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Chinese
Philosophies & Religions --- The Status
The
status of religion in the China of today
by Dai Kangsheng
Senior Fellow and Deputy Director of the Institute of Religion, Chinese
Academy of Social Science.
China is a country of great ethnic and religious
diversity. Nearly 10 percent of its 1.2 billion people are religious believers.
Among the 56 ethnic nationalities, some 20 minority groups are composed
almost entirely of followers of the same religion. The major religions
are Buddhism, Taoism, Islam, Catholicism and Protestantism. Buddhism was
introduced into China in the first century. There are now about 13,000
Buddhist temples and some 200,000 monks and nuns. Buddhism also still
has strong appeal to numerous elderly people, who turn to the Buddha for
help. Lamaism, a blend of Buddhism and indigenous Tibetan religion, is
followed by the overwhelming majority of Tibetans and Mongolians.
Taoism, a native Chinese religion, originated
at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220 AD), a century after Buddhism's
arrival. Taoists regard Lao Zi or "Old boy" (believed to be an old man
with a long white beard from birth) as their founder. His world-famous
5,000 character Dao De Jing is their holy book. There are now about 1,500
Taoist temples in China with some 250,000 Taoist priests and nuns.
Islam came to China in the mid-7th century,
after Buddhism had already spread to most parts of the country inhabited
by the Han people, the largest ethnic group. That explains why Chinese
Moslems, who total about 18 million, are mostly within 10 Islamic minorities,
including the Hui and Uygur, living in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region
and Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. There are about 30,000 mosques served
by around 40,000 priests called Imams or Ahungs. Roughly the same number
of devotees have made the pilgrimage to Mecca since the 1980s.
Although Nestorian Christians arrived in China
before the 7th century, the Christian faith did not plant itself firmly
until the 16th century, when the Ming emperors allowed Jesuit priests,
led by Matteo Ricci, to locate in Beijing and other cities. There are
now about 4 million Catholics with around 4,600 churches and a slightly
smaller number of clerical personnel. By comparison, Protestant missionaries
began to appear much later, around the time of the First Opium War(1840).
Yet Protestant Christian denominations enjoyed a much more rapid dissemination,
with believers reaching 10 million and missionaries surpassing 18,000.
There are now 12,000 Protestant churches in China.
There is no state religion in China and no
religion has ever predominated over the nation. All religions have equal
status. As a result, harmon reigns among religions in China. In a sense,
Confucianism is not really a religion, despite its dminance in Chinese
history. The Confucian goal of close harmony between Man and Nature, the
Chinese ideal of benevolence, tolerance and unity, the historical preference
for rule by moral power to rule by force and the spirit of "all men are
brothers inside the four seas"combined to create an ages-long environment
for harmonious coexistence among religions in China and the absence of
inter-religious wars. In fact, in the course of the country's long history,
the various religions have become part of Chinese tradition, thought and
culture. The advocacy since 1949 of patriotism, national equality and
mutual respect has further enhanced this religious harmony.
Since believers of the same religion comprise
nearly the entire population of some minority nationalities, freedom of
belief is closely related to the protection of autonomous rights and human
rights of national minorities in areas inhabited by Tibetans, Huis (Moslems)
and other ethnic groups.
During the "cultural revolution" (1966-1976),
however, all religious institutions suffered severely. After 1978, churches,
mosques and temples were reopened with the help of their reactivated religious
associations and the Bureau of Religious Affairs. The government has spent
heavily since then to refurbish and build new churches, mosques and temples
across the country, especially in Tibet. In the 1982 constitution, more
definitive stipulations were decreed to ensure freedom of religious belief
as a basic right,
This has resulted in expansion of religious
institutions and their activities in the past two decades as the country
launched reforms and opened to the world. Christians now account for 14
times the figure in 1949. All the religious institutions have reactivated
their national associations, and have established 74institutions of higher
leaming. Each organization defines its own aims, handles its own religious
affairs, publishes its own journals for distribution at home and abroad
and prints millions of copies of religious canons. The national Tibetan
Studies Center even published an edition of the Tibetan language Gangyur
of Tripitaka, an encyclopedic Buddhist scripture. By the end of 1996 more
than 18 million copies of the Bible had been printed, with special-tax
exempt treatment speeding their publication.
Freedom of religious belief has also increased
the participation of believers in social-welfare activities and state
affairs. Over 11,000 religious personages are delegates to People's Congresses
and Political Consultative Conferences at all levels.
Meanwhile, China's religious communities have
than 70 countries and territories. Parishes nationwide welcome 100,000
Catholic visitors from over 90 countries annually. On their recent China
tour, a delegation of American religious leaders was deeply impressed
with the thriving religious activities here. Indeed China's religious
communities have evolved into an important social force, full of vigor
in national life and in the modernization drive in China today.
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