Beyond Myanmar’s Embattled Muslims, Christians Say They Face Their Own Persecution

Mang Suan Kim | Religion News Service | Updated: Feb 18, 2015

Beyond Myanmar’s Embattled Muslims, Christians Say They Face Their Own Persecution

Despite democratic reforms and international pressure that have pushed Myanmar to improve its human rights record in recent years, religious freedom remains heavily constrained across the country.

The persecution of the Rohingya Muslim minority in this majority Buddhist country has attracted much international media and foreign policy attention. But in Chin State, along Myanmar’s northwest border, a predominantly Christian population faces its own challenges and restrictions.

“There is no improvement with regard to religious freedom in Chin State,” said Pu Zoe Ram, chairman of the Chin National Democratic Party. “Authorities destroyed crosses during the military regime and continue to do so.”

Teak and steel crosses atop clocktowers, hillsides and Chin State’s nearly 2,000 churches have long identified the local majority religion. Area Christians consider their destruction, at the behest of government agencies, a direct attack on their faith community.

The Chin Human Rights Organization documented 13 incidents of  large crosses being destroyed by order of the Ministry of Religious Affairs during the country’s half-century military regime, which formally ended in 2011. Since then and under nominally democratic rule, at least four more large crosses have been destroyed.

“The previous regime repressed the Christian religion. The army pulled down crosses, which are sacred. The new government is doing the same and is refusing permission to build new churches,” said Daw Zar Tlem, a member of Myanmar’s House of Representatives, who represents Thang Tlang township in Chin State.

In July 2011, shortly after Myanmar’s military junta was officially dissolved, two crosses were burned in the townships of Kyin Dawe and Kan Pat Lat. Local Christians in Hakha and Falam were ordered to replace crosses with Buddhist shrines, and a cross in Tiddim Township was removed to make way for a new road, officials from Myanmar’s ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party told villagers.

“Religious symbols should be built for people in that area. They should not be misused for political purposes,” said Saya Mya, who is Buddhist and secretary of the Chin Progressive Party.

According to data from Myanmar’s Ministry of Religious Affairs, there are 108 Buddha images and shrines in Chin State, compared with 1,958 churches — a close reflection of the state’s Christian majority.

The Rev. Thang, a pastor at an Assemblies of God Church in Tiddim Township, said the rate of cross destruction has slowed since 2011 and some are now being replaced. At Kennedy Mountain in Tee Tain township, steel crosses were erected in 2012 and 2013 to replace a teak cross destroyed in 1985.

Pu Zozam, a member of parliament from Chin State, said that although army and local authorities have tried to block the replacement crosses, “it is our belief and our responsibility” to continue to replace them, with or without government permission.

“There are 13 crosses that still need to be replaced. We put up the crosses on our land originally, so we do not think it necessary to ask permission to replace them,” he said.

Cross destruction isn’t the only problem plaguing Chin State’s Christians.

Salai Ling, program director of Chin Human Rights Organization, said that youth development schools in border ethnic regions have been set up to convert Christians to Buddhism.

There are 29 border development schools around the country, established under President U Thein Sein’s current 30-year plan. One-third of these schools are in Chin State.

“Thirty years is a generation. This project is targeting us. The government’s plan is to intentionally change our beliefs and mindsets,” said Salai Ling.

Some say the discrimination goes both ways. Although Buddhists do not face official discrimination in Chin State, Saya Mya, a Chin Buddhist teacher, said they feel it indirectly.

“When Christians hold youth gatherings or public forums, they start or close the ceremonies with prayers, which makes non-Christians uncomfortable,” he said.

This story is part of a series on religious freedom and conflict in Myanmar, brought to you with support from Religion Newswriters and the British Foreign & Commonwealth Office.

Courtesy: Religion News Service

Photo: A man and a child from a Christian family look out from their home in the industrial suburbs of Yangon on April 14, 2012. 

Photo courtesy: Reuters/Damir Sagolj
 

Publication date: February 18, 2015



Beyond Myanmar’s Embattled Muslims, Christians Say They Face Their Own Persecution