Thursday, August 11, 2016

At the Death End








     The Shanga

     The Venerable Thich Khong Tanh

The notice of August 27, 2001 by the International Bureau of Information, Unified Buddhist Church in Paris indicated that the State persistently applied pressure on the Vietnam Unified Buddhist Church. The Venerable Thich Khong Tanh, the superior monk of Lien Tri Pagoda at Thu Duc, Saigon, sent a letter of protest to the authorities of the Communist Party and State. The monk expressed indignation of the Buddhist clergy of Saigon in face of multiple repressive measures of the authorities agaiist it. The letter further stressed that “these measures aimed at repressing all those who express opinions that are different from the dogmas considered as infallible by the Party in power.” The monk cited, as a case in point, the arrests of  dissidents who  advocated religious freedom. Among them were Catholic priests, Hoa Hao Buddhism, and the Christian supporters of the Christian Montagnards Movement in the Central Highlands. He also established a long list of Buddhist monks and nuns who suffered police intolerance in various instances of repression. The Venerable Thich Khong Tan is best known as a fervent Buddhist monk and devoted advocate for religious freedo. He himself had been detained in camps of concentration for 23 years (EDA 336).    

Released from prison, the Venerable Thich Khong Tanh was targeted with repression. On November 5, 1994,  he was, again, arrested when he and a group of Buddhists were on the way to the Mekong Delta to aid the flood victims. He was condemned to 5 years in prison. Freed from the prison, he continued to devote himself to religious duties and engage in humanitarian services He was trailed wherever he traveled. He was stopped from doing charitable work at 8:00 A.M. on August 22, 2007 while he was distributing money and relief aids to the victims of injustice in front of the Office of Reception at 110 Cau Giay Street, Hanoi. The local security police kept close watch on every gathering of victims of injustice who claimed for unjust compensation for their land. and readily disbanded any assembly of land claimants at any place.
      
On the recommendation of the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do to deliver relief money to the victims of injustice in the North, the Venerable Thich Khong Tanh arrived in Hanoi on August 22. Actually, in a meeting session, at the Institute for the Propagation of Buddhist Faith, the Vietnam Unified Buddhist Church decided to set aside  an amount of  the 300 million dollars from the fund of relief it received from the Vietnamese communities overseas as a means to rescue the victims,  and the monk was assigned to the mission. He was trailed and detained at the security police headquarters of Cau Giay. Also present at the interrogation was the Vice-minister of Security Police Nguyen Van Huong, who entreated him in vain to give the money for relief to the Fatherland Front. Those claimants for land, in this State official’s views, are, in reality, rich people who act in the interests of evildoers. The Venerable Thich Khong Tanh was escorted back to Saigon, August 24.     
    
Meanwhile, in Saigon a protest of hundreds of victims of injustice was taking place in front of the residence of President of the State Nguyen Minh Triet on Ky Dong Street, Third Precinct, expressing indignation over religious repression. The demonstrators marched through the streets and chanted slogans. They were finally blocked and disbanded by the security police. The campaign to rescue the victims of injustice initiated by the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do received warm welcome and gained strong popular support in the country and overseas. In Texas, U.S.A,, assemblies for fund raising were organized for this  purpose. A vigilant activist in the movement, the Venerable Thich Khong Tanh was restricted to inaction.

     The Venerable Thich Vien Dinh
   
The Most Venerable Thich Vien Dinh, Vice-president of the Institute for the Propagation of Buddhist Faith, declared in an interview with RFA that the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam was facing severe repression. On August 18, 2005, the members of the Executive Board of the Vietnam Buddhist Church in Binh Dinh Province were convoked to “work with” the  security police.” They were warned with threats of their participation in the Church’s activities. Instances of repression occurred  after the issuance of the decision by the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do that officially recognized the legitimacy of the Executive Board of the Vietnam Unified Buddhist Church in Binh Dinh.  Eighteen members in the board who dutifully carried out their tasks were continually convoked to “work with” the security police. The Most Venerable Thich Vien Dinh, the Superior guardian monk at Long Van Pagoda, Saigon, concurrently the guardian monk at Thap Buddhist Temple in Binh Dinh, was also the target for repression. The authorities had placed him under house arrest in Saigon.after the Luong Son (Binh Dinh)  incident in October 2005.  For two years, he had been restricted to isolation and warned against a visit to the ancestral temple and his master, the Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang.

    The Venerable Thich Thien Minh

On the anniversary of the foundation of the Vietnamese Communist Party (February 3, 2006), the authorities released several prisoners of conscience among whom was the Venerable Thich Thien Minh Huynh Van Ba of the Unified Buddhist Church from the concentration camp Z30A Xuan Loc, Dong Nai Province. The monk had been repeatedly arrested and imprisoned without a trial, first in 1979 then in 1986 for his struggle for religious freedom, democracy, and human rights and. particularly for the restoration of the legal status for the Vietnam Unified Buddhist Church. Telling about his impression after 26 years in prison, he said that it was truly a story of  horrible fright even to a monk like him.  

The monk was free from the prison and allowed to come back to his old residence, but was  placed under house surveillance. Such condition was to him a transfer from a small prison to a larger one. He thought that so long as Vietnam has no freedom, democracy, and human rights he himself and the Vietnamese in the country will ever live in difficulty, silence, anxiety, loss of faith, and restlessness.  As a result, the Venerable Thich Thien Minh became a victim of antagonism and harassment when coming back to Bac Lieu Province where he had been a resident. He could no longer serve his faith at his old pagoda. His petition to the authority requesting to render to him his pagoda was ignored. He even received warnings with threats. If he would not join the State-sponsored Buddhist Church of Vietnam, he had to give up the frock.

     The Venerable Thich Minh Nguyet
  
The Venerable Thich Minh Nguyet, Chairman of the Executive Board of Tien Giang Province, the Unified Buddhist Church, was tried in absentee in a session of crime denunciation of the people because he had joined in the services of rescue of the victims of injustice. On August 22, 2007, the security police mobilized the masses from various Buddhist worship places to meet at the Khmer Buu Thang Pagoda in the province of Tien Giang to take measure against him. Also present at the meeting were State officials, cadres, and members in the executive board of the State-created Buddhist Church of Vietnam. Until after the speeches and declarations by the district and commune authorities had finished could the masses realize they were mobilized to impute  Monk Thich Minh Nguyet and members of the Unified Buddhist Church. The Church was charged with unfounded crimes and defamed with calumny and insult.   
  
The Venerable Thich Minh Nguyet, when asked on a possible session of revelation of crimes against him, disclosed that he had refused to come to a ”session of work” with the security police due to his poor health. In an interview with RTA, the monk related that he had for a long time met with difficulties from the administration. They always caused trouble to the members in the executive board of the Vietnam Unified Buddhist Church. He had faced serious oppression ever since the time he was in company with the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do when the dignitary was on his mission to rescue the victims of injustice at the Palace of National Assembly on Hoang Van Thu Street, Saigon.
         
      Repression at Pagodas

Twice in two consecutive days, 9-10 August, 2006, evildoers stormed Phuoc Buu Pagoda at Vung Tau Township in the Ba Ria province, ransacking the worship place. Part of the roof of was accidentally in flames. The incident occurred while  the guardian  monk and the believers were reciting prayers. The Venerable Thich Thnh Tinh of Phuoc Buu Pagoda said that, on the first  night, August 9, 2 bottles of gasoline had been found in front of the guardian-monk’s office. The following night, a container of 5 liters of gasoline was planted right in the room near the entrance to the pagoda.

On September 3, 2006, Buddhist Nun Thich Thong Man of the Unified Buddhist Church was unjustly evicted from Dich Quang Pagoda where she  had lived her priesthood for the past ten years. The Venerable Thich Vien Dinh, Vice-chairman of the Institute for the Propagation of Buddhism, Unified Buddhist Church, presented the case in a petition to SRV Prime Minister for consideration. The petition came to no reply, nevertheless.


     The Leadership

     Desperate Resistance

Resistance to repression ever persisted, although under desperate condition. Previously, in many instances, the clergy of the Unified Buddhist Church had demanded the government to release Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang from residence surveillance. For almost 20 years, the ailing dignitary had only been treated with poor medical care, and thus he should be allowed to return to Saigon to be treated with proper care. The Most Venerable Thich Quang Do decided on his own initiative to look for  a new residence for the Patriarch and bring him from Quang Ngai back to  Saigon. The dignitary was instantly placed under stricter control. Security measures against the Church multiplied. From the early days of June 2001, the security police tightened watch on the pagodas in 8 provinces in the South and the Center. Heavy guard was posited in hundreds of pagodas in Saigon, Nha Trang, Phu Yen, Binh Dinh, Quang Nam, Da Nang, and Hue. Inside Thanh Minh Monastery where the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do was in residence, the security police posited a permanent checkpoint; outside of it, hundreds of plainclothes agents moved about. Telephone lines to the monastery were cut short. The dignitary could in no way  communicate with the believers outside, and thus everyone was ignorant of what would happen to him.
 
On June 1, 2001, in 115 pagodas in the South, telephone lines were cut, and communication between them was totally dead. Tension reached a climax in Quang Nam and  Quang Tri where the State’s accusations against the clergy of the Unified Buddhist Church were ambiguously diffused through the loudspeakers hung on electricity posts. In spite of all that, in the morning of June 7, 2001, a large group of monks and believers left for the Center to join in  the one in the district of Nghia Hanh in the province of Quang Ngai. On June 7, 2001, mobilization of support for the journey was activated in pagodas throughout Central Vietnam, in Nha Trang, Phu Yen, Binh Dinh, Quang Ngai, Quang Nam, and, particularly, Hue and Quang Tri. The clergy and laity were prepared for participation in the operation of rescue initiated by the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do.

To deal with, he police, on the other side, blockaded the roads to pagodas all along the way from Saigon to Quang Ngai. In addition, by the order of the People's Council of Ho Chi Minh City, the authorities imposed house surveillance on the principal promoter, the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do. The dignitary had been, in reality, under residence surveillance, beginning on June 1, 2001. Movement ouside the residence is violation of the law. His violation of the law was intolerable, and thus he was restricted to inaction. (EDA 333)
    
Under international pressure, the authorities changed their tactics. The Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang, who was in residence at his pagoda in Quy Nhon township, south of Quang Ngai, was coerced to move to another pagoda. The Patriarch desisted the authorities’ initiative and insisted that the police should let the Buddhist delegation to bring him back to Saigon. To soothe out his stance, they suggested to him to consider a plan for reunification of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam and the State-affiliated Buddhist Church of Vietnam. The Venerable Thich Quang Lien of the State-affiliated Vietnam Buddhist Church was sent for to play the role of an intermediary. The Most Venerable Thich Huyen Quang nevertheless rejected the initiative and affirmed that there existed no disagreement between the two monks on any subject, neither was there problem between the two Buddhist organizations. The existence of two Buddhist Churches  essebtially resulted from the intention of the State, It deliberately had founded the Buddhist Church of Vietnam, creating division between them. He suggested that a meeting at the highest level be scheduled, if there was any, and the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do should be invited to come to discuss the matter.     

Restrictive measures focused on the leadership of the Church were taken. The administration kept a severe watch on the activities of the Patriarch  Thich Huyen Quang. In his message on the Lunar New Year’ s Day (2003), the Patriarch, 85, who had been placed under house arrest since 1982, appealed to Vietnamese fellow countrymen and Buddhists inside the country and overseas to continue to struggle for religious freedom, democracy, and human rights. The message stressed the difficulties facing Buddhism. Regardless of atrocious violence no one feared and surrendered. The appeal was issued coincidentally with the publication of the resolution of the Seventh Plenum of the Communist Party, specifying that it pushed forward the program of social welfare, to erase hunger and reduce poverty, and looked for a better way to maintain security and social order.
    
In the middle of February, the Patriarch s heath  deteriorated. The doctors at Quang Ngai Hospital proposed that he be brought to Saigon for better medical treatment. The Patriarch then asked the local security police to give  consent. At the end of February, his health deteriorated alarmingly, and he was brought to and hospitalized at Quang Ngai. The doctors, again, proposed that he be brought to Saigon for better treatment. After multiple deliberations, the  authorities decided to bring him to Hanoi for treatment, after which he would be transferred back to Co Chua Hamlet, Nghia Hanh District, Quang Ngai Province where he had been placed under house arrest.  

On June 27, 2003, the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do, who had been under house arrest since June 2001, addressed to the administration his demands for reforms and expressed his wish to make a trip to Quang Ngai to visit the Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang. who had still been placed under house arrest.

During the two months, July and August of 2003, the authorities of the central administration quickened stricter measures. The Vice-minister of the Police Security Ministry Nguyen Van Huong, from Hanoi came to Binh Dinh “to visit” the Most Venerable Thich Huyen Quang. The local authorities came up with woos, entreating him to join the leadership of the State-sponsored Vietnam Buddhist Church. This high-ranking official appeared to ignore the request of the Buddhist clergy and laity, which is  to create favorable conditions for them to take care of the Most Venerable Thich Huyen  Quang.     
       
Police harassment continued in Saigon.  From September 9,  security police agents came to Gia Lam Monastery at Go Vap to “work with” the Venerable Thich Thanh Huyen, warning him of his cooperation with the Vietnam Unified Buddhist Church.  On September 19, the Venerable Thich Nguyen Ly was convoked to “work with” the security police. The monk was also warned with threat of his cooperation with the Unified Buddhist Church. On September 12, the representative of the Section of Religious Affairs of Ho Chi Minh City, on a visit to the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do, entreated him to join the leadership of the State-sponsored Vietnam Buddhist Church and to abandon his trip to Binh Dinh to attend the Buddhist National Congress. Disagreement persisted. On September 12, the delegation led by the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do left for Binh Dinh and met no hindrance. Yet, their vehicle was stopped by the security police, at Ru Ri Pass 10 kilometers north of Nha Trang  in Khanh Hoa Province.

All through September, the security police of Quang Tri and Thua Thien-Hue caused troubles to the delegations from Thua Thien-Hue, Quang Tri, and Saigon that came to attend the Buddhist National Congress taking place during September 17-18. In Quang Tri, the security police obstructed the Venerable Thich Hai Tang from leaving Long An Pagoda, Trieu Thuong Commune. His  trip to Binh Dinh was canceled. He was convoked to “work with” the authorities at the People Council’s office. He was interrogated about his relationship with the highest dignitaries of the Unified Buddhist Church, For ten days after that the monk continually received threats from the security police.  The delegation from Hue also met with difficulty. The Venerable Thich Phuoc Vien and members in his delegation  were warned with treats against their intention to travel to Binh Dinh. Regardless of obstruction, the delegation resolutely left for Binh Ding to take part in the congress as planned. Until midnight of September 17 could it hire a car. But, when coming to Hai Van Pass, the driver was ordered through wieless telephone to come back to Hue. The delegation was left abandoned amid thick forest. Quite by chance, they got several vacant seats in a bus and arrived in time in late evening of September 18.

The Most Venerable Thich Quang Do, in his letter of protest to Prime Minister Phan Van Khai, requested police obstructions against the delegations be taken into consideration and the difficulties the authorities caused to the clergy be explained. The request fell to deaf years. Stricter security measures weretaken, instead. On October 9, the authorities placed under house arrest the Venerable Thich Tue Sy, the Venerable Thich Thanh Huyen, and the Venerable Thich Nguyen Ly, the three members of the Saigon delegation, on charges of violations of national security and of intention to destroy good relationship between the people and Buddhism. The penalty term was two years, starting from October 11, 2003. These three monks had been freshly nominated to the highest positions in the Institute for the Propagation of the Buddhist Faith of  the Unified Buddhist Church.
  
In his letter to the Congress of Buddhists at Nguyen Thieu Monastery in Melbourne, Australia, October 1, 2003, the Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang stressed the perilous situation in which the Unified Buddhist Church was facing. He appealed to the Sangha and laity, both inside the country and overseas, to resiliently perform deeds in their daily religious life, enlightening Buddha’s teachings on benevolence and self-sacrifice. To retaliate, on October 10, the administration placed under house arrest the Venerable Thich Dong Tho, the guardian monk at Nguyen Thieu Monastery, Binh Dinh Province. The order was issued several days after the Patriarch Huyen Quang and the Mosr Venerable Quang Do and other monks were inhibited to come to the monastery. The spokesman of the Foreign Affairs Ministry specified that the security police had investigated into the “crimes the monk had committed,” such as keeping materials of national secrets. Even though, he had not been persecuted. 

In a press conference, the spokesman of the administration refuted all arguments from  the Buddhist delegation. He elaborated that both the Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang and the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do were in good health and were doing their daily jobs at Nguyen Thieu Monastery in Binh Dinh and then at Thanh Minh Monastery in Saigon, respectively. Contradictorily, on the morning of September 9, 2003, on the way back to Saigon, the Buddhist delegation led by the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do was stopped at  Luong Son near Nha Trang, and 11 members in it were forced to go back to Binh Dinh. Worse still, by verbal order or some form of decision, they were all placed under house arrest after coming back to their worship places. The Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang and the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do were no exception.
       
Requests followed. On April 19, 2004, the Venerable Thich Vien Dinh, Secretary-general of the Institute for the Propagation of Buddhist Faith, Vietnam Unified Buddhist Church, sent a letter to Prime Minister Phan Van Khai, requesting his visit to the Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang be set up, and the progress of which be aired on the television. On April 27, the Unified Buddhist Church also sent a letter to the highest authorities of the regime, requesting immediate release from house arrest of the leaders of the Church. In his letters to President of the State Tran Duc Luong and Prime Minister Phan Van Khai, the Venerable Thich Vien Dinh stressed the tragic consequences resulting from the repressive policy of the State against the Church. This totalitarian regime had executed discrimination politics against the religions, forcing their leaders to submit themselves into serving as slaves for it, immersing them in misery, and depriving off themliberty. He specifically demanded the President and Prime Minister to  give back freedom to the Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang and the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do.
   
Silent protest continued all through the Lunar Year’s Day and the days that followed January 2005, Unified Buddhist Church pagodas in Saigon and Binh Dinh were under security police watch day and night. On January 16, a delegation of monks traveled to Binh Dinh to visit the Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang and wish him a happy new year. Their car was nevertheless stopped at the the place of departure. To denounce such an act of unlawful obstruction, on April 5, the Most Venerable Thich Quang Do, who was under house arrest, in his taped letter to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, called on international personalities and organizations to help end religious persecution in Vietnam.   

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