International Christian Concern (ICC) has learned that on October 25, the authorities in China’s Wenzhou seized Bishop Shao Zhumin ahead of the month of the dead. He was officially detained to go on a forced “vacation,” a measure employed by the government to “educate” dissidents and religious clergy who fail to submit to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)’s control.
According to Asia News, sources
on the ground relay that the bishop was officially taken away a few
days before November, where many masses are celebrated for the dead,
accompanied by meetings, rosaries, and prayers.
At
this time every year, Catholics in Wenzhou march to the cemetery where
Msgr. James Lin Xili, the first local bishop recognized by the Vatican,
rests. In past years, authorities have blocked the entrance to Wenzhou's
cemetery with iron barriers to prevent Catholics from gathering;
this time, they directly took Bishop Shao away.
This
was not the first time Bishop Shao disappeared from his parish. He has
been repeatedly detained in the last few years, with the longest being
seven-month. The authorities often put him under “thought
transformation” process which lasts from 10 to 15 days, brainwashing him
to join the state-vetted “official” Catholic Church. He never gives
in.
His disappearance took place after the news of Vatican being pressured by China to
sever ties with Taiwan was revealed and before President Joe Biden’s
upcoming trip to meet Pope Francis at the Vatican in late October.
Despite the
signing of a Sino-Vatican deal on bishop appointment in 2018, religious
freedom for Chinese Catholics has not improved. Priests and nuns not
loyal to the CCP have been harassed, monitored, and detained; crosses
and religious symbols have been removed from churches; impoverished
Catholics were forced to renounce their faith in exchange of welfare
benefits.
Gina Goh, ICC’s Regional Manager for Southeast Asia, said, “The
Vatican should stop believing the promises made by CCP and see to
it that the deceitful authoritarian regime is not to be partnered
with. The decades-long persecution of Chinese Catholics has not and will
not stop simply because the Holy See and China have signed a
provisional agreement on bishop appointment. Bishop Shao’s latest
detention is living proof of that. It is time for Pope Francis
to re-examine the Vatican’s approach with China and boldly speak
out for the persecuted Chinese Christians.”
For interviews, please contact: press@persecution.org.
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