
be protected. If its rights and interests are
infringed upon the organization in
charge of the site
is entitled to seek administrative and legal protection by
appealing to the relevant government organ or taking
the case to a people's
court. There is no
registration requirement for, to quote from Chinese
Christians, ``house services,'' which are mainly
attended by relatives and
friends for religious
activities such as praying and Bible reading.
People's
congresses at different levels, which are organs through
which the
people exercise their power, and the
Chinese people's political consultative
conferences
at different levels, which are playing an important role in
the
political and social life of the State, shall
supervise the implementation of
the policy and laws
relating to the freedom of religious belief. There are about
17,000 religious personages who are deputies to
people's congresses or members
of political
consultative conferences at different levels. On behalf of
religious circles they participate in the discussions
of important State and
social affairs at the people's
congresses and political consultative
conferences,
and offer comments, suggestions and criticisms, or submit
proposals
and motions relating to the government's
work on religion. During the three
years from 1993 to
1996 alone the Religious Affairs Bureau of the State Council
heard and responded to more than 50 motions proposed
by deputies to the National
People's Congress and the
National Committee of the Chinese People's Political
Consultative Conference.
IV. Support for
Independence and Initiative in Management of Religious
Affairs
China's religious affairs are handled by the
various religious bodies, their
clergy and followers
themselves. China's religious affairs and religious bodies
are not subject to any foreign domination. The
Chinese government supports the
management of
religious affairs by the various religions themselves
according to
the Constitution and laws.
The
principle of independence and taking the initiative in their
own hands in
the management of churches is a
historical choice made by the Chinese religious
believers of their own accord as part of the Chinese
people's struggle against
colonialist and imperialist
aggression and enslavement. Following the Opium War
of 1840 China declined to a semi-feudal and
semi-colonial country. During this
process Western
Protestantism and Catholicism were used by colonialism and
imperialism as a tool for aggression against China,
and a number of Western
missionaries played an
inglorious part in this.
--They participated in the
opium trade and in plotting the Opium War unleashed
by Britain against China. In the 19th century Robert
Morrison, a British
missionary, and Karl Friedrich
August Gutz, a German missionary, both working
for
the East India Company, participated in dumping opium in
China. Some
missionaries strongly advocated resort to
force by Western powers to make the
Qing government
open its coastal ports, saying that it was only war that
could
open China to Christianity, and directly
participated in the British mititary
activities to
invade China.
--They participated in the war of 1900
launched by the allied forces foreign
powers against
China. A number of missionaries, serving as guides,
interpreters
and information officers, took part in
the slaughter of Chinese civilians and
the robbing of
money and property. According to Mark Twain, the renowned
American writer, some of the missionaries imposed on
the poor Chinese peasants
fines 13 times the amount
they were supposed to pay, driving their wives and
innocent children to lingering death from starvation,
so that they were thus
able to use the money gained
through such murder topropagate the Gospel.
--They
directly took part in plotting and drafting unequal
treaties, such as the
Sino-British Treaty of Nanking
of 1842, the Sino-American Treaty of Wanghea of
1844,
the Sino-American and Sino-French treaties of Tientsin of
1858 and the
Sino-French Convention of Peking of
1860. According to these unequal treaties,
Western
Catholic and Pretestant missionaries could lease land for
building their
own places of worship in trade ports
andenjoyed the protection of local
officials;
missionaries could also freely lease or buy land for
construction and
other purposes in the provinces;
local Chinese officials must treat kindly and
protect
those missionaries who came to inland regions to preach
their religions;
Chinese officials must not impose
prohibitions on Chinese who professed a
religious
faith; etc.
--They enjoyed extraterritoriality, and
were not governed by China's laws. The
Western powers
gave their missionaries in China protection on the strength
of
the consular jurisdiction they enjoyed. Taking
advantage of extraterritoriality
some Western
missionaries, backed by the aggressive imperialist forces,
went to
inland China to build churches and set up
parishes.
They forcibly occupied land, and bullied and
oppressed Chinese officials and
civilians. These
missionaries even wilfully extended the extraterritoriality
to
Chinese converts and interfered in Chinese
judicial authority.
--They strengthened the control of
the Western powers over China on the pretext
of
"religious cases," i.e., conflicts and disputes
between Chinese people and
the Western missionaries
who incurred popular indignation by doing evil deeds
under the protection of the unequal treaties. In the
period between 1840 and
1900, some 400 such cases
occurred in China. On the pretext of these religious
cases the Western powers imposed military and
political pressure on the Chinese
government. They
put forward various unreasonable demands, compelled the
Chinese
government to pay indemnities, and arrested
and executed innocent people.
Moreover, they even
launched aggressive wars on such a pretext. In a case in
Tianjin in 1870 alone, the Western powers compelled
the Qing government to
execute 20 people and exile
25.
--They obstructed and opposed China's struggle
against fascism and the Chinese
people's revolution.
After Japan invaded Northeast China the Vatican took a
stand which was, in fact, supporting the Japanese
aggression. It took the lead
in recognizing the
puppet Manchukuo regime set up by the Japanese and sent a
representative there. After the victory in the War of
Resistance Against Japan
some Western missionaries
stirred up hostility against the people's revolution
among the converts and even organized armed forces to
help the Kuomintang fight
in the civil
war.
--They adopted a hostile attitude toward New
China and plotted sabotage. After
the founding of New
China in 1949 the Vatican issued papal encyclicals several
times instigating hatred against the new people's
political power among the
converts.
While
playing an inglorious role in modern Chinese history,
Western Catholicism
and Protestantism manipulated and
controlled Chinese churches turning them into
the
appendages to Western religious orders and mission
societies. Under these
circumstances Chinese
clergymen and the vast majority of their followers had no
rights. In the 1940s among the 20 archbishops in
China there were 17 foreigners
and only three
Chinese; in the 143 parishes there were some 110 foreign
bishops
but only about 20 Chinese bishops.
Some
Chinese Christians early on expressed their wish to cast off
such control
and began establishing their own
independent Christian organizations. However,
in the
semi-colonial and semi-feudal old China it was absolutely
impossible for
Chinese churches to maintain real
independence and realize self-management.
The founding
of the People's Republic of China put an end to the era of
semi-colonial and semi-feudal society in China, thus
providing the historical
conditions for Chinese
Catholicism and Protestantism to become independent and
self-managing. In July 1950, 40 leading figures from
various religious
denominations headed by Wu Yaozong
published the ``Three-Self Declaration,''
titled
"The Way in Which the Chinese Christianity Works for
New China's
Construction," expressing the
attitude of Chinese Christians who supported New
China, and their determination to cast off
imperialist influence and achieve the
"Three
Selfs" (self-administration, self-support and
self-propagation) of
Chinese churches. In September
1950, 1,527 leading Christians signed the
declaration. Three or four years later the number of
Christians who had signed
the document reached more
than 400,000, about two-thirds of the total number of
Christians in the country. Christians have since then
adhered to the principles
of the "Three
Selfs."
In November 1950 more than 500 Catholics
in Guangyuan County, Sichuan, published
the
Declaration on the Catholic Reform Movement of Self-Support,
advocating
cutting off the relationship with
imperialism in all aspects and setting up new
churches on the basis of self-administration,
self-support and self-propagation.
The declaration
was welcomed by the leading Catholic clergymen and other
converts in all parts of China. Though the Vatican
took repeated political
actions of hostility against
New China, the Chinese church reported the
appointment of one acting bishop and two full
bishops, selected in 1957 and
1958, to the Vatican.
However, the Vatican refused to recognize them threatening
to mete out extraordinary punishments, greatly
hurting the feelings of the
Chinese Catholics. Since
then the Chinese Catholic church has firmly taken the
way of selecting and ordaining its own bishops and
independently managing the
churches. In religious
belief Chinese Catholicism is the same as Catholicisms
anywhere else in the world, while in church
administration all the internal
affairs are handled
according to decisions made by the Chinese Catholic church
independently.
In the past few decades the
Chinese Protestantism and Catholicism have stuck to
the principle of independence and self-management,
which has met with assent and
support from the vast
majority of believers and enabled the church and its
religious activities to develop soundly. Now the
total number of Chinese
Christians is 14 times as
many as in 1949. Chinese Catholicism has 115 parishes
under the direction of Chinese bishops or
priests.
While adhering to the principle of
independence and self-administration, Chinese
religions are active in making exchanges and contacts
with their counterparts
all over the world on the
basis of equality and friendship. China is always open
to foreign religious organizations and individuals
who are friendly to China,
respect China's
sovereignty and Chinese religions' principle of independence
and
self-administration. China's Protestantism and
Catholicism have maintained
friendly contacts with
churches in many countries. In February 1991 the China
Christian Council officially joined the World Council
of Churches. The Chinese
Catholic Church has sent
representatives to attend some international religious
conferences successively, such as the Fifth World
Conference on Religion and
Peace and the World
Catholic Youth Day. In recent years Chinese churches have
sent quite a number of students to study abroad and
invited foreign lecturers
and scholars to teach in
China's theological seminaries. Friendly international
exchanges are also increasing in the areas of China's
Buddhism, Taoism and
Islam.
The Chinese
government has consistently adhered to a peaceful foreign
policy of
independence and taking initiative in its
own hands, and is willing to improve
the relations
with the Vatican. However, such improvement requires two
basic
conditions: First, the Vatican must end its
so-called diplomatic relations with
Taiwan and
recognize that the government of the People's Republic of
China is
the only legal government in China and that
Taiwan is an inalienable part of
China's territory.
Second, the Vatican must not interfere in China's internal
affairs on the pretext of religious affairs. In the
first place, the
relationship between China and the
Vatican is one between two countries.
Therefore, only
when the relations between the two countries improve can
religious issues be discussed. Whether the relations
between China and the
Vatican change or not, the
Chinese government will, as always, support Chinese
Catholicism which holds aloft the banner of
patriotism, sticks to the principle
of independence
and self-management, and stands for selection and ordination
of
bishops by itself.
V. Protection of the
Right to Freedom of Religious Belief for Ethnic
Minorities
China is a united country of many ethnic
groups. The Chinese government pursues
a policy of
equality, unity and mutual assistance among all the ethnic
groups,
respects and protects the right to freedom of
religious belief and the folk
customs of the ethnic
minorities. The Law of the People's Republic of China on
National Regional Autonomy stipulates: "Organs
of self-government in ethnic
regional autonomous
areas protect the right to freedom of religious belief of
the citizens of all ethnic groups."
While
making great efforts to promote progress in economy,
culture, education
and other undertakings in the
areas where ethnic minorities live in compact
communities, so as to improve the material and
cultural well-being of the broad
masses of the ethnic
minorities (including believers in various religions), the
Chinese government pays special attention to their
religious beliefs and the
protection of their
cultural heritages. Special programs have been carried out
to survey, collect, classify, study and publish the
cultural heritages --
including religious cultures --
and folk arts of all the ethnic groups. In
addition,
the State has made huge investments in the maintenance and
reconstruction of temples, mosques and other
religious facilities of important
historical and
cultural value in ethnic-minority areas.
Tibet is one
of China's ethnic autonomous regions, and the Tibetans
mostly
believe in Tibetan Buddhism. Since the
peaceful liberation of Tibet in 1951, and
particularly since the introduction of the reform and
opening policies in 1979,
citizens' right to freedom
of religious belief has been thoroughly carried out
in Tibet. Since the 1980s the central government has
allocated more than 200
million yuan in special funds
for the maintenance and reconstruction of the
famous
Potala Palace and the Jokhang, Tashilhunpo and Samye
monasteries. The
State has also established special
funds to support the work of compiling and
publishing
the Tripitaka in the Tibetan language and other major
Tibetan
Buddhist classics as well as the work of
establishing the Advanced Buddhism
College of Tibetan
Language Family of China in Beijing and the Tibet College of
Buddhism in Lhasa.
At present, there are in
Tibet over 1,700 places for Buddhist activities and a
total of 46,000 resident monks and nuns. Small prayer
halls or shrines are
virtually universal in the homes
of believers, and pilgrims coming to Lhasa
number
well over one million each year. Believers performing
Buddhist rituals,
and prayer umbrellas and Mani rocks
carved with Buddhist sutras can be found all
over the
Tibet Autonomous Region. In addition, religious activities
during the
annual Sholton Festival and the
traditional practice of circling Mount
Kangrinboqe in
the Year of the Horse and circling Lake Namco in the Year of
the
Sheep along pilgrim paths have been carried on
and respected by society at
large.
The
reincarnation of holy men, or ``Living Buddhas,'' is a
unique form of
succession in Tibetan Buddhism which
has long been recognized and respected by
the State.
In 1992 the Religious Affairs Bureau of the State Council
approved
the succession of the 17th Karmapa Living
Buddha. In 1995 China successfully
concluded the
search for and identification of the reincarnation of the
10th
Panchen Lama and the title-conferring and
enthronement of the 11th Panchen Lama
after
lot-drawing from a golden urn according to the established
religious
rituals and historical conventions of
Tibetan Buddhism, and with the approval of
the State
Council. These actions highlight the fact that the Tibetan
people's
right to religious freedom is respected and
protected, thus winning endorsement
and support from
the converts of Tibet.
Considering the special place
of the Grand Living Buddhas in Tibetan Buddhism of
past generations in Tibetan social life, the Ming
(1368-1644) and Qing
(1644-1911) dynasties gradually
put the identifying of the reincarnation of the
Living Buddhas within the jurisdiction of the central
government and into the
framework of the State's laws
and statutes. In 1792 the Qing government issued
an
order that the reincarnation of the Grand Living Buddhas
above the Hutuktu
rank be determined through drawing
lots from the golden urn, which later
developed into
a historical institution and was accepted as a permanent
religious ritual in Tibetan Buddhism. The "soul
boy" confirmed through
lot-drawing from the
golden urn as the reincarnation of a Grand Living Buddha
must be reported to the central government for
approval prior to his official
enthronement. The
lot-drawing may be dispensed with under special
circumstances,
but this must also be reported to the
central government in advance for
approval. The
practice of lot-drawing from the golden urn not only upholds
the
central government's supreme authority and the
sovereignty of the State, but
religiously displays
the ``decision by Sakyamuni's Dharma''as well. Since 1792,
in the reincarnation system of the Grand Living
Buddhas of Tibetan Buddhism over
70 "soul
boys" have been identified by confirmation through
lot-drawing from the
golden urn and with the approval
of the central government. Therefore, the
approval of
the reincarnation of the Grand Living Buddhas by the central
government is a religious ritual and historical
convention of Tibetan Buddhism,
and is the key to
safeguarding the normal order of Tibetan Buddhism.
The
Chinese government also respects and protects the Moslems'
freedom of
religious belief as well as their folk
customs. The departments concerned in the
government
have provided special pilgrimage-related services for Moslem
pilgrims, to the acclaim of the latter. Since the
1980s the number of Chinese
Moslems going to Mecca on
pilgrimages has exceeded 40,000. In the Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region alone, there are now more than
23,000 mosques, with 29,000
clergymen, having thus
met the needs of believers' religious life. Out of full
consideration for the dietary habits and funeral
rites of those ethnic-minority
people who believe in
Islam, the Chinese government has enacted regulations on
the production of halal food and opened Moslems-only
cemeteries. In recent years
Chinese judicial organs
have provided legal protection for the lawful rights of
the Moslems. Some cases concerning publications badly
hurting the religious
feelings of the Moslems have
been handled according to law.
The Chinese government
resolutely opposes attempts to split the country along
ethnic lines, and any use of religious fanaticism to
divide the people, split
the country or harm the
unity among all ethnic groups or engage in illegal
activities and terrorist actions under the signboard
of religion. Meanwhile, the
Chinese government firmly
upholds national unity and social stability in areas
where ethnic minorities live in compact communities,
and safeguards the normal
religious activities of the
ethnic-minority believers.
The Chinese government
respects the generally accepted principles regarding
religious faiths in the international community, and
holds that these principles
must be applied in
accordance with the concrete conditions and be carried out
according to the domestic law of each country. The
Chinese government opposes
creating confrontations in
religion or interfering in the internal affairs of
another country under the pretext of
religion.
The facts make it fully clear that
remarkable improvements have been achieved in
the
situation of human rights of the Chinese people, and the
freedom of
religious belief has enjoyed full respect
and legal protection since the
founding of New China,
particularly in the recent two decades following the
implementation of reform and opening policies. The
Chinese government will, as
always, make ever-greater
efforts to safeguard human rights and specifically to
protect the freedom of religious belief.