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Sister Peter, 90, withstood
imprisonment, beatings and forced labor during China’s Cultural
Revolution.
CNS PHOTO/NANCY WIECHEC |
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Bishop Pius Jin Peixian, 83, of Liaoning was imprisoned
for 10 years and spent several more years in a labor camp.
CNS PHOTO/NANCY WIECHEC |
By Barb Fraze
Catholic News Service
FUSHUN, China
(CNS) -- Ninety-year-old Sister Peter has worked in a bus factory, built
houses, reinforced river embankments and spent time in jail and a mental
institution.
Bishop Pius Jin Peixian of Liaoning, 83, spent 10 years in prison and
later was sent to a work farm.
In 1966, at age 19, Cecilia Tao Beiling was sent to a work farm “for
re-education,” because she was Catholic. She spent eight years and
four months there. Today, she is the deputy chief editor of the Shanghai
Diocese’s Guang Qi Research Center.
Throughout China, Catholics who suffered after the communist government
closed churches in the late 1950s and during the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution
kept their faith alive under tough conditions. Later, they faced a tough
decision: whether or not to openly worship and work within the system
under restrictions imposed by the government, including rejecting ties
to the Vatican.
Sister Peter, a member of the Sisters of the Sacred Heart in Fushun, said
that in 1958 the Chinese government closed the community’s motherhouse
and put the superior in jail. Some of the sisters were doctors, so they
worked in a local hospital, but about 10 others, including her, were forced
to do manual labor.
In January 1969, Sister Peter was accused of having connections to other
Catholic nuns and priests. She was arrested and put in jail, where officials
spent 17 days interrogating her. She said that during that time she was
beaten, and near the end she went five days without food.
At that point, she said, “I had a mental breakdown for three days,”
so she was released from jail.
Sister Peter said that Jesus then appeared to her in a watch that hung
from a chain around her neck. Jesus talked to her through the watch, she
said, and told her, “You carry me in your heart.”
Members of the communist Red Guard came upon her talking to the watch,
attacked her and put her in prison, where they confiscated the watch.
After about two hours, however, officials returned the watch, she said,
and Jesus told her, “Don’t worry, I am with you.”
Sister Peter said another person in the prison witnessed her joy and faith
when the watch was returned, and that person later became a Catholic.
In the following years, she held various jobs. She also spent a year in
jail -- allegedly for criticizing Communist Party leader Mao Tse-tung
-- and, beginning in 1974, she spent a year in a mental hospital.
“God gave me the grace” to make it through the rough times,
she said in mid-March.
In 1980, when the government returned part of the Fushun church’s
property, she and some of the nuns returned to the church compound, and
her community was reinstated in 1986.
Today, four Sisters who made it through the Church suppression remain
at the Fushun motherhouse. Two of them are very ill, and Sister Peter
prays with them four times a day, then prays in the chapel.
For nearly two decades, China’s Catholic churches were suppressed.
In the 1980s, as the government began loosening its religious restrictions,
Catholics who had suffered were faced with how to pass along the faith
to a generation brought up without religion.
Although some were forced to join or made the decision to join the government-approved
Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association, which rejected Vatican ties, many
secretly maintained their allegiance to the pope and the universal Church.
Bishop Jin, ordained a priest in 1951, was in prison from 1958 to 1968
and later served at the Shenyang Masanjia work farm. He said that during
his imprisonment he “definitely believed that someday we would be
free” but did not know when.
In 1980, the government called him to serve the Church as a priest and
apologized to him. The government, not the Vatican, appointed him a bishop
in 1989, and he decided to accept the appointment. The bishop said his
sister, a nun in Taiwan, and a bishop in Japan helped negotiate for him
to be recognized secretly by the Vatican.
He was “trying to work in a very complicated situation,” he
said.
Liaoning Auxiliary Bishop Paul Pei Junmin was born in 1969, so shortly
after he started elementary school the Cultural Revolution was finished.
“I basically received the Catholic teaching from my parents,”
he said. His mother’s cousin, who died two years ago, was an acolyte
for 45 years.
“He was the only preacher in my village,” he said in mid-March,
and during the Cultural Revolution the cousin “was almost beaten
to death” and almost burned to death because he was Catholic.
Since the village did not have priests or catechists, “this gentleman
played a very important role” in passing on the faith, said Bishop
Pei. “He was a very dear person to me.”
Later, at age 76, the cousin was ordained a priest of the Liaoning Diocese.
He died two years ago, the bishop said.
In a November address in Atlanta to a conference on China’s Catholic
Church, Tao, a laywoman, called her 100 months on a work farm “a
way to carry the cross of Jesus.”
In the early 1980s, Tao said, she felt the need to participate in the
Catholic community and pass on the faith to her son, but she hesitated.
Millions of Catholics were refusing to join the patriotic association
and were continuing to practice their faith clandestinely.
One day she passed a church and went to pray in front of the Eucharist.
“It was as though Jesus spoke to me there and urged that our family
become part of the registered church, in order to worship God openly and
help pass on the Catholic faith to the next generation,” Tao said.
“In this time of prayer I decided we would participate in (the)
open church, even though this would mean we would be criticized by friends
or family. If these misunderstandings came, I prayed that I would be strong
to accept these, too, as part of the cross that Jesus asked me to share.”
In 1990, Tao accepted a position as coordinator of the academic program
at the novitiate of a diocesan order of nuns. When she ran into conflicts
with the government’s Religious Affairs Bureau, Shanghai Bishop
Aloysius Jin Luxian sent her abroad to study: first English in the Philippines,
then religious education in England and finally systematic theology at
the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, where she earned her master’s
degree.
Upon her return, the bishop asked her to work at Guang Qi Research Center,
where one of her principal responsibilities has been the translation of
English-language theological works into Chinese. Among her projects was
an eight-volume series, “Catholicism” by Father Richard P.
McBrien, one of her theology professors at Notre Dame.
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