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‘All Under Heaven’ Hosts the World
August 17-23, 2008 Issue |
Posted 8/12/08 at 1:15 PM
There's a
British comedy routine in which German soldiers in World War II sitting around
a campfire start to notice that a human skull is incorporated into the insignia
on their caps. What do skulls make you think of? Death, cannibals, beheadings,
pirates, says a soldier. And then the realization dawns on him. Are we the
bad guys?
Its the sort of conversation that
we hope will happen in China over the course of the Olympics and in their wake.
It might go something like this:
Hey, you know how we call ourselves Children of the dragon and force
families to kill their kids? Other countries feature eagles, or koalas, and
freedom. Are we healthy?
Americans have always had a quiet
and wholly appropriate reverence for Chinese culture.
From The
King and I to Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,
our popular entertainment has envied primal Eastern civilization. From Pearl S.
Buck to Amy Tan, our fiction has explored the countrys villages and introduced
us to its people. We are charmed by fortune cookies and impressed by Buddhist
wisdom. We take out Chinese when were dating and we pick out china when we get
engaged.
There is great beauty in the Chinese
culture and its people. There are great virtues as well.
The determination and perseverance
of the Chinese people survived decades of hardship and helped them succeed
where other nations saddled with Marxism have collapsed.
But with that determination has come
a kind of ruthlessness that is a great threat to the rest of the world, given
Chinas immense geopolitical ambitions.
Chinese elite call the country
Tian-Xia, which means all under heaven. In the view of the nations ancient
philosophers, the emperor of China was nominally the ruler of All under
heaven that is, the entire world. Other nations rulers were said to derive
their power from the emperor just as, in Christian thought, political
authority is derived indirectly from God.
The opening ceremonies of the
Olympics were beautiful and extraordinary as they traced the history of the
Chinese people. But once you realize that the Chinese government operates, at
least to some degree, under the assumption that the Chinese are a master race,
the message is considerably darker.
The extravaganza was propaganda,
pure and simple. For instance, children were generously incorporated in the
presentation, particularly in the segments about modern-day China. And yet
China is famous for its draconian, one-child policy. In effect, this is a program
of genocide and sterilization that touches every single family in the country.
The blood of the children, born and unborn, killed by the modern Chinese
regimes is immeasurable.
Particularly, the opening ceremony
seemed to feature little girls. But in China, little girls are becoming rare
indeed. Families who can only have one child tend to want a boy. In what the
American media used to call gendercide, girls are far more likely to be
aborted, killed as infants, or put in orphanages.
Human-rights experts told us in last
weeks issue how the Olympics actually forced China to crack down more on
dissidents and not just dissidents. Catholics in the underground church have
been persecuted for fear that they might speak out. Clerics are in prison. The
government is taking no chances that its enemies will tell the world what is
happening.
Chinas self-conception and the
brutal actions it justifies should be frighteningly familiar to the post-World
War II and Cold War West.
When we trade with China, were thinking
in economic terms. But what are the Chinese elite thinking? We speak of how our
trade with China will open the country to Western ideas of freedom, justice and
democracy. But China is very aware of its sheer size and the power that its
mammoth population gives it. How likely is it that all under heaven will
undergo a political metanoia just because its workers paradise is churning out Dark
Knight toys?
When one late-night comedian quipped
Imagine how much those Opening Ceremonies would have cost if China didnt have
slaves? the comment was more truth than joke.
In Americas present-day
culture-of-death phase, is our command of freedom, justice and democracy great
enough to attract converts in the East anyway?
Chances are, the opposite is true.
Over the past 25 years of trade with China, we have become much more like them
than they have become like us. Our family sizes have shrunk almost to their
one-child limit. Abortion has become as important a value to many of our
politicians as it is for theirs. And while Chinas abuse of religious rights
hasnt abated, our commitment to religious freedom has, from crèches in public
places to the dismantling of the conscience rights of doctors, and the freedom
of Catholics to run adoption agencies.
Think of China as a village in
thrall to a dragon. In classical literature, weak people always deal with
dragons the same way: by appeasing them. That plan always works to the benefit
of the dragon, not the villagers (or its maidens), and America should reject
that strategy.
Is it a hopeless situation?
Certainly not. The faith has flourished against greater odds elsewhere, and
great things are happening in China.
Many in the West are still jaded
about Christianity. They are recovering slowly, but in China, Christianity is a
new and exciting phenomenon. The government is alarmed by its rise, calling it
Jesus fever and trying to beat it down. But we know what happens when you try
to beat down Christianity. A religion that features its crucified founder as
its unfurled banner doesnt give up very easily.
Pray for the Church in China and
pray that its missionaries will one day spread the faith from Beijing with as
much flair and imagination as the city has spread the Olympic message.
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