Christians in eastern China scramble to save symbol of their faith
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Chinese Christians keep watch to protect cross on Wenzhou church
- Authorities have demolished churches and removed more than 300 crosses
- They say the demolitions are part of a broader campaign to target illegal structures
- Chinese church leaders say it's the worst anti-Christian crackdown in decades
Wenzhou, China (CNN) -- At a gray church on the outskirts of Wenzhou in eastern China, Christians from across the county keep a nervous watch.
Some stand behind the
iron gate; others sit just inside the church door. For more than two
months they've waited, preparing themselves to protect the cross on top
of their church.
"If I have to, I am going
to hold it in my arms and protect it," one elderly man says. "They have
no right to tear it down, that is why we have to defend our church."
Like many here, it's too risky for him to give his name.
Wenzhou is known as the
"Jerusalem of China" and throughout this year the local Communist Party
authorities have demolished scores of churches and forcibly removed more
than 300 church crosses.
Chinese church leaders say it's the worst anti-Christian crackdown in decades.
"What the government here
is doing is so barbaric, they're like bandits and we are furious with
them," says Chen Zhi'ai, a respected church leader in the Wenzhou area.
"Today we've seen the fundamental symbol of our faith violated and it
hurts us deep inside our hearts."
Crackdown
The cross of the Salvation Church in Pingyang County in Wenzhou was removed earlier this year.
The local authorities are
mostly targeting state-sanctioned churches, long tolerated by the
ruling Communist Party and often touted as a sign of religious freedom
in the officially atheist country.
Scores have been injured in the crackdown, as congregations throughout the region try to stop the government teams.
In late July, hundreds of police tried to storm the gates of the Salvation Church in Pingyang County in Wenzhou.
Like other attempted
demolitions, they moved in in the middle of the night, and scenes of
extraordinary defiance unfolded on the church's CCTV video as
club-wielding police beat their way in.
They appear to lose
their resolve when an older man is rushed away by ambulance. A blow to
the head fractured his skull, say church activists.
They wanted to drag it away...but we refused. - Church caretaker
But several weeks later,
they came back with reinforcements and tore down the cross. It now lies
under a cheap plastic shroud at the foot of the church's stairs.
"They wanted to drag it
away," says a church caretaker who wouldn't give his name. "But we
refused. Now it is too big for us to move."
Illegal structures?
The local government
denies the crackdown on Christianity. They say the demolitions are part
of a broader campaign to target illegal structures in the province. They
say church demolitions represent only a tiny fraction of their work.
But leaked party
documents single out churches and folk religious sites in the so-called
"three rectifications and one demolition" campaign. And church leaders
like Chen say that the demolition campaign is merely a front for a
crackdown to curtail Christianity's influence in the region.
Church leaders say that
the central government has ignored all their complaints and petitions.
They fear that the Wenzhou demolitions could be a test case for the
party, an opening salvo in what could become a wider national campaign.
"The leaders think
Christianity is a foreign religion and it is part of a foreign culture,
which they define as 'western' culture," says Chen. "They see our growth
as an invasion of western culture into China."
Since Chairman Mao's death in 1976, Christianity has taken hold in China. Though it is still a minority religion.
The cross now lies under a cheap plastic tarpaulin at the foot of the church's stairs.
"Christianity has been
growing very rapidly in China in the last several decades," says
Fenggang Yang of Purdue University in Indiana. "There is very little
sign that it is slowing down."
"It moved from a largely
rural religion, came into the cities and became very popular with
entrepreneurs. Many converts are now the youth."
He estimates that in a
few years China will have more Christians than Communist Party members,
which stood at more than 85 million in the last count.
And in just 15 years,
China could overtake the U.S. as the country with largest Christian
population in the world. Chinese state media have disputed those claims.
'Social glue'
Back at the gray church,
the Christians have managed to keep the demolition crews away for now.
Their striking red cross sits above the church's spire. They often sing
hymns to steel their resolve. "The Cross Is My Glory" by a Taiwanese
composer has become a rallying cry in Wenzhou.
The congregation don't
look like typical Chinese activists. There are elderly faithful with
their grandchildren, wealthy-looking businessmen and clean-cut students.
Chen says, far from
hurting the party, Christianity has been a refuge and social glue for
many Chinese as income gaps rise and Chinese look for meaning. "We help
promote social harmony," he says.
But Chen has a warning.
"If they keep doing things this way, there is a saying 'those who play with fire will get burned,'" he says.
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