Mao - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Mon, 16 Sep 2013 04:38:11 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Mao - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 China's modern martyrs: from Mao to now, part 2 https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/09/17/chinas-modern-martyrs-mao-now-part-2/ Mon, 16 Sep 2013 19:13:32 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=49681

The little-known story of the murder of 33 Trappist monks by Chinese Communists in 1947: "The body of Christ which is the Church, like the human body, was first young, but at the end of the world it will have an appearance of decline." — St. Augustine As I sat with Brother Marcel Zhang, OCSO Read more

China's modern martyrs: from Mao to now, part 2... Read more]]>
The little-known story of the murder of 33 Trappist monks by Chinese Communists in 1947:

"The body of Christ which is the Church, like the human body, was first young, but at the end of the world it will have an appearance of decline." — St. Augustine

As I sat with Brother Marcel Zhang, OCSO (b. 1924), in his Beijing apartment, I thumbed through his private photographs of Yangjiaping Trappist Abbey. Some were taken before its destruction in 1947, and some he had taken during a recent visit to the ruins. What was once a majestic abbey church filled with divine prayer and worship had been reduced to debris and an occasional partial outline of a gothic window. When the People's Liberation Army (PLA) attacked the monastery in 1947 and began its cruel torments against the monks, Zhang was one of the monks. He shared with me some of his recollections, no doubt at great risk. As we looked at a picture of the Abbey church as it appears today, where the monks gathered for daily Mass prior to 1947, Zhang paused to contemplate the ruins. "It's already gone . . . already, the church is like this," he said, insinuating that the ruins of the Abbey "church" metaphorically represented the "Church" in China, still haunted by the past, still tormented in the present.1

After the People's Court had demanded the collective execution of the monks of Our Lady of Consolation Abbey at Yangjiaping, the Trappists were bound in heavy chains or thin wire, which cut deeply into their wrists, and were confined to await their punishments. Brother Zhang recalled that during the many trials, Party officials presiding over the interrogations accused the Trappists of being, "wealthy landlords, rich peasants who exploit poor peasants, counterrevolutionaries, bad eggs, and rightists". Essentially, they were charged with all of the "crimes" commonly ascribed to the worst classes in the Communist list of "bad elements."2 Normally, only one of these accusations was sufficient to warrant an immediate public execution, but some of the accused from the abbey were foreigners, and news that Nationalist forces were on their way to save the monks alarmed the Communist officers. Punishments had to be inflicted on the road, on what became the Via Crucis of the Trappist sons of Saint Benedict. More interrogations were staged during stops, and Brother Zhang noted that new trials, or "struggle sessions" (鬥爭) as he called them, were orchestrated at every village. Zhang himself was questioned more than twenty times at impromptu People's Courts. He remembered that he was treated with much more leniency than the priests, as he was still only a young seminarian in 1947. The priests were much more despised. "After the interrogations," Zhang recalled, "we would go out to relieve ourselves, and I saw the buttocks of the priests, which were red [from their beatings]; the flesh hung off like meat."3 Chinese Catholics who know about the Yangjiaping incident refer to these torments as a "siwang xingjun," 死亡行軍 or a "death march," and this is when most of the Trappists who died received their "palms of martyrdom." Continue reading

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Powershop - seems it is OK to offend Catholics but not the Chinese https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/03/22/powershopseems-it-is-ok-to-offend-catholic-but-not-the-chinese/ Thu, 21 Mar 2013 18:29:46 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=41959

Auckland Transport has pulled an advertisement depicting Chairman Mao performing the Gangnam Style dance. It has been banned from Auckland bus stops for fear it will insult Chinese residents. The advertisement for online electricity store Powershop shows the Chinese former dictator surrounded by Chinese people and soldiers posing with guns, and carries the slogan 'Same Read more

Powershop - seems it is OK to offend Catholics but not the Chinese... Read more]]>
Auckland Transport has pulled an advertisement depicting Chairman Mao performing the Gangnam Style dance. It has been banned from Auckland bus stops for fear it will insult Chinese residents.

The advertisement for online electricity store Powershop shows the Chinese former dictator surrounded by Chinese people and soldiers posing with guns, and carries the slogan 'Same Power Different Attitude'.

Powershop is the same business that produced an advertisement depicting the Pope at the time, Pope Benedict XVI, officiating at a same sex wedding.

Auckland Transport communications manager Sharon Hunter said as a general rule they did not want to have adverts on shelters that were designed to "shock, offend or be controversial".

"Something which may be funny to one person can easily be offensive to another.

"On this occasion we believed Powershop's advertisement may potentially cause offence to Auckland's Chinese population".

A Blogger on the New Zealand Conservative Website remarks:

"Strange, how potentially offending the Chinese Government (I mean, come on, this is not poking fun at Chinese people - Chairman Mao represents the Chinese Government, not the people!) immediately creates a proactive reaction from the Council-owned company, while as an ad poking fun at the Pope Emeritis (supposedly marrying two men when the Catholic Church is totally against same-sex marriage) who represents almost as many Catholics as Chinese people (1.1 billion vs 1.2 billion) does not result in a ban on that other ad!"

Powershop chief executive Ari Sargent said he was not aware of any official complaints about the advertisement, which has appeared online and on billboards in Auckland and Wellington.

He said previous campaigns had been more likely to cause offence than the Chairman Mao advert. Powershop had received only one complaint through its call centre, and would be asking Auckland Transport to review the decision.

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