From Catholic News Service
Catholics mark Tiananmen Square anniversary
By Catholic News Service
HONG KONG (CNS) -- Hong Kong Cardinal Joseph Zen Ze-kiun joined about
100 Catholics praying for religious freedom and democracy in China while
commemorating 17 years since the Tiananmen Square incident.
Cardinal Zen said people cannot forget the 1989 tragedy and should
demand that Chinese authorities give a clear explanation, especially in
accounting for the hundreds allegedly killed, reported UCA News, an
Asian church news agency based in Thailand.
The call for democracy and sacrifice had motivated him to spend six
months each year in China educating new religious leaders, he said,
referring to the time he spent teaching in major seminaries on the
mainland from 1989 until 1996.
He expressed his belief that the same motivation "encouraged Hong
Kong people to show their concern about state affairs and to commemorate
those who died in Tiananmen Square."
Participants at the prayer service organized by the Union of Hong
Kong Catholic Organizations in Support of the Patriotic and Democratic
Movement in China were commemorating the young people and others who
died June 4, 1989, when Chinese authorities used military force to
suppress a student-led protest in Beijing's Tiananmen Square. Protesters
were calling for democracy and clean government in China.
"All they asked for was a clean government -- is that a sin?" The New
York Times reported the cardinal as saying. "And what they wished for
was a strong nation -- is that a sin? All we're doing is pursuing their
aspirations."
The New York Times reported June 4 that Cardinal Zen said the economy
has improved and that "some people have earned lots of money, but
corruption abounds, the gap in wealth is huge, mines keep swallowing
workers and fake milk powder and fake medicines are flooding the market
-- is this considered an improvement?"
"If they had listened to the kind advice of the students and workers,
would today's country be a better country?" he asked.
Participants at the Hong Kong service, which this year fell on the
feast of Pentecost, stuck small crosses onto a large map of China to
symbolize evangelization all over the country.
After the prayer meeting, Catholics marched to the nearby local
government headquarters, alternating hymns and slogans that demanded a
clear and public account of the Tiananmen Square incident.
Tens of thousands of people in Hong Kong have gathered at Victoria
Park for a candlelight vigil every June 4 to mark the incident.
Copyright (c) 2003 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The CNS news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed, including but not limited to such means as framing or any other digital copying or distribution method, in whole or in part without the prior written authority of Catholic News Service.
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