Chinese officials in one province say they are "converting" Christians to 
party loyalty through poverty alleviation and other schemes to help the 
disadvantaged. A local priest said that the removal of the Christian images 
involved officials giving money to poor households in return for hanging 
President Xi Jinping's portrait. ...
 
 Chinese officials pay poor to swap religious images for portraits of Xi 
Jinping 
https://cruxnow.com/global-church/2017/11/16/chinese-officials-pay-poor-swap-religious-images-portraits-xi-jinping/
 Catholic News Service https://cruxnow.com/author/cns/
 Nov 16, 2017
 CONTRIBUTOR

 

 

 

 Chinese President Xi Jinping arrives for the inauguration ceremony of Chinese 
sponsored Vietnam-China Cultural Friendship Palace in Hanoi, Vietnam Sunday, 
Nov. 12, 2017. (Credit: Kham/Pool Photo via AP.)

 
 Chinese officials in one province say they are "converting" Christians to 
party loyalty through poverty alleviation and other schemes to help the 
disadvantaged. A local priest said that the removal of the Christian images 
involved officials giving money to poor households in return for hanging 
President Xi Jinping's portrait. 

 HONG KONG - Officials in China’s eastern Jiangxi province have replaced 
religious images displayed by Christian families with portraits of the 
country’s leader, Xi Jinping.
 Ucanews.com reported that, on Nov. 12, pictures were uploaded to the popular 
social messaging service WeChat account of Huangjinbu town government, showing 
officials removing images of the cross and other religious subjects in Yugan 
County.
 The message from officials said the Christians involved had “recognized their 
mistakes and decided not to entrust to Jesus but to the (Communist) Party” 
claiming the Christians voluntarily removed 624 religious images and posted 453 
portraits of Xi.
 The officials also claimed they were “converting” Christians to party loyalty 
through poverty alleviation and other schemes to help the disadvantaged. Nearly 
10 percent of Yugan County’s largely impoverished 1 million people are 
Christian.
 Father Andrew, who declined to give his full name for fear of government 
retribution, told ucanews.com that the removal of the Christian images involved 
officials giving money to poor households in return for hanging Xi’s portrait.
 Father John, in northern China, said he felt Xi had become “another Mao” 
Zedong following the 19th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in 
October. The priest predicted that other officials around the country would 
imitate what had been done in Jiangxi.
 With the party’s new revised “Regulations on Religious Affairs” to be 
implemented Feb. 1, Chinese Christians and observers believe religious policy 
will closely follow Xi’s “Sinicization” model.
 During the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, religious intolerance and Mao’s dogma 
prevailed. Young people were encouraged to criticize their elders, including 
parents and teachers. People accused of spying for foreign powers were detained 
and beaten to obtain confessions.
 Priests in China who spoke to ucanews.com did not see any direct return to the 
conditions of the Cultural Revolution, but said they feared religious and 
social controls would continue to intensify.
 “It is not going to be good,” said one of the priests.
 The release in China of videos urging children to spy on their families has 
also brought back further memories of the Cultural Revolution, when youths 
enforced Communist Party ideology. Young people of the Red Guards engaged in 
the arrest and public humiliation of anyone considered to be deviating from the 
teachings of revolutionary leader Mao.
 
 Recently, the Chinese Society of Education, affiliated with the Education 
Ministry, released two videos online aimed at teaching children to report 
family members who could pose a threat to national security. One video was for 
primary school students and another for high school students.
 Both instructed children to report to the national security bureau anyone, 
including parents, who could be illegally relaying confidential information, 
especially to foreigners. The videos provided a hotline phone number to report 
suspicious activities.
 
 An official notice said the videos were produced to match Xi’s strategy of 
incorporating national security objectives into the education system
 

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