CHINA BANS CHILDREN FROM RELIGIOUS EVENTS OVER BREAK IN MUSLIM COUNTY
A mostly Muslim
county in western China has banned children from attending religious events
over a winter break, an education bureau said in a notice posted online, as
authorities step up control of religious education.
School students in
Linxia county in Gansu province, home to many members of the Muslim Hui ethnic
minority, are prohibited from entering religious buildings over their break, a
district education bureau said, according to the notification.
Students must also
not read scriptures in classes or in religious buildings, the bureau said,
adding that all students and teachers should heed the notice and work to
strengthen political ideology and propaganda.
Reuters was unable
to independently verify the authenticity of the notice.
A man who answered
the telephone at the Linxia education bureau hung up when Reuters asked about the
notice. A woman at the district education bureau declined to comment on the
document’s authenticity.
Xi Wuyi, a Marxist
scholar at the state-backed Chinese Academy of Social Scientists and an
outspoken critic of rising Islamic influence in China, shared the picture and
welcomed the apparent move by the authorities.
With the notice, the
county was taking concrete action to keep religion and education separate and
sticking strictly to education law, she said on the Weibo social media
platform.
New regulations on
religious affairs released in October last year, and due to take effect in
February, aim to increase oversight of religious education, and provide for
greater regulation of religious activities.
Last summer, a
Sunday School ban was introduced in the southeastern city of Wenzhou, sometimes
known as “China’s Jerusalem” due to its large Christian population, but
Christian parents found ways to teach their children about their religion
regardless.
Chinese law
officially grants religious freedom for all but regulations on education and
protection of minors also say religion cannot be used to hinder state education
or to “coerce” children to believe.
Authorities in
troubled parts of China, such as the far western region of Xinjiang, home to
the Turkic-speaking Uighur Muslim minority, ban children from attending
religious events.
But religious
communities elsewhere rarely face blanket restrictions.
Fear of Muslims
influence has grown in China in recent years, sparked in part by violence in
Xinjiang.
The Chinese-speaking
Hui, who are culturally more similar to the Han Chinese majority than to
Uighurs, have also come under scrutiny from some intellectuals who fear
creeping Islamic influence on society.
SOURCE: REUTERS
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