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China arrests Catholic priests, church members as persecution intensifies

Priests and church members in China’s immense underground Catholic Church were arrested this weekend in the community of Tianshui — as the Chinese government continues its persecution of Christians.

Among those rounded up were the administrator of the underground diocese, Father John Baptist Wang Ruohan, retired Bishop Casmir Wang Milu, Father John Wang Ruowang, as well as several other priests and dozens of parish lay leaders, according to sources.

Bishop Wang and the two Wang priests are all brothers. They are being held in different places and subjected to political indoctrination sessions designed to break their will. The Chinese government prohibits Chinese Catholics from having any contact with the Pope or the rest of the worldwide church – and insists they participate in a government-run Catholic church not recognized by Vatican.

The vast majority of Chinese Catholics have refused, instead worshipping in makeshift “house churches” with priests and bishops ordained by the church in Rome. The Vatican automatically excommunicates any priest or bishop who joins the Chinese-government church. Recently, Pope Benedict XIV extended leniency, suggesting that excommunication might not be mandatory for priests who come under extraordinary coercion by the Chinese government.

The underground diocese of Tianshui had maintained a comfortable relationship with the police and government authorities. The two Tianshui communities, the official and underground, have a total of 20 thousand faithful and 27 priests, 15 of which belong to the underground community. In 2003, Monseignor. Wang Milu retired. The government-appointed bishop, Jinglong Augustine Zhao died in 2004 and the government appointed in his place his nephew, Zhao Jianzhang Woods.

According to observers, the arrests are designed to forcibly convince members of the underground – which has more priests than the government-run church — to accept the nephew prevent an underground priest from being elected bishop.

The government had already been attempting to slow growth in the underground church by preventing the election of underground priests, arresting several diocesan administrators. In recent months, two other priests were arrested, possible candidates to be bishop.

Two weeks ago, Chen Hailong, underground priest of the diocese of Xuanhua was released after his arrest in April. During his 4 months detention he was abused physically as well as mentally and coerced to join the government-run church, which is called the “Patriotic Association” and sever his ties with the Vatican.

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Comments read comments(2)
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andrew

posted August 29, 2011 at 9:18 pm


Well brothers and sisters, no surprise, this is our main business partner (read it Judas), who some day will betray even our business relationship,a country who has no values,besides their communist believes, and our politicians and businessmen, sell our country to this communist nation, who persecutes its own people, in any way they can!
Sad very sad!



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Carmine Fragione

posted October 16, 2011 at 3:28 pm


The Catholic Church should issue a ban on any religious objects produced in China ,refuse to bless any such things, and order that nothing made in China can be sold as “Catholic” merchandise.



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