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China Communist Party Intrudes In Mosque Life

EjazR

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China Communist Party Intrudes In Mosque Life

Monday, 09 August 2010

Members of the Uyghur ethnic minority in northwest China have expressed anger and concern about controls over imams after a local Communist Party committee held a meeting in a place of worship.

The Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) Peyziwat County Committee held the meeting at the Second Village Mosque in Xinjiang’s Kashgar prefecture on July 24, according to the official Tianshan Net website.

“To hold communist activities in a mosque is a kind of ridicule to our religion and our humanity,” said Abdurahman Kasim, a religious scholar from the county.

At the meeting, 35 imams attended a speech contest organized by the Unity and Friendship Department.

The topic of the speech contest was “Love the Country, Promote the Homeland.”

Local people contacted religious figures to express their anger over the issue.

“So far, within a week I have received at least 100 calls from the public, all of them complaining about the issue. I understand that they cannot express their opinions to officials because of the political situation in our homeland,” Abdurahman Kasim said.

“We did not say anything to the government about the issue, because we know what the cost of expression on this topic would be, especially these days. But officials should know that our silence does not mean we agree,” he added.

A staff member from the Unity and Friendship Department of the CCP’s Peyziwat Committee confirmed that the meeting was held in a mosque but refused comment on the issue.

Influence on imams


The meeting reflects the central government’s strong concern for controlling religious leadership among Uyghurs, a mostly Muslim ethnic minority in China with their home in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.

One of the 19 participants in the speech contest, Abdurehimjan, a 41-year-old imam from a mosque in nearby Canbaz village, said, “I heard that people are blaming me as a traitor, but it is no secret to anyone what the rules for imams are in society now.”

“We have to listen to officials, we have to obey regulations, we have to do many things against our will. It’s not only me—all the imams are paid by government to do that,” he said.

Since 2006, the government has paid monthly salaries of 80, 120, or 230 yuan (U.S. $12, $18, or $34) per month to imams throughout the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, according to an official in Karamay city in charge of religious affairs.

In exchange, the government is asking imams to seek common ground between socialism and Islam and to guide the public to obey state regulations, he said.

“Patriotic education does not contradict Islam or our policy,” an official from the CCP’s Kashgar Prefectural Committee surnamed Zhang said.

“Stability is the main demand of our society, and unity is a major desire for the all the people who belong to various ethnic groups in the region,” he added.

“Also, there was nothing wrong in terms of the location of the meeting, because we discussed it with imams before holding it there and they had agreed to allow it in the mosque.”

Another staff member of the Unity and Friendship Department of Kashgar Prefecture, a Uyghur who did not wish to give his name, disagreed.

“I thought it was wrong that the activity was held in the mosque. We should respect some sensitive principles of religion, otherwise [some] activities will cause unexpected results that our government does not want to see,” the staff member said.

“I think some local officials are just hoping to receive praise from higher-level authorities and they are neglecting the feelings of the local people.”

Reactions overseas

Uyghur communities in the U.S. and Turkey have called for religious freedom in Xinjiang and said they are outraged by the lack of respect shown by the CCP towards places of worship.

President of the exiled World Uyghur Congress Rebiya Kadeer said she was shocked by the pictures of the meeting held in a mosque.

“At first, I could not believe my eyes. Actually I did not want to believe it was a mosque, but unfortunately it was,” she said.

According to Kadeer, the central government’s level of control over imams has increased over the last three decades, from watching over activities from the outside of mosques in the 1980s, to appointing and directing imams and arranging mosque activities in the 1990s.

“This is unique problem that Uyghurs are encountering. If they protest a problem, they will be punished. If they do not protest, China steps up attacks on their other rights,” Rebiya Kadeer said.

In Turkey, religious activist Abdukadir Asim said, “It is a common principle among all religions that the privacy of the place of worship is fundamental. It is a strange and abhorrent event that communist propaganda was conducted in a mosque. I don’t believe it has ever happened before, anywhere else in the world.”

He also criticized general secretary of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, Ekmelledin Ihsanoglu, who visited China last month but neglected to draw attention to the issue of religious freedoms in Xinjiang.

“The action of holding a communist activity in a mosque ridicules not only Uyghurs but also the whole Islamic world. The international community should speak out about this event.”

Kashgar is known among Uyghurs as the most religious place in Xinjiang. Kashgarians converted to Islam in the 10th century, 400 to 500 years earlier than Uyghurs in nearby cities.

Peyziwat is one of the largest counties in the prefecture, with 330,000 residents.

In June, authorities in Kashgar detained 30 women who had formed a Quran study group.

Authorities frequently require religious groups to submit texts for examination before they may be used for worship.

Regional regulations forbid mosque attendance for those under 18 years old.
 
If the story is factual then it's a demonstration of criminal incompetence by the concerned authorities. For such an absurd thing to happen in so sensitive an area, it's sheer stupid, stupid, stupid, incompetence.
 
Oh did they do anything wrong inside the mosque.. !!!
They just had a debate over there and most probably with an intention to resolve a tussle..!!!
 
Oh did they do anything wrong inside the mosque.. !!!
They just had a debate over there and most probably with an intention to resolve a tussle..!!!

Exactly if it was just a meeting then what's the big deal in it??

Islam does not prohibit meetings in a mosque...
 
Little they realize that Pakistani muslim political tycoons have already given their blessing to CCP in controling these mindless Ughairs. Pakistan is also a victim of these Ughair terrorist as they are rife with anti-pakistan feelings...aah the blessing of ummah politics.
 
Yes, but this, if true, was pointless. All it did was to piss off people - The issue is not that CCP meting was held in the mosque but that any political meeting was held in the mosque -- it's a bad precedent.
 
Little they realize that Pakistani muslim political tycoons have already given their blessing to CCP in controling these mindless Ughairs. Pakistan is also a victim of these Ughair terrorist as they are rife with anti-pakistan feelings...aah the blessing of ummah politics.

Really ?? are you serious?? do you think ttp is chinese??
 
Yes, but this, if true, was pointless. All it did was to piss off people - The issue is not that CCP meting was held in the mosque but that any political meeting was held in the mosque -- it's a bad precedent.

It depends on what view you have about politics... but in any case Islam is not an obsatacle in holding a political meeting in Masjid....
 
Communism believes in supressing religious freedom.

What about the fact that
Regional regulations forbid mosque attendance for those under 18 years old.

As any muslim would know this is unacceptable. Religious duties do not have anything to do with politics and I don't see any reason why young muslims are not allowed to practice their faith except so that they can be brainwashed with the communist ideology.

But ofcourse I don't see any protest forthcoming from the OIC or others as they are just a cosmetic group. However, China should be more open about religious freedom for all faithsincluding Christians, Buddhists and Muslims.
 
If it was so hard to speak up about the issue and the cost of protesting was so high...

why did they get to speak?

And what is the "Unity and Friendship Department"?

I googled this exact term, there are 3 search results... all of them this very same article. There is also no such department in China, no such translation, and nothing related to the translation.

Fake news.
 
Go this link and you will find CCP weblinks that support each of the charged below. I have just highlighted some which clearly shows suppression of religious freedom of muslims. Ofcourse similar cases are applicable to other faiths.

This is nothing to do with sepratism and I don't support sepratism just based on the fact that muslims are in majority in some area. But fundamental rights to practice and preach your religion are a must.

Restrictions on Religion Continue in Xinjiang


June 25, 2010
Authorities in the far western region of Xinjiang exert tight control over religious practice in the region, in a number of cases imposing limits on religious activities that are harsher than restrictions imposed elsewhere in China. Authorities single out Muslim practices in some instances, as a number of recent reports detail. Authorities have claimed "illegal religious activities" and "religious extremism" as threats to the region's stability and blamed "religious extremism" as one source of unrest during demonstrations and rioting in Xinjiang in July 2009. Several recent government and media reports detail tight controls over religious activity in the year since the demonstrations and rioting took place. Such controls include steps to monitor mosques and pre-examine sermons, to prevent children from "believing in a religion," and to punish religious believers engaged in activities outside of officially approved parameters.

Authorities in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) continue to exert tight control over the practice of religion, according to reports from XUAR government Web sites and Chinese and overseas media. In the aftermath of demonstrations and rioting in the XUAR in July 2009, authorities claimed "religious extremism" as one cause of the events in July and they continue to include controls over religion as part of security measures in the region. Some details about recent controls over religion in the XUAR remained unknown in the aftermath of the July events, as authorities curbed Internet access and imposed other restrictions over the free flow of information from the region. As government Web sites from the XUAR have become more widely accessible in recent months, several reports—some newly available—detail efforts throughout the year to control religious activity, discriminate against religious believers, and punish religious practitioners, singling out Muslim practices in some cases. Examples include:

* Strengthening Oversight of Mosques, Religious Activities in Aqsu. The Aqsu municipal government in Aqsu district reported on strengthening implementation of and refining its "two systems" program of maintaining regular government contact with mosques and religious figures, according to a January 26 report from the Aqsu municipal government Web site. Measures include monitoring conditions at religious venues on a daily basis and formulating measures to pre-examine sermons. Aqsu district has launched a nine-month work project targeting "illegal religious activities," according to a May 18 Tianshan Net report. For more reports from Aqsu district on examining and "standardizing" the content of sermons, see a September 4, 2009, report from Yiganqi township (via Aqsu municipal government Web site) and April 20, 2010, report from Shayar county (via Xinjiang Kunlun Net, also reprinted in Uyghur Online). For more information on the "two systems" as implemented in another locality in the XUAR, see April 9, 2009, measures on the "two systems" posted on the Zepu (Peyziwat) county, Zepu Town government Web site.

* Restrictions on Students' Freedom of Religion. As part of steps to "strengthen ethnic unity" and "safeguard social stability" on school campuses, authorities in Nilka county, Ili Kazakh Autonomous Prefecture, described implementing "responsibility agreements" to prevent students from entering religious venues and participating in "illegal religious activities," according to a May 20 report from the Ili Party Committee Organization Department Web site. Concrete steps include ensuring students do not fast [a practice observed during the Muslim holiday of Ramadan], enter mosques or other venues during religious services, or wear clothes with a "religious hue." In addition, the report said that the county education bureau launched a campaign that brought teachers into students' homes to teach issues such as ethnic unity, state policy toward religion, and the "Six Forbiddens" for students. The "Six Forbiddens" refer to forbidding students from believing in religion, participating in religious activities, fasting, wearing clothes with a "religious hue," viewing or listening to audio-video products with "reactionary content," and disseminating "separatist thought" in any form, according to information posted August 31, 2009, on the Chapchal county, Ili, government Web site.

In addition, the Bayingol Mongol Autonomous Prefecture in the XUAR adopted rules, effective September 2009, that include restrictions on children's and teacher's religious freedom, according to a report from the Bayingol Prefecture News Office (via Bayingol Mongol Autonomous Prefecture government Web site, August 27, 2009). The rules forbid elementary school students and teachers from "believing in religion," and forbid all students and teachers from participating in religious activities or wearing clothes with a "religious or superstitious hue," among other acts. People who violate the rules will receive "education" and be "severely dealt with," according to a preface to the rules.

* Campaign against Scarves and Beards in Kucha. Authorities in Hanikatamu township in Kucha, Aqsu district, held a campaign in May to detect items such as "illegal publications," "illegal propaganda materials," and "bizarre" clothing, steps that an official connected to battling against "illegal religious activities" and separatists, according to a May 6 report on the Kucha Party Construction Web site (cached page). Some residents and officials, including a visiting delegation of county and district officials, took part in a public event to destroy confiscated items, which included 34 scarves, 42 items of clothing, and 53 books. The article described the steps as effectively attacking "religious fanaticism" and changing "outmoded thinking" regarding "bizarre" apparel worn by some women in Hanikatamu and "big beards" worn by some young men. Radio Free Asia (RFA) interviewed an official from Hanikatamu township, who affirmed that authorities had recently called on young people not wear scarves or beards. (See the interview in a June 9 article). Other localities within Kucha also reported carrying out campaigns against "illegal propaganda materials," including religious materials. (See cached pages, originally posted June 2 and June 4, from the Kucha Party Construction Web site.)

* Discriminating Against Religious Job Candidates. Government offices in Turpan district and Shule (Qeshqer Yengisheher) county issued job advertisements for teachers and members of a performing arts troupe, respectively, that required that candidates "not believe in a religion" and "not participate in religious activities." See a September 11, 2009, posting on the Xinjiang Education Department Web site and March 5 posting on the Kashgar Personnel Bureau Web site. Article 12 of the PRC Labor Law states that job applicants shall not face discrimination in job hiring based on factors including religious belief, and the PRC Civil Servant Law does not bar religious adherents from government work.

* Detentions of Religious Believers. Authorities in a village in Dadamtu township, Yining (Ghulja) county, Ili Kazakh Autonomous Prefecture, detained three adult siblings and one sibling's spouse--Zulpiye, her brothers Extem and Tashpolat, and Tashpolat's wife Shemshiban--starting on July 7, 2009, in reported connection to their religious activities, according to May 13 and 26 Radio Free Asia (RFA) reports. Their father reported that authorities alleged Zulpiye had provided religious instruction to neighborhood women and that they detained his other children in connection to religious books they had read. He also reported that authorities criticized his children for wearing religious dress and for allegedly undercutting the authority of state-appointed imams. Information on the charges and trials, if any, against the group—three of whom are reportedly held at a detention center within Ili and a fourth whose whereabouts are not known—is not available.

At another village within Dadamtu township, authorities detained Setiwaldi Hashim, his son Qasimjan Setiwaldi, son-in-law Tursunjan, nephew Abdurahman Osmanjan, Sultan Tursun, and his wife Helime on July 15, 2009, according to accounts by relatives of Setiwaldi Hashim and Sultan Tursun in the May 26 RFA report. A relative said authorities accused Setiwaldi Hashim of providing unauthorized religious instruction but the relative did not know the precise charges against Setiwaldi Hashim at trial. Authorities released Helime after 40 days. The current status of the remaining people in detention remains unknown.

Authorities reportedly detained 32 women in a Quran study group in Bachu (Maralbéshi) county, Kashgar district, around early June, according to June 7 and 8 reports from Radio Free Asia. Authorities said the women were engaged in "illegal religious activities" and formally detained two of the women, releasing the others after fining them, according to the reports. A government article describing events in Bachu, linked to in the June 7 RFA article, appears to have been removed from the Internet.
 
The CCP controls the official state sanctioned Christian church pretty much the same way. That is why there are far more underground Home churches. Many Christians are still being persecuted, arrested, and sent to prison for worshiping outside the state sanctioned church.

Persecution of Christians - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The communist government of the People's Republic of China tries to maintain tight control over all religions, so the only legal Christian Churches (Three-Self Patriotic Movement and Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association) are those under the Communist Party of China control. Churches which are not controlled by the government are shut down, and their members are imprisoned."
 
Little they realize that Pakistani muslim political tycoons have already given their blessing to CCP in controling these mindless Ughairs. Pakistan is also a victim of these Ughair terrorist as they are rife with anti-pakistan feelings...aah the blessing of ummah politics.

So easy to call others terrorists. I wonder what argument you will use to justify Kashmiri freedom struggle but call Uighur Muslims terrorists for saying China interferes too much in religion.
 
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