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The Laws of China and its Interaction with Religion

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Title: The Laws of China and its Interaction with Religion


1
The Laws of China and its Interaction with
Religion
  • HKU Faculty of Law LLAW 3118
  • Professor Benny Tai

Rob Kallio Ken Lee Hugh McKee Jordan
Nahmias Frankie Tam
2
Agenda of Presentation
  • Chinese Legislations and Regulations on Religious
    Affairs
  • Intro to Religious Freedom in China
  • Christianity
  • Islam
  • Confucianism
  • Judaism
  • Falun Gong
  • Conclusion

3
Intro to Religious Freedom in PRC
  • China officially recognizes five religions
  • Buddhism
  • Catholicism
  • Islam
  • Protestantism
  • Taoism

4
Chinese Legislations and Regulations on Religious
Affairs
  • International Documents
  • International Covenant on Civil and Political
    Rights Article 18
  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948)
    Article 18
  • United Nations Charter Article 1(3), 55
  • United Nations Declaration on the Elimination of
    All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination
    based on Religion or Belief

5
Chinese Legislations and Regulations on Religious
Affairs (2)
  • Current Domestic Laws
  • Constitution of the Peoples Republic of China
    (1982) Article 36
  • Document No. 6 Circular Issued by the Central
    Committee of the Communist Party and the State
    Council on Some Problems Concerning Further
    Improving Work on Religion (5 Feb 1991)
  • Document No. 19 The Basic Viewpoint on the
    Religious Questions During Our Countrys
    Socialist Period (31 Mar 1982)
  • Regulations on the Management of Religious
    Activities of Foreigners in China (Decree 144 of
    State Council, 31 Jan 1994)
  • Religious Affairs Regulations (Decree 426 of the
    State Council, 30 Nov 2004)

6
Intro to Religious Freedom in PRC (2)
  • Constitutional protection of religious freedom
  • Subject to Community Party leadership
  • Communism
  • 1950s goal of religious freedom to lead people
    to abandon religion
  • Control by CCP over official religious
    organisations
  • Govt financed religious publications
  • Control religious activities involving foreigners
  • CCP National Religious Work Meeting (2001)
  • Religions will survive for long time
  • Influence on national development and social
    stability
  • Factor in international politics

7
Christianity in the PRC
  • Brief history
  • The CCPs current strategies on Christianity
  • -three-self policy self-administration,
    self-support, and self-propagation
  • -Only protects normal activities
  • -mandatory registration with patriotic
    association (Chinese Protestant Three-Self
    Patriotic Movement, China Christian Council)
  • -Limit external influence on churches

8
Christianity in the PRC (2)
  • Challenges faced by Christian churches today
  • -Officially registered churches
  • -underground churches

9
Christianity in the PRC (3)
  • Officially registered churches
  • -close supervision by government controlled
    patriotic association
  • -mandatory political education for churches
    personnel
  • -lack of foreign churches support
  • -Screening of preaching
  • -banning Christians from joining the Communist
    Party
  • -uncertainty about the definition of normal
    activities

10
Christianity in the PRC (4)
  • Underground churches
  • -regarded as illegal in China
  • -frequent raids, arrests and detention
  • -Criminal prosecution of religious dissidents,
    or counter-revolutionary charges
  • -Labour camps and unfair trails

11
Christianity in the PRC (5)
  • Since Chinas opening up of its economy in 1979
  • - Law is used as a tool to suppress Christianity
  • More recently, from 2000 onward
  • -an emphasis on accommodation, churches
    adaptation to Chinese socialism, social harmony
    and development of rule of law
  • -Law is used as a tool to allow religious
    tolerance, but no freedom of religion is
    guaranteed

12
Islam in the PRC
  • Historical Background
  • Focus on Modern China after est. of PRC
  • Two dimensions
  • State and Religion (Islam)
  • State and Ethnicity (Hui and Uygurs, etc.)

13
Islam in the PRC (2)
  • Inception Trading with Arabs coming to China in
    Tang Dynasty (7th century)
  • Refused to kowtow to Chinese Emperor
  • Islam not recognise filial piety (xiao)
  • Each viewed other as foreigner
  • Yuan Dynasty Resentment against Muslims and
    Stereotypes
  • Qing Dynasty Muslim Rebellions

14
Islam in the PRC (3)
  • Islam as a way of life without a separation of
    state and religion.
  • Strong sense of foreignness
  • Belong to larger Islamic world the universal
    Umma.
  • reinforced through the daily prayers, and Hajj
    (the pilgrimage to Mecca)
  • Brew suspicion between state and Islam
  • Constant suppression by Chinese rulers and
    rebellions of the Muslims

15
Islam in the PRC (4)
  • Pragmatism Room to manoeuvre under Islamic
    theology
  • War between Dar-al-Islam (Pax Islamica)
    consisting of Islamic and non-Islamic territories
    held under Islamic sovereignty and Dar-la-Harb
    comprising of rest of the world
  • While fighting for Islamic superiority in
    Dar-la-Harb, Muslims under religious obligation
    to take cognisance of (not accept) non-Islamic
    sovereignty (for considerations of law and order)
  • Ambiguity whether a territory which Muslim law
    is respected but the rulers are non-Muslims
    constitute Dar-al-Islam or Dar-la-Harb
  • Unclear means of jihad

16
Islam in the PRC (5)
  • Preventing succession of Xinjiang
  • Religious schools closed down
  • Only licensed religious leaders could preach
  • Written pledges of loyalty to govt required
  • Diplomacy Middle-Eastern and Arabic policies
  • Diplomatic connections set up between China and
    Arabic countries
  • Search for new energy sources from Middle East
  • However, greater exposure of Muslims in China to
    great success of Islamic world

17
Confucianism in the PRC
  • Background and History
  • Confucius, the philosopher (551 479 BC)
  • Thought to be the author of the Five Classics, a
    set of ancient books used as a basis of study for
    Confucianism
  • Popular after he died through his disciples
  • His teachings found in the Analects of Confucius

18
Confucianism in the PRC (2)
  • Key Practices and Teachings
  • Morality and Virtue
  • human beings born to pursue 4 fundamental
    qualities
  • Propriety (Li), Humanity (Ren), Righteousness
    (Yi), and Wisdom (Zhi)
  • Relationships
  • Confucian state is composed not of individuals
    but of interconnections everyone is expected to
    have a role and know their role
  • The Superior Man
  • portrayed as wise, humane, and courageous
    motivated by righteousness rather than profits
  • A well-ordered society is a result of behavioural
    exemplification of the superior mans moralistic
    virtue

19
Confucianism in the PRC (3)
  • Is it a religion?
  • Focus on present life, not next life
  • No central God or supernatural entity
  • More a way of life or philosophy
  • based on a moral system where phrases and
    teachings suggest how one should lead their lives
  • Depends on what definition of religion is used

20
Confucianism in the PRC (4)
  • History of Treatment in PRC
  • Qin Dynasty (221 BC 206 BC)
  • All schools of thought besides Legalism were
    banned
  • Burning of intellectual books and burying
    Confucianism
  • Han Dynasty (206 BC 220AD)
  • Confucianism as we now know it began
  • Emperor Wu officially declared China a Confucian
    state and used Confucianism as a political system
    to run China
  • Confucianism has survived since then, often
    debated with Buddhism and other rising religions
  • Republic Period (1912-1948)
  • many believed Confucianism and its traditional
    roots would not move China into the modern,
    industrial world
  • Cultural Revolution (1966 1976)
  • Mao used Confucian ideals to praise sacrifice for
    the greater good, but spoke out against
    Confucianism

21
Confucianism in the PRC (5)
  • Current state of Confucianism in China
  • Not recognized as an official religion by PRC
  • No evidence of official persecution of its
    practice
  • Has permeated throughout Chinese culture,
    including legal system
  • Contract negotiations
  • Enforcement of piracy laws
  • Mediation and arbitration
  • Judicial independence

22
Judaism in the PRC
  • Key Aspects of Judaism
  • Compatibility with Chinese Culture and Communism
  • Historical Background
  • A brief history of Judaism in China
  • Past and Present Treatment of Jews in China

23
Key Aspects of Judaism
  • Although hundreds of rules govern the lives of
    Orthodox Jews, some basic rules include
  • kosher,
  • Sabbath,
  • High Holiday observances,
  • freedom of practice,
  • Temples of Worship.
  • Generally speaking, Jews can live under any
    government, so long as they are allowed to
    practice freely.
  • However, in China, there are limitations
  • For example, the general absence of Kosher meat,
    lack of Synagogues and restrictions on religions
    which are not approved by the Communist Party,
    make practicing Judaism difficult, if not
    impossible.

24
Historical Background
  • Jewish presence in China since 1605, in Kaifeng,
    possibly dating from the 11th C.
  • Jews in China beginning in the Tang and Song
    Dynasties
  • Jews have historically lived in Harbin, Shanghai,
    Kaifeng and Nanjing, as well as other cities
  • Traditionally, referred to as youtai zhong,
    loosely meaning the Jewish Race

25
The Movement of Jews into China
  • Jews arrived during the Han Dynasty, and followed
    in the Tang and Song Dynasties, through to the
    Qing Dynasty

Early Kaifeng Jews in traditional clothing
26
  • In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, many
    more Jews arrived in Harbin, Nanjing and
    Shanghai, as they were colonial business and
    financial centres.
  • By the 1930s and 1940s, Jews were bring forced
    out of Europe, and many fled to the same cities
    in China to escape the Holocaust.

27
  • During World War II, many more Jews fled to
    China, specifically to Shanghai, where the
    remaining Jewish communities exist today.

The remaining parts of the Ohel Moishe Synagogue,
in Shanghai. It was used as an insane asylum
until recently.
28
Treatment of Jews in China under the Cultural
Revolution
  • By the time of the establishment of the PRC, few,
    if any Jews remained in China
  • Under Maos laws, and as a result of the Cultural
    Revolution, Jews were seen as a separate and
    distinct race.
  • Most, if not all, synagogues and temples in China
    were destroyed, and Jews were forced to leave
    China.

29
Intellectual Treatment of Jews
  • Authors such as Pan Guangdan Wu Zelin, maintained
    an interest in Jews, even when they were
    mistreated in China.
  • They argued that since the Han Dynasty was
    superior, and the Jews assimilated with the Han
    Dynasty, then the Jews are a superior race.
  • They also suggest that Jews are forever imagined
    in the context of money lenders, oppressed
    people, smart, capitalists, and a distinct race
    altogether.

30
  • Today, interests in Jews as people, and not a
    religion, are at a high point.
  • Since recommencing relations with Israel, Israel
    is Chinas second most important trading partner
    (particularly in arms and war technology)
  • Books, like Youtairen Chaofan Zhihui Jiemi
    (Revelations on the Jews Superior Intelligence)
    are becoming part of popular literature
  • Jewish descendants in Kaifeng have been given
    allowances, and exempted from the birth control
    policies, in order to create a rebirth in
    Chinas Jewish minority

31
Flattering Anti-Semitism
  • However, the interest in Jews today is more on
    the imagined basis that all Jews are rich,
    clever, successful and can handle money
    efficiently.
  • Moreover, the new treatment of Jews in Kaifeng
    has been argued to be an example of the Chinese
    government portraying itself as tolerant of
    other religions.

Headline from a magazine which reads CHILDHOOD
COMPANIESMaking money from children is no longer
only a trick of the Jews. The whole world has
joined this activity...
32
Falun Gong in the PRC
  • I Is the practice of FLG a religion?
  • II Human Rights
  • III Background
  • IV The PRCs Legal Toolkit
  • V The Results
  • Concluding Thoughts

33
Issue I Is the practice of FLG a religion?
  • What is a religion?
  • Lack of intl consensus
  • Academic classification methods
  • New Religious Movement (NRM)
  • What is a cult?
  • What is an evil cult organization?

34
Issue II Human Rights
  • Freedom of Religion - UDHR
  • Belief vs. Manifestation dichotomy
  • Collectivist vs. Individualist Rights
  • Confucius state, collective, individual
  • Can China accommodate freedom of conscience?

35
Issue III Background
  • Founded by Li Hongzhi 1992
  • Central Text Zhuan Falun
  • Eclectic mix of Buddhism, Doaism, Confucianism
    the qigong
  • Cultivation of truthfulness, compassion and
    tolerance
  • Appeal to marginalized groups in society large
    cross-section of followers
  • April 25, 1999 10,000 practitioners
    demonstrate outside of Zhongnanhai
  • Even by the regimes conservative enumeration, it
    is one of the largest non-govt. organizations in
    the history of the Peoples Republic

36
Issue IV The PRCs Legal Toolkit
  • Art. 36 of the PRC Constitution
  • FLG repression had to fit within the limitation
  • Executive needed to be reinforced in either NPC
    decision or judicial interpretation
  • PRC Law Governing Assemblies, Parades and
    Demonstrations not especially useful
  • July 22, 1999- Ministry of Civil Affairs declared
    that the FLG was an illegal organization
    applied various Articles of the November 1989
    Regulations Governing the Registration and
    Administration of Public Organizations, various
    CL provisions, and Regulations Governing Public
    Order and Security REGISTRATION
  • warrant for the arrest of Li issued by the
    Ministry of Public Security
  • Legislative
  • Oct. 30, 99 NPC Standing Committee promulgated
    the Decision to Eradicate Evil Cult
    Organizations and to Prevent and Punish Evil Cult
    Activities passed a decision to eliminate FLG
    activities eliminate evil cult organization,
    re-educate
  • Didnt answer What is an evil cult organization?
    In what ways the FLG fits into this definition?

37
Issue IV Cont.
  • Judicial
  • Applies Article 300 of the Criminal Code to cults
    clarifies degrees of severity of related crime
  • Increased substantive content
  • The rule of law tied to heresy
  • Ex post facto determination?
  • Notice 29 (Nov. 99) instructions to local
    courts must be fully aware of the important,
    complex, and long-term nature of this struggle
    and they must make it their serious public duty
    to punish every kind of heretical organization
  • Penal Code can only target peoples actions, not
    their thoughts or group identity (Gao)
  • The FLG was accused of breaking a range of
    specific laws on publication, associational
    registration, demonstration and the illegal
    misappropriation of confidential state material,
    and various sections of the Regulations on
    Governing Public Order and Security, related CL
    provisions with regard to disturbing social
    administrative order and specific crimes dealing
    with illicit sexual relations and cult practices
    resulting in personal injury or death.
  • RETL Camps 99
  • Forced Labour Camps violates multiple articles of
    the PRC Constitution (5, 10, 33, 37, and 38)
  • A newly constructed balance between the
    requirements of rights protection and public
    order (Ronald C. Keith and Zhiqiu Lin, The China
    Quarterly)

38
Issue V The Results The Paradox
  • Deaths
  • Increased devotion to the practice
  • A potential international PR disaster
  • The fall of communism or the adaptation to a
    system better able to accommodate competing power
    bases?
  • Internal public opinion A mixed reaction

39
Falun Gong - Conclusions
  • Hard to ascertain the facts
  • Broad brush stroke is alarming
  • Belief vs. Manifestation
  • International Customary Law belief
  • ICC jurisdiction Crimes Against Humanity
  • unable or unwilling sovereignty waive
  • Issues of Complicity?

40
  • Questions
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