China in Hu's Colours--Part
III
By B. Raman
In a despatch on October 21, 2007, the State-owned
Hsinhua news agency of China reported as follows: "For the
first time in its history, the Communist Party of China
(CPC) has mentioned the word "religion" in an amendment to
its Constitution, adopted on Sunday (October 21, 2007) at
the closing session of the 17th CPC National Congress. To
insert CPC's guiding principles and policies in religious
work in the Party Constitution is conducive to their full
implementation, according to a resolution on the amendment
to the Constitution. It said the insertion has been made to
meet the demands posed by the new situation and new tasks.
The CPC has been widely known as atheistic since its
founding in 1921."
2. The actual text of the amendment has not been
available so far. However, a resolution on the amendments
passed by the Congress at its concluding session stated as
follows: "The Congress holds that incorporating into the
Constitution the principles and policies the Party has
formulated for guiding efforts to strengthen the armed
forces as well as the work related to ethnic and religious
affairs, the united front and foreign affairs in light of
the new circumstances and tasks is conducive to fully
implementing these principles and policies and getting
better results in the work in these areas."
3. In the past, the reference used to be to "the work
related to ethnic affairs". The Tibetans and the Uighurs
were treated as ethnic communities and not as distinct
religious communities. The Catholics and the
Protestants were not treated as distinct religious
communities. They were identified with whatever ethnic group
to which they belonged. Does the present reference to
"ethnic and religious affairs" presage their being treated
as not only ethnic groups, but also distinct religious
groups? It would be difficult to answer this question till
more details become available.
4. The Chinese project every concept or idea as having
unique Chinese characteristics. Thus, they have "socialism
with Chinese characteristics" and "democracy with Chinese
characteristics". Similarly, they have religious freedom too
with Chinese characteristics, though they do not openly use
that expression. One could give the following examples of
the Chinese characteristics of religious freedom:
- The Buddhists have the freedom of
worship in their places of worship, but they cannot
project the Dalai Lama as their leader or possess his
picture. Nor can they speak of their faith in
reincarnation. They have to accept the Panchen Lama
chosen by the Communist Party. When the Dalai Lama dies,
they have to similarly accept the Dalai Lama chosen by
the Party. Reports from Sikkim say that local
trans-border traders have complained of harassment by
the Chinese police in Tibetan territory for possessing
pictures of the Dalai Lama.
- The Catholics and the
Protestants similarly have the freedom of worship in
their churches, but the Catholics cannot project the
Pope as the head of the Catholic church or possess his
picture. The Chinese look upon the Dalai Lama and the
Pope as political and not religious figures.
- The Muslims too have the freedom
of worship in their mosques, but they cannot have
madrasas to impart religious education to their
children. There are also restrictions on how they
worship in order to prevent large gatherings at the time
of worship. To talk of jihad even in the benign sense
(the inner struggle to make oneself a better Muslim) is
a crime.
5. The apparent decision of the
Congress to give a de jure recognition to religion in the
Party Constitution has come in the wake of continuous
pressure from the West---particularly the US--- on the
Chinese Government to grant full religious freedom to those
Chinese who believe in religion. The decision has also been
motivated by the desire to improve the image of China as it
nears next year's Beijing Olympics. To improve its visage,
China has been using a lot of cosmetics and religious
freedom is one of them.
6. The pre-Olympics angle is evident from the report on
this amendment carried by the Chinese media. To quote from a
despatch of the Hsinhua news agency: "The CPC is atheistic
but allows freedom of religious beliefs. China is home to
100 million religious faithful, largely Buddhists, Taoists,
Christians, Catholics and Islamites. "The Party's secret in
handling well China's religious issues lies in its
principles and policies," said Ye Xiaowen, director of the
State Administration of Religious Affairs. "Their insertion
in the Party Constitution shows the Party is sincere, and
capable, of its implementation of policies on the freedom of
religious beliefs." He said religious problems are reported
in many parts of the world. "But in China we enjoy peace and
quiet because we have the established policies and
principles." With the new elaboration on religious work, Ye
said the Party is determined to enhance the active role of
the religious circle and faithful in boosting social and
economic development. Hao Peng, vice Party chief in Tibet,
described the relations between the Party and the religious
faithful as "united, cooperative and mutually respectful".
The CPC's tenet of building socialism with Chinese
characteristics, featuring prosperity, democracy, cultural
advancement and harmony, reflect the common aspirations of
Tibet's religious faithful, said Zhukang Tubdankezhub,
president of the Tibetan branch of the Buddhist Association
of China. As the host country of the 2008 Summer Olympic
Games, China has pledged to offer religious services for
foreigners arriving for the Games. "A large number of
religious faithful will be arriving for the Games," Ye
Xiaowen told reporters at a news conference on the sidelines
of the 17th Party congress. He said China is working on
religious facilities at its Olympic venues with the help of
the International Olympic Committee and referring to the
practices at previous Games. "Our religious services will be
up to previous standards." Ye also dismissed allegations
that China restricted the printing and sale of Bibles, which
he said receive state subsidies and other preferential
policies. China, with 16 million Protestant Christians, has
printed 42 million Bibles, he said. "
7. In an article under the title "God As A Threat To
National Security" written by me on July 11, 2002, which is
available at
http://www.saag.org/papers5/paper492.html,
I had stated as follows: "The Chinese people have reasons to
be grateful to their leadership, which has given them
increasing prosperity and a well-run administration. People
definitely have more money in their pockets now than in the
past and than the people of India have in theirs. Despite
this, why are they attracted to God? Why this feeling of
emptiness inside them despite a bulging money purse? Why
more and more people seek solace in religion and
spirituality, even at the risk of falling foul of the
establishment? These are questions which continue to confuse
and haunt the Chinese leadership, which is not able to find
an answer to them. The way they monitor religious and
spiritual activities, one gets the impression as if they
feel that God is a major threat to their national security.
The pragmatic and far-sighted Chinese leadership has handled
the economy with aplomb. The chances of political
instability due to economic causes are low. One wishes the
leadership develops an equal understanding of the force of
religion and spirituality. If one day there is serious
instability in China and if its society comes unstuck, it
will, most probably, be not due to political, economic or
social causes, but due to the State continuing to come in
the way of the religious and spiritual yearnings of the
people. "
8. Mr. Hu's China may no longer see, to the same extent
as in the past, God as a major threat to national security,
but they continue to see the Dalai Lama as a major threat to
their national security and to the smooth holding of the
Olympics. Their concerns have increased after the
high-profile treatment accorded to His Holiness during his
current tour of the US. Their concerns have also
increased after seeing the recent massive demonstrations by
the Buddhist monks in Myanmar in support of democracy. They
are worried over the possibility of the monks of Tibet
emulating those of Myanmar. That is why they have been
nudging the Myanmar Junta to make overtures to the
pro-democracy activists in order to keep the monks off the
streets. Remember how the huge demonstrations in Bulgaria,
Romania and other Communist countries of East Europe in the
late 1980s spread like an European flu? They don't want the
Myanmar flu to spread to Tibet.
9. On the eve of the Congress, the Chinese authorities
further stepped up their campaign to denigrate His Holiness.
They have been projecting the Dalai Lama not as a respected
Buddhist leader, but as the leader of an evil sect
comparable to the Aum Shinrikiyo of Japan and the Falun Gong
of China. They accuse all the three of being evil birds of
the same feather. Annexed is an article on the Dalai Lama,
which was carried by the "People's Daily" on October 9,
2007. To be continued
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and,
presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai.
He is also associated with the Chennai Centre For China
Studies. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)
ANNEXURE
ARTICLE ON THE DALAI LAMA CARRIED BY THE "PEOPLE'S DAILY" OF
OCTOBER 9, 2007
Xinhua was authorized on Tuesday to release a signed
article by Shi Shan on the relationship between the 14th
Dalai Lama, Aum Shinrikyo cult and Falun Gong. The full text
of the article is as follows:
The world has seen rapid development in the scientific
civilization of mankind, but the malignant tumor of evil
cults is still rampant, plunging innocent people into the
depths of suffering. Evil cults such as the Solar Temple
Cult of the United States, the Falun Gong of China and the
Movement of the Restoration of God's Ten Commandments of
Uganda wantonly preach the fallacy of "the End of the
World", destroy social stability and jeopardize the lives
and property of the public. Such perverse acts have aroused
strong indignation of the people and governments of various
countries. Many countries have staged a fight against evil
cults by enacting legislation and setting up special
agencies.
Buddhist doctrine advocates good deeds and extrication
from the earthly weal and woe. It has also long been viewing
evil cults as the "feud of Buddha" and maintaining that
"Buddha and demons do not coexist with each other". The 14th
Dalai Lama, who boasts to be a "follower of Buddhism" and
"human rights fighter", however not only has no hatred
toward evil cults but instead shows a great deal of
compassion for them. Isn't it worth pondering the reasons
behind this? Let's first start with the Aum Shinrikyo cult
of Japan. The cult leader Shoko Asahara claimed that it was
"the 14th Dalai Lama who
personally led him into the Mahayana tradition of Buddhism"
and that he could shorten the time needed for one to become
a Buddha from 2,000-3,000 years to just 10 years, urging
people to ditch the ascetic practices advocated by Buddhism
and follow his sect tenets to merrily achieve longevity and
even to become a Buddha. The 14th Dalai Lama kept writing
certificates or letters of recommendation for Shoko Asahara
to the authorities of Tokyo, hailing Shoko Asahara as "a
very capable religious teacher" and hoping the authorities
would "allow the Aum Shinrikyo Sect to be exempted from tax
payments and propagandize its credo. The German weekly Focus
reported that without the support of the 14th Dalai Lama, it
would have been absolutely impossible for Shoko Asahara to
build up his sect empire and, within a short period of very
few years, gain status as a cult leader in Japan. In other
words, it is the 14th Dalai Lama's all-out "support" that
turned Shoko Asahara, a swindler and a mountebank, into "a
religious teacher".
It was because of the 14th Dalai Lama who persistently
supported and trumpeted Shoko Asahara that the Aum Shinrikyo
cult could acquire the privilege of "tax exemption" and
accumulated funds to bankroll his cruel evil doing against
the Japanese people. In the Spring of 1995, Shoko Asahara
organized a terrorist attack by discharging poisonous gas in
Tokyo's subway, killing 12 people and injuring 5,000 others.
The event sparked indignation from the Japanese people. In
October of the same year, Shoko Asahara and his die-hard
followers stood public trial in a local court of Tokyo and
were punished in line with laws.
Even at this moment, the 14th Dalai Lama who claimed
to be a "human rights fighter" still spoke plausibly to the
Kyodo News Service that Shoko Asahara remained his friend
and that he still thought what the Aum Shinrikyo cult
preached was in accordance with Buddhist doctrines. It was
the support and connivance of the 14th Dalai Lama who took
the foe for his friend that made Asahara feel secure in the
knowledge that he had strong backing. The evil cult
continued to do evils under the guise of constantly-changed
names and leaders. Eventually in 1999, the Japanese Senate
completed the legislative procedures against evil cults
including the Aum Shinrikyo. The Tokyo authorities also took
a number of measures to crack down on the leaders of the
evil cult.
Why would the 14th Dalai Lama openly violate the
teachings of Sakyamuni that urge his followers to get rid of
demons and uphold truth and laws to favor Aum Shinrikyo? Why
would he flout the tenets of Buddhism urging the masses not
to do evils but to do good deeds? The 14th Dalai Lama had
confessed in a letter to the cult, appreciating the Aum
Shinrikyo Sect for its "generous donation to our Buddhist
collective in exile". Aha, it turned out to be that the
"leader" even bartered away the sacred tenet of Buddhism as
a cheap bargaining chip in money deals.
It is the 14th Dalai Lama's own deeds that have step
by step betrayed his real intentions and political ambitions
put under the guise of Buddhism and peace. A weekly
newspaper in Manila commented it was a pity that the 14th
Dalai Lama wore the cassock of a Lama but played political
tricks, spoke of the pursuit of freedom through peaceful
means but harbored in mind the vain attempt of restoring the
past feudal rule of Lamaism. Even catholic senator P.
Santorum of the United States couldn't help exclaiming that
such conduct reflected a subdued religious sentiment. He
held that to establish a society respecting life, cracking
down upon crimes and promoting dignity of mankind, efforts
must be made to prevent religion from being individualized.
It appears that many people of insight across the world have
recognized the tricks of the 14th Dalai Lama in using
Tibetan Buddhism to engage in political activities and have
stayed on high alert to and
repulsed the deed of the Dalai Lama.
Let's now have a look at the 14th Dalai Lama's
attitude toward China's evil cult Falun Gong. Cult leader Li
Hongzhi of Falun Gong took religion as pretence, trampled
upon religious doctrines and thus invited indignation,
reprimands and stern objections from the religious circles.
They said that Li Hongzhi had blasphemed Buddhism by
fabricating his birthday from July 1952 to May 13, 1951, the
date on which Sakyamuni was believed to be born. His attempt
to pass himself as the reincarnation of Sakyamuni and his
bragging about getting true knowledge from Sakyamuni and
thus being more powerful than Sakyamuni was "an extreme
blasphemy to Buddhism", they said. However, even such an
evil cult leader who is denounced by many people and had to
flee abroad to escape the punishment of laws secured
compassion and admiration from the 14th Dalai Lama. The
latter first dispatched his representative to comfort Li
Hongzhi and then sent over his representatives to conspire
with Li and staged various farces at the time when the 56th
World Human Rights Conference was held in Geneva, stopping
at nothing to spread lies and rumors and to trumpet
anti-China bills.
As one Chinese saying goes: Birds of a feather flock
together. The real reasons for the collusion of the 14th
Dalai Lama and Li Hongzhi are their shared situation. They
are both in exile after their illegal acts to subvert the
Chinese government and the Chinese people ended in constant
failures under the august Chinese Constitution and laws;
Shared nature--They are both not resigned to failures and
attempt to hoodwink and manipulate their few domestic
followers to carry on making turbulence and to hold back the
rejuvenation of the Chinese nation; Shared intention--They
are both hostile to their motherland and regard the 1.3
million Chinese as enemies, dreaming a pipe dream of
returning to China, with the support of their masters, to
materialize their evil objective of splitting China. Imagine
the 14th Dalai Lama, the self-proclaimed "religious leader",
even condescended to associate with Li Hongzhi who has been
labeled by the United International World Buddhism
Association Headquarters as a preacher of evil cult and a
swindler! This obviously reflects that the 14th Dalai Lama
has cornered himself into a dead end!
Source: Xinhua