SEPTEMBER
27, 10:53 EDT
China, Vatican Dispute Intensifies By CHARLES HUTZLER
BEIJING (AP) — China
intensified a war of words with the Vatican on Wednesday, publishing rules
to curb missionaries and getting Communist Party-backed bishops to accuse
Rome of fomenting anti-government sentiment among Chinese Catholics.
The controversy,
simmering for months, adds a bizarre chapter to the 50-year rift between
the Vatican and Beijing that both sides claim to want to end.
The dispute has stirred
fears about rivalry with Taiwan and revived China's enchantment with the
bloody, anti-foreign Boxer Rebellion 100 years ago.
At the center of
the dispute are long-laid Vatican plans to make saints of 120 Western and
Chinese Catholics killed in China, mostly by the Boxers, and to do so on
Sunday, Oct. 1 — China's National Day and a date given to celebrating the
triumph of communism in 1949.
``This public humiliation
and scorn for the Chinese people and Chinese church is something we absolutely
cannot tolerate and accept,'' the state-backed Chinese Catholic Patriotic
Association and the Chinese Catholics Bishops College said in a statement.
``Some in the Holy
See want to use this 'canonization' to distort and slander history, renew
control over China's Catholic church and encourage worshippers to oppose
the government,'' the groups said.
Their statement,
reported in major national newspapers Wednesday, added to a barrage of
harsh words from the Chinese government and marked the clergy's most public
criticism of the Vatican in years. They demanded the Vatican ``repent.''
A Vatican spokesman
denied that Sunday's ceremony was politically motivated or ``directed against
anyone.''
The spokesman, Joaquin
Navarro-Valls, noted on Tuesday that Sunday marked the feast of Saint Therese
of Lisieux, patron saint of missionaries, and was a natural time to name
saints.
Set up by Beijing
in 1951 to prevent foreign influence, the state-run church has recently
tried to keep open channels to Rome in hopes of reconciling. The government,
too, would like to win over the Vatican and get it to sever diplomatic
ties with Taiwan, the island Beijing considers its territory.
The Vatican has encouraged
contacts, while trying not to alienate supporters in Taiwan and China's
8 million Catholics, half of whom reject the state-run church. A high-ranking
envoy, Cardinal Roger Etchegaray, tried to allay Beijing's concerns over
the canonizations in talks with Chinese officials two weeks ago.
In a sign of its
displeasure, China on Wednesday reissued rules forbidding proselytizing
by foreigners and prohibiting them from bringing any religious items into
China except for their own use.
The Communist Party's
most authoritative newspaper also defended China's decision to run its
own churches without foreign control. ``No foreign force should count on
China to be its servant,'' the People's Daily said in a front-page editorial.
In their statement,
the Chinese bishops accused the Vatican of violating its own rules on canonization
by not seeking the approval of China's clergy and allowing Taiwanese bishops
to influence the process at Beijing's expense. |
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Press. All rights reserved.
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