(Yining (aka Ghulja), Xinjiang Province—Feb. 23, 2021) Chinese Communist Party (CCP) authorities ordered Yining Catholics to stop attending Yining Xinjiang’s Sacred Heart of Jesus Church on February 19 for failure to align with the party’s “sinicization” policy. Under the leadership of Party General Secretary Xi Jinping, sinicization involves reconciling the doctrines of all officially recognized religions with the CCP’s core values of socialism and assimilating religions into Chinese traditional culture.
Local authorities failed to disclose the reason for the demolition. Some Believers presume that as the church’s geographic location lies within a commercial area, the city’s urban planning officials will develop the property in the future.
In 2018, Xinjiang’s authorities deemed that the exterior decorations of the church did not align with “sinicization.” Consequently, because of its perceived “showiness, authorities removed the church’s cross, bell tower, icons, domes, and religious symbols, including two statues of St. Peter and St. Paul.
Local authorities failed to disclose the reason for the demolition. Some Believers presume that as the church’s geographic location lies within a commercial area, the city’s urban planning officials will develop the property in the future.
In 2018, Xinjiang’s authorities deemed that the exterior decorations of the church did not align with “sinicization.” Consequently, because of its perceived “showiness, authorities removed the church’s cross, bell tower, icons, domes, and religious symbols, including two statues of St. Peter and St. Paul.
Approximately 2,000 Catholics live in the area of Yining’s Sacred Heart Church of Jesus, situated 700 kilometers west of Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang. The first Catholics in Yining trace back to those exiled to Xinjiang because of their beliefs during the Qing Dynasty when the government banned religion. After the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, Catholics joined the wave of immigrants moving to Yili from the mainland.
Since the start of Xi Jinping’s reign in 2013, Chen Quanguo, party secretary in Xinjiang, initiated a hardline policy towards Catholics, Muslims and other religious groups. In recent years, under the guise of “sinicization,” in addition to demolishing churches, CCP authorities have damaged or demolished an estimated 16,000 mosques.
Contrary to CCP claims, no conflict of interest exists between commercialization and church. China’s massive demolition of mosques, Christian churches, and religious symbols like crosses outside of commercial areas in various provinces other than Xinjiang, reveals that the demolition of religious buildings for “commercial” reasons serves as an excuse for religious persecution.
(Gao Zhensai, ChinaAid Special Correspondent)
~ Romans 12:2 (NKJV)
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