Jesuits
mark 400 years in Vietnam
More than 3,000 people joined 210 Jesuits in Ho Chi Minh City,
in Vietnam, on Sunday for the climax of yearlong celebrations marking the
arrival of the first Jesuits in Vietnam 400 years ago. Jesuit Bishop
Cosmas Hoang van Dat of Bac Ninh, near Hanoi in Vietnam’s north, celebrated the
Mass at the main Jesuit compound in Thu Duc, a suburb of Ho Chi Minh
City. Fifteen bishops and Jesuits from Vietnam joined a congregation from
across Asia and from Europe, including the Superior-General of the Jesuits, Fr
Adolfo Nicolas. Many celebrations took place over the last year with
seminars, retreats and pilgrimages to places that were once significant Jesuit
centers in the 17th and 18th centuries and Masses in parishes across Vietnam.
The gatherings and events focussed on the missionary experiences and strategies
since the arrival of an Italian and two Portuguese Jesuits in 1615, along with
Japanese Christians who went to Cua Han near Da Nang to escape the persecution
of Christians in Japan.
While initially coming
to serve the Japanese, the first Jesuits soon turned their attention to the
Vietnamese people who were split into two kingdoms — Tonkin in the north and
Cochinchina in the south. The Jesuit arrival in Vietnam came shortly after
the death of Matteo Ricci in Beijing in 1610 and followed his approach to
missionary work. Ricci’s revolutionary way of spreading the Gospel started with
making friends among the local population and learning their language and
culture before any effort was made to share faith in Jesus Christ. (Source:
UCAN)
The most famous early
Jesuit was a Frenchman, Alexandre de Rhodes (1591–1660), whose work led to the
adoption of Romanized script for the Vietnamese language which is still used
today. In 1661 he published the first Vietnamese-Portuguese-Latin
dictionary and his Catechism in eight days, which presented the Catholic faith
in the context of the traditional moral and spiritual beliefs of Vietnamese
people.
Some 158 years after
arriving in Vietnam, the Jesuits were suppressed by the pope and disappeared
from the country until their return in 1957 at the invitation of the South
Vietnamese government to help develop universities. That was followed by
requests from bishops in Vietnam to assist in training local clergy. That
all changed in 1975 when the Vietnam War ended with victory for communist North
Vietnam. Forty-one foreign Jesuits were expelled, leaving twenty-six
Vietnamese Jesuits, half of whom went to jail almost immediately. The others were
drafted into the army or put to work on state farms. Today there are 210
Jesuits in Vietnam with as many as 140 of them in training.
The government
restricts their activities so they are barred from working in schools,
universities or social work, except if it is done in a clandestine way.
As a result, many Jesuits have undertaken missionary work to Japan, Greater
China, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia, Timor-Leste and European countries. The
Jesuits are also preparing for the future in Vietnam by sending their young students
for postgraduate studies in Europe and the United States.
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