The Economist
   
Exporting bibles
In the beginning was the ideogram
China has become one of the largest producers of bibles in the  world
Mar 30th 2013 | NANJING  
 
Amity’s little black book 
LU GENGSHENG remembers growing up in rural Anhui province in the 1980s, 
where  his father was pastor of a house church, an illegal congregation that 
refused to  join with official churches it believed to be stooges of the 
Communist Party.  His family owned the area’s only bible, and other believers 
would bring  notebooks to copy passages of scripture to take home. 
Today, Christians make up 5% of the population, some 67m people, according 
to  the Pew Research Center, a think-tank. Unofficial headcounts say that 
China has  more Christians than members of the Communist Party (about 82m  
people). 
To meet their spiritual needs, a joint venture called Amity Printing was  
founded in 1988 between Amity Foundation, an NGO linked to the China 
Christian  Council (CCC), a government body, and the United Bible Societies 
(UBS), a 
 British-based group dedicated to providing access to Christian literature. 
In its first year, using a single printing press donated by UBS, Amity  
produced 500,000 bibles. In 2012 it printed more than 12m bibles and New  
Testaments. This makes Amity one of the largest printers of bibles in the 
world;  
quite an accomplishment in a country where, not long ago, people died for 
their  faith. 
In 2008 the company moved to smart new premises on the outskirts of 
Nanjing,  an affluent eastern city near Shanghai. The new factory employs 600 
people and  has the capacity to produce around 18m bibles a year in more than 
90 
languages,  including English, Swahili, Zulu and Russian, as well as Braille 
editions. The  100-millionth bible, printed last year, is displayed proudly 
in the lobby. 
Amity is the only publisher in China authorised to print bibles, leading to 
 criticism that it is exploiting its monopoly status and low cost-base to 
make  money in the export market. Indeed exports have increased and it says 
that  roughly two-thirds of bibles printed in 2011 went overseas. Meanwhile, 
domestic  sales have remained static, at about 4m copies per year. 
Bob Fu, founder of ChinaAid, a Christian charity based in America, says  
Amity’s domestic quota has failed to keep up with the growth in the number of  
Chinese Christians. The CCC keeps a tight rein on who gets Amity’s bibles, 
he  says, by distributing them only to 55,000 “official” churches. Though 
anyone can  buy a bible there, Amity does not deal with the hundreds of 
thousands of  unofficial house churches around the country. The line dividing 
such groups from  the official churches is now less clear, but they are 
frequently persecuted by  the government because they still refuse to register, 
fearing they will have to  compromise their faith. 
Other foreigners are trying to make up the bible deficit. Paul Hattaway,  
director of Asia Harvest, an American Christian group, speaks of a bible  “
famine” in China. In the late 1990s, he started printing bibles there  
illicitly. Mr Hattaway says he has distributed more than 6m of them through the 
 
house-church network. 
Mr Lu, the Christian from Anhui, is now a  house-church pastor himself. He 
says the situation is by no means perfect, but  since the mid-1990s, bibles 
have been easier to obtain. Today every house-church  member in his region 
owns a bible, he adds, all of them published by Amity  Printing.

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