A Catholic Voice Out of China
Margaret Chu
|
About The Author
- This is a true-life experience of the author. She spent 23 years
in jail and in the labor camp. In 1979, while still in the labor
camp, Margaret, almost miraculously, received permission to leave
China to join her brother, Joseph Kung, in America. Margaret wanted
to share her experience with you to give you more insight into the
condition of the thousands of Catholics in China. Unfortunately, the
persecution is still ongoing. Some of her friends are still in labor
camps. Many are in great poverty because they missed the education
and career opportunities as ex-prisoners. |
I
In China,
there were tens of thousands of silent martyrs who died namelessly during
the struggles. Many are still in jail. They suffered discrimination and
poverty as ex-prisoners. The difference between those thousands of unsung
heroes and I is that I was blessed with the opportunity of coming to this
great country, the United States of America. I was reunited with my family.
I can now practice my religion freely. The others did not have this
opportunity.
I was fortunate to be born in a
family of many generations Catholic. When I was a child, I had no deep
understanding of religion. Religion was simply a way of life for me.
In 1949, I was in my early
teens, full of hope dreaming of a great future filled with love, freedom,
opportunity and a great career. Then, China turned red.
According to Communist teaching,
"religion is the opium of the people". Therefore, to be a Chinese and a
Catholic at that time was a very serious challenge. Suddenly, Catholics had
to decide whether to follow God's law or to follow the government's
anti-Catholic policy. To follow God meant prison. To follow the government
meant security and opportunity for education and a job. It was a difficult
and painful choice. With God's grace, thousands of Catholics courageously
chose God. The leader of the Shanghai Catholic Diocese since 1950 was Bishop
Ignatius Kung Pin-mei. In fact, he was the Bishop of three Dioceses
including Nanking, the old Chinese capital, and Soochow. In the beginning of
the Communist regime, the government continued to give the church some
limited freedom. It hoped to win Bishop Kung's cooperation to form a
state-controlled Chinese Catholic Patriotic Church independent of Vatican.
After five years of increasing pressure without success, the government
changed its tactic.
September 8, 1955 will
always be remembered as the darkest day of persecutions in Shanghai. Maybe I
should say as the glorious day when so many Chinese Martyrs were made. On
this quiet night, in one swift operation, the Communist government paralyzed
the Shanghai Diocese. Bishop Kung, together with hundreds of priests, nuns
and lay Catholics were arrested. The seminary was closed. Many Catholics
were placed under house arrest and must report to the police station daily
for re-education (brainwashing).
I was not arrested on September
8, 1955, but I had to attend the brainwashing meeting everyday. Most of
those at the meetings belonged to my parish. We were not allowed to talk to
each other. However, our presence gave each other moral support.
In the brainwashing session, the
government wanted us to sign a declaration stating that Bishop Kung was the
leader of the counter-revolutionary gang dedicated to overturn the communist
government. We had to report on all religious organizations, the names of
their members and their activities.
Those who buckled under the
pressure and signed the declaration were set free. They were restored all
jobs and educational privileges. However, those who followed their
conscience and followed the Church were dismissed from their jobs. They were
not allowed to attend university and finally ended in prison.
I love Jesus, my Lord. I love my
church. I love and respect my priests. I also love my friends. Before the
September 8 crackdown, for five years the government already suppressed us.
But, we struggled together. We prayed together. We cried together. To ask me
to betray my beloved Bishop, priests, and friends, and to ask me to support
the government's persecution of the Catholic Church, was to ask me to
abandon my faith and to betray my Lord. No. No. My faith did not allow me to
betray my God. My love for my friends made it impossible for me to betray
them.
Therefore, in front of police
interrogators, I refused to participate and remained completely silent.
While they read their propaganda, I simply prayed in my heart. It worked for
a short while.
The government gradually stepped
up the pressure on us. Within two months, many of those priests who were
still free signed a declaration supporting the government's action to charge
Bishop Kung with high treason.
I was young and innocent. I had
unquestionable faith for all priests. It never occurred to me that they
would give in so quickly to the government's pressure and betray their own
bishop and the Church.
I was particularly shocked when
I learned what my spiritual director, Father Aloysius Jin, S.J., had
done after his arrest. He was a very eloquent priest, the Rector of the
Shanghai Seminary, and had great influence among the faithful. Soon after he
was arrested, he recorded a tape to persuade loyal Catholics to support the
government. This tape was used for broadcast in many prisons. Many of my
friends heard this tape in jail. Father Jin is none other than the current
illegitimate bishop of Shanghai of the Patriotic Association. That was
indeed a great blow to the Shanghai diocese and to me personally. At a time
when I most needed spiritual support and consolation, I was left entirely
alone without any priests in whom I could trust.
I realized that many Catholics
who signed the declaration needed jobs or wanted to go to university. I too
needed a good job. I also wanted badly to go to the university. But I could
not give up everything I believed in. I refused to sign the declaration.
After six months, thinking that
it had crippled the Catholic Church, the government relaxed its persecution.
Many Catholics were released in early 1956. I too was allowed to leave my
house. I got a temporary job as a medical lab-assistant and submitted
application for admission to a university. I did very well in my job. The
lab director wanted to offer me a full time position. However, when the
Director found out about my religious background, I was fired. On top of
that, regardless of my high scores in the entrance examination, my
application to university was also rejected.
Because I was a niece of Bishop
Kung, because I refused to betray my Church, I was considered by the
government to be a high political risk and was thereby condemned.
II
After the September 8th
mass arrest in 1955, we became a flock without a shepherd. Churches were
still open, and Holy Masses were still celebrated. However, the fervent
atmosphere was changed. There was serious mistrust between all levels of the
Church. Many Catholics, including I, refused to receive Holy Sacraments from
those priests who had publicly renounced the Church and betrayed the Bishop.
At the same time, we had no spiritual support. We were lonely and isolated.
We could only pray privately among friends.
God did not abandon us. At that
time, I met a priest, Father Koo, who was under house arrest. In the spring
of 1956, he was allowed to say public Mass in a small chapel, but not
preach. To find a loyal priest was like finding a light in the midst of the
dark raging sea. I found my light. Although the chapel was far from my
house, I attended his Mass daily and received grace and consolation in his
confessional. Before long, more and more people came to attend his Mass. As
a result, the authorities closed the chapel after a few months.
A Trappist nun helped us to
maintain contacts with Father Koo. We hand-copied his sermons and
distributed them to the faithful. Holy Communion was sent to the nun's house
and was distributed. Father Koo heard confessions in the park or while
walking on a busy street. Once, we even secretly organized a pilgrimage to
She-Shan, a national Marian Shrine near Shanghai. Father Koo's sermons were
distributed even to other cities. It was truly a very risky yet rewarding
time. This, in fact, was the beginning of the underground Catholic Church in
China, and I was blessed to be a small part of it.
We never wanted to oppose the
government. All we wanted was to keep our faith. We had no experience in
political struggle. We never suspected that the government would plant a spy
among us. As this spy came to us through the introduction of that good
Trappist Nun, we blindly trusted her. She joined every religious activities
organized by us. Several times she asked me to mail Father Ko's sermons to
her friends. Like a fool, I did. Those addresses were fake. The Public
Security Officers intercepted them all. These materials would later become
the government's proof of my accused crimes. In addition, the spy reported
to the authorities the location of a wanted Catholic in hiding. This person
was later arrested.
III
In the early morning of May 28,
1958, about ten people from the Patriotic Association broke into my house.
They grabbed my hands and feet, and dragged me to a study meeting, organized
by the Patriotic Association. That study meeting lasted several days in a
dormitory.
There were many other Catholics
also dragged to the study group. The Association wanted to brainwash us to
think that we had joined this meeting of our own free will. They waged a
smear campaign against the church to force us to renounce the Pope. I was
criticized, scolded, and jeered at by many people. I prayed my rosary
quietly and ignored the commotion, and insults.
During the "study (struggle)
meeting", I determined that my position must be complete reliance on God. I
meditated on Christ's words to St. Peter "Your are the rock. Upon this rock
I will build my Church". I reminded myself that denouncing the Pope was the
same as leaving Christ. I decided that I would rather die than leave Him.
After three days of "struggle
(accusatory session)", an officer of the state religious bureau asked if I
had come to the study group of my own free will. I replied: "Hell, no! I did
not want to come. Your people dragged me here." The officer replied; "You
may now go home. But you will be responsible for your future activities." I
never ran faster in my life than out of that compound.
I felt great peace and joy after
I left the session, because I was able to hold on to my own principle.
However, I was truly scared of the prospects of imprisonment and labor camp.
I was not sure how long I could endure and hold onto my own principles. I
begged God to give me enough strength to accept any suffering which I might
be made to endure. I prayed and prayed and waited. I was prepared for their
future action.
Three months after that forced
"religious" study session, I was arrested and jailed on September 12, 1958.
I was 22. It was the beginning of my 21 years of jail and labor camp.
My first feeling when I stepped
into my cell was to feel nausea. The cell was about 250 square feet, housing
sixteen prisoners. There was only one very small window. There was a strong
body odor from those cellmates who obviously had not washed for a long time.
There were human wastes collected in a corner of our cell. Everything was
simply suffocating. I thought of my family at home and my brother Joseph in
the United States. The pain of separation was intense. I was psychologically
less prepared than I had thought.
I met several Catholic
acquaintances in the cell and began socializing with them. Guess what? I was
accused by my jailers for influencing others and was transferred to another
cell in the male section. Again, I met a male Catholic. Wherever I was
transferred, I found other Catholics nearby.
After two months, without a
trial, I was sentenced to eight years imprisonment as a counterrevolutionary
because I participated in many religious activities.
I was naïve enough to think that
since the government had what they wanted, they would leave me alone to
serve my sentence. I thought that my religious and psychological struggle
was over. I thought that I could enjoy God's grace in peace during my
sentence. I was entirely wrong. My struggle had just begun.
After my sentence, I was sent to
a transit jail, waiting to be dispatched to the prisoner labor camp. We had
seven people in one cell, sharing three beds. Four of them slept on the
concrete floor, partly under the beds. It was winter. There was absolutely
no heat. The cell was very drafty and freezing cold. We had two stone cold
meals a day. I started experiencing stomach aches and cramps.
My family was once allowed to
visit me. While waiting in line, I said a few words to another Catholic. An
inmate reported me. Consequently, my scheduled visit with my family was
abruptly cancelled. All prisoners were allowed to shower once a month, but
not Catholics. Somehow, we Catholic prisoners still managed to keep
communicating among ourselves secretly.
After staying in this transit
prison for about a month, I was sent to a prison knitting factory about 100
miles from Shanghai. My family came to bid me goodbye. From them, I learned
that two of my good friends had died shortly after they were sent to the
Camp. This news shocked me. I could not understand why anyone should die
after a brief period in the Camp. What was the camp really like?
In the prison factory, we worked
18 hours a day, 7 days a week. The drums awoke us at 4 every morning. In a
short time, I lost my appetite because of extreme fatigue. At night I
collapsed on my bed without even washing my face. This routine lasted for an
entire year.
A few days after I arrived in
the prison, an officer asked me: "What is your crime?" I snapped back: "I
did not commit any crime. I was arrested because I am a Catholic and I
determined to keep my faith." The officer became very angry and shouted at
me: "If you did not commit any crime, why are you here?" His extreme anger
shocked me. I fell silent. The whole factory was dead silent.
Because of this incident, I
discovered several Catholics. We quickly united. Among them was a girl named
Tsou who was turned in by a priest in the government sponsored Patriotic
Association. She was especially good to me. Unfortunately, after four years,
she had mental break down. The officer even used her mental condition as a
violation of prison regulations. They tied her. They hung her up and beat
her. They extended her sentence twice. Although she has already completed
her sentence, she is still in the labor camp without proper care.
After a year, the government
changed the 18 hour shift to 10 hour shift. However, there were two hours of
daily political re-education. At year's-end, we were all required to write a
self-assessment how our political thinking had improved through labor. Those
who refused to admit their crimes in the self-assessment were often isolated
from other prisoners.
Because I was a niece of Bishop
Kung and because I had never acknowledged any crime, I was under constant
surveillance. I was a model worker. My productivity was among the highest in
the group. I conformed to all regulations. I somehow succeeded in separating
my work and my alleged crimes as two separate issues. But this did not earn
me leniency from my country.
Looking back, those eight years
of hard labor and the constant "struggle" sessions robbed me of the prime of
my life. Although I knew I was doing all this for God, I despised and hated
the camp which was barren of culture, music, humanity, and friendliness. I
was exhausted and depressed by the endless brain washing and "struggle". I
was completely homesick.
At the same time, I realized
that to be released would not solve my problems. Ex-prisoners were social
outcasts. I was condemned for life and would always be at the bottom of
society. I thought of my brother Joseph's early invitation to come to the
United States. Would that ever be possible now? I was very tired and
depressed. Oh Lord, please give me strength, faith and hope.
IV
Four months before the end of my
eight years sentence, the Cultural Revolution began. The camp officers
started surprise searches in all cells. Some years back, I had come across a
few verses which inspired me. I copied them in a little notebook. I tucked
the notebook away and forgot about that. During a surprise search, they
found the notebook. They singled me out and made an example of me for other
prisoners. They put me through many more struggle sessions, even took me to
the court. I was afraid that my sentence would be extended. I was isolated.
Most of the inmates were afraid to be near me.
In the morning of September 12,
1996, I was told that I would be transferred to another labor camp. I was
stunned. Because this meant that my prison sentence would not be extended
after all. Thank God. I took a deep breath and looked at the beautiful blue
sky. Suddenly, everything became so beautiful.
Now, I must clarify that being
released from prison did not mean freedom for me. I was not on my way home.
No. I was simply transferred from a heavily guarded prison camp to a less
secured labor camp.
Rules in that labor camp were a
little easier. We had wages about six U.S. dollars a month. Out of the six
dollars, three dollars were deducted for our ration. Sounds like a real
bargain, doesn't it? We had to buy all our personal necessities out of that
remaining three dollars each month! We received three weeks off to visit
families each year. Otherwise, we were not allowed to step outside the camp.
Our mail was all censored. One could only get married with the approval of
the labor camp officer. We were not allowed to exchange any material things.
And, I repeat, no material things were allowed to be exchanged among camp
mates.
Catherine Ho who is the author
of Many Waters (printed by Caritas Printing Training Center, Hong
Kong 1988) was with me in the same camp. (In fact, I was the girl whom she
called Xiaolong in her book). In May 1968, 2 years after I had been in this
new camp, I received a parcel from my family. I told Catherine about this
parcel. Immediately, an inmate accused me of giving something to Catherine.
I strongly denied that. I was dragged to the office. Without any
investigation, the officer assembled the entire camp to start a "struggle
session" against me. In the session, the officer suddenly asked me whether I
had committed my alleged original crime leading to my 8 year sentence. I was
stunned. It then dawned on me that this "struggle session" was in fact
prearranged. The parcel was only a pretense. Their real motive was once
again to force me to admit all my alleged crimes. Therefore, I replied
firmly: "I did not commit any crimes". Immediately, two people jumped on me
and cut off half of my hair. The officer again asked: "Are you guilty?" I
firmly replied: "No". Two people then used a rope to tie my hands backwards
tightly. It was connected to a loop around my shoulder and underneath my
armpits. It was knotted in such a way that a slight movement of my hands
would cause intense pain. They ordered Catherine to stand next to me. The
Government often tried to alienate Catholics in that way. The struggle
session lasted for two hours. Afterwards, they untied me and handcuffed me
instead. The handcuffs became a part of me for the next one hundred days and
nights.
After I was untied, I felt such
pain that it seemed that all my bones were broken. I had bruises all over. I
was very indignant over such inhuman treatment. I did not sleep that night.
Therefore, I washed and ate with my cuffs on. I worked in the field with my
cuffs on. I was followed every minute. Anyone who dared even to smile at me
was punished. Working under 95 degree heat in the field, I was not allowed
to wear a hat. I could not bathe or change my clothes with my cuffs on. My
clothes would get soaking wet from perspiration, would dry and only to get
wet again. I smelled worse than a skunk. Every night was another "struggle
(accusatory) session". Everyone was encouraged to insult me. I, in fact,
became a prisoner again without a trial and without anyone outside knowing
it.
I could not appeal. I could not
escape. I was isolated. I was too sad to cry. I hoped I would die. I could
not commit suicide. But I could pray for the gift of death. So, when I was
tortured, I hoped that I would be tortured more so that I could die
suddenly. When I was ordered to carry things on my shoulder, I hoped that
they would give me more to carry so that I could suddenly collapse. But, not
only I did not die, I did not even get sick.
I spent my days and months
working in the field with my hands cuffed. My sufferings became unbearable.
Where are you, my Lord? I questioned divine providence. O Lord, for the last
ten years, I struggled and suffered. Haven't I already proved myself to you?
Let me die, my Lord.
In the summer, we had a two hour
rest at noon. Almost everyone took the opportunity to sleep. I was too
distressed to sleep. In the field were wooden barrels used as toilets. All
waste was accumulated inside to be used later as fertilizer. The place
smelled foul and was filthy beyond description. No one would go there longer
than necessary. Certainly not the camp officers.
I found my haven right there in
that stinky toilet. It was quiet and peaceful. There no one would come to
accuse me. Once in a while, some kind people would secretly come with a wet
towel to clean my face and rub my back. I could not do it myself because my
hands were still cuffed. Several people came to apologize for accusing me
because they were under pressure. Their good intentions and sympathy moved
me to tears.
When I was handcuffed in the
beginning, I was the only target they attacked. They attacked me physically
and verbally. Finding that I did not give in, they extended their target to
include the Catholic Church. They would use foul language to insult the
Church, insult God and the Blessed Virgin Mary. I was extremely saddened by
their direct assault against our beloved God.
I prayed for my death, but it
was not granted. I was afraid that I might not be able to endure much
longer. I could no longer tolerate those foul languages day and night
against God and against the Holy Mother. I finally admitted one of my
alleged crimes as written in the court paper. I admitted that it was
counterrevolutionary to persuade children not to join the communist youth
organization, but I continued to refuse to submit any names of religious
organizations and their religious activities. Nevertheless, that was enough
for the camp officer to claim victory over me. My cuffs were finally taken
off.
This episode of my being cuffed
was only one incident. There were many others. For instance, there were
times we did not have enough to eat. In desperation, we dug out the roots of
a certain tree, grounded them into powder and ate it.
In 1969, I was transferred to
another labor camp. I harvested tealeaves and vegetables. Frequently, I had
to carry almost 150 pounds of vegetables on my shoulder. In the winter, I
was ordered to the mountain about 20 miles away to gather fire wood.
Somehow, I began to prefer this kind of labor, although it was very hard.
Because to work in the mountain was to be absent from camp.
Whenever I thought of the
future, I became extremely depressed. I felt that I might never live to see
the revival of the Catholic Church in China. I had nothing to look forward
to. I was very lonely. Before long, several years had passed
V
For six years, my annual home
visit privileges were taken away. In 1972, after 14 years, I was finally
allowed to visit home. When I was home in Shanghai, I discovered that the
underground Catholic Church flourished. I even went to attend an underground
Mass. The city authority refused to register me as a resident of Shanghai.
That meant I had nowhere to go but to return to the labor camp once my leave
was up.
In the second half of 1974, I
met Ignatius Chu who eventually became my husband. He was sent to jail three
years before I was and for the same reasons. He too was transferred to hard
labor. I knew him before, but had not seen him for some twenty years. We
both grew much older. It must be God's providence that we met again. At that
time, conditions at the camp were a little better. We were allowed to talk
to each other. After six months, we decided to get married.
At that time, I received from my
brother Joseph a copy of the approval of his petition for me to immigrate to
the United States. Ignatius indicated his willingness to accompany me.
Ignatius has a family of eight brothers. With the exception of his brother
Father Michael Chu, a Jesuit, who was out of China when China turned
Communist, all other seven brothers were at one time or another in various
jails for their faith. At that time, he still had four other brothers plus
himself in the labor camps. It was most unlikely that his passport would be
approved.
To marry Ignatius would
jeopardize my chances of getting my passport. Ignatius would not want to
drag me into his family situation. We wanted to marry. But I also wanted to
go to the United States. I wanted both. After much discussions and praying
together, we decided to get married on February 11, 1976, on the feast day
of our Lady of Lourdes.
The marriage plan was a secret
in labor camp. We invited Ignatius eldest brother, Father Francis Chu, also
a Jesuit, to come to Shanghai to marry us. Father Francis was in another
labor camp at that time.
We both took home leave in
February and hoped to get married in Shanghai. Father Francis also applied
for permission to go home. Unfortunately, Father Francis did not receive the
permission in time. By the time Father Francis finally arrived in Shanghai,
we were back to our camps. So, Father Francis came to us. Ignatius and I
faked illness that day and received permission to go to the clinic. Instead,
we went to the train station to meet with Father Francis. From there, we
went to a small restaurant.
At the dinner table in the
middle of a noisy restaurant, Father Francis took out a few soda crackers
and few drops of wine. He offered in secret a short Mass and performed our
marriage ceremony with our exchange of marriage vows. We were finally
married before God. There were no flowers. There was no music, no guests,
and no ring. All we had was God's blessings. That was more than enough for
us. After dinner, having taken Father Francis back to the train station, we
went back to our separate dormitories, pretending that nothing had happened.
Here I would like to add that
Father Francis died in prison in 1983 as a martyr after his second arrest.
He was 70. He spent a total of 30 years in prison and labor camp.
After my marriage, I started
applying for my passport. But the officers of the camp refused to give me
permission to proceed.
In the meantime, my brother
Joseph started a letter-writing campaign. He wrote to Public Security
Department, Overseas Chinese Association, Reformation Department, Foreign
Affair Department and other departments and organizations. Finally, in
August 1978, I was contacted by the Public Security Department. They
rejected my passport application.
To test the attitude of the
government towards us, we registered our marriage with the Government and it
was approved on October 3, 1978. Two and one half months later, the US-China
relation was normalized. In July 1979, we were notified that our passport
applications were approved. It took us 39 months to obtain our passports. I
was exuberated.
Finally, on September 5, 1979,
Ignatius and I walked across the border bridge and stepped onto the soil of
freedom in Hong Kong. Ten months later, on July 10, 1980, Ignatius and I
arrived in the United States with my brother Joseph waiting for me at the
Kennedy Airport. I started my second life.
I beg you to pray for China. The
Roman Catholic Church is still under persecution. The Government is still
putting bishops and other religious and the faithful in jail. It has
destroyed our churches and the Mariah Shrine. We not only need your prayers;
we also need your action as suggested in the June issue of the Cardinal Kung
Foundation's newsletter. The underground Roman Catholic Church needs your
voice and organized action to secure for them the religious freedom that we
all enjoy here. Please also remember the Government sponsored Patriotic
Catholic Church is not really a Catholic Church. It is an agency of the
Chinese Government. It does not recognize the authority of our beloved Holy
Father.
Finally, let me take this
opportunity to thank our Almighty God for protecting and carrying me in my
ordeals. I pray that He will continue to protect me, my family and friends
as well.
I would also like to thank the
Government of the United States for supporting human rights around the
world, leading to my dream coming true.
I would like to thank my brother
Joseph for his persistent support, care and efforts during the most
difficult time of my life.
I would like to thank Pitney
Bowes Company, which offered jobs to Ignatius and me when we first came to
this beautiful, but strange land without any marketable skills and without a
knowledge of English. We have worked at Pitney Bowes for the last 17 years
without a single day of layoff.
Last, but not least, I want to
thank the Cardinal Kung Foundation for giving me this opportunity to share
my Chinese prison experience with you.
Thank you.