Hoang Minh Chinh asked to be converted to Buddhism on his deathbed, by IBIB, author
INTERNATIONAL BUDDHIST INFORMATION BUREAU
(BUREAU INTERNATIONAL D'INFORMATION
BOUDDHISTE)
Official information service of Vien
Hoa Dao, Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam
B.P. 63 - 94472 Boissy Saint Léger
cedex (France) - Tel.: Paris (331) 45 98 30 85
Fax : Paris (331) 45 98 32 61 - E-mail
: ubcv.ibib@buddhist.com
Web : http://www.queme.net
For immediate release
Paris, 11th February 2008
On his deathbed, prominent dissident
Hoang Minh Chinh asked to be converted
to Buddhism by Thich Quang Do
PARIS,
11th February 2008 (IBIB) -
The International Buddhist Information Bureau
expresses sincere condolences on the death of former high-ranking
Communist Party member and leading dissident Professor Hoang Minh Chinh,
who died in Hanoi
on 7 February 2008 after a long struggle against prostate cancer. Former
Dean of the Hanoi Institute of Marxist-Leninist Philosophy, Hoang Minh Chinh
spent over 20 years in prison and under house arrest for criticising the Communist
Party of Vietnam. Jailed in the 1960s for “anti-Party revisionism”, he became a
vocal advocate of democratic reform. Despite renewed imprisonment, house
arrest, intimidation and acts of violence against himself and his family, Hoang
Minh Chinh continued his activities for democratic change, reactivating the
unofficial Democratic Party in 2006 (formerly a Communist-Party sanctioned
body, dissolved by the Party in the 1980s).
In November 2007, whilst Hoang Minh Chinh was gravely
ill in hospital, he expressed the wish to become a Buddhist and asked Thich
Quang Do, Deputy leader of the outlawed Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam, to
be his master. Thich Quang Do agreed, and held a ceremony in Saigon
on 27th November 2007 to convert him to the faith. He gave Hoang
Minh Chinh the Buddhist name “True Heart” (Chan Tam). Hoang Minh Chinh’s family
report that he regained consciousness and became more serene and alert on
hearing this news.
In Hoang
Minh Chinh’s testament, communicated to IBIB by his daughter today, the former
VCP veteran wrote: “What I tell you now is very important. I
believe with all my heart that Freedom and Democracy will come to Vietnam. It is ineluctable. Long live the
victory of Freedom and Democracy for all our people ! Tell Venerable Thich
Quang Do: I have absolute faith in Buddhism, and I have absolute faith in Thich
Quang Do. He, along with all [Buddhists in the UBCV] are resolutely
committed, to the point of forgetting their own lives and security, to
democratisation and freedom for Vietnam.
For that reason,
I have no doubts or worries whatsoever”.
Professor
Hoang Minh Chinh and Venerable Thich Quang Do exchanged contacts in 2005, after
Thich Quang Do sent a “New Year’s Letter” calling on Vietnamese intelligentsia
in the North and South to rally together for pluralism and democratic change. This
appeal, sent through the intermediary of IBIB and Quê Me to avoid government
censorship, succeeded in forging unprecedented links of solidarity and
understanding between Communist dissidents in the North and democrats in the
South. Hoang Minh Chinh then
wrote: “Thich Quang Do’s proposals
for democracy and pluralism are fundamentally important and absolutely urgent. He proposes the very things that all our
people have been aspiring to with all their hearts for the past half century
and more. I have seen the letter circulating widely in Hanoi. Everyone who has read it has found it
totally convincing, extremely moving, and worthy of their wholehearted
support...
“Indeed,
I want to say how much I admire the actions of the Unified
Buddhist Church
of Vietnam.
Thich Quang Do, along with all the UBCV clergy and followers, have waged
a courageous combat for decades, since the fall of Saigon
until today. We Vietnamese have suffered misery and humiliation for too long.
It is time to unite. I call on all Vietnamese to join together in support of
Thich Quang Do’s proposals and struggle fearlessly to achieve them. We do not
fear repression, imprisonment, intimidation. We must keep up the struggle for
democracy, pluralism and human rights. This is the only way we can escape from
our condition of slavery today...”.
In April 2006, Hoang Minh Chinh and Thich Quang Do were jointly awarded
the “Democracy Courage Tribute” by 600 democracy activists gathered at
the Fourth Assembly of the World Movement for Democracy (WMD) in Istanbul. The WMD praised these “two
particularly heroic figures… Even from prison, these men and many others like
them from both the secular and religious communities have dared to disseminate
messages defending human rights, increased pluralism and the rule of law in Vietnam”.
Accepting
the award on their behalf, Mr. Vo Van Ai, IBIB Director and President of
Quê Me: Action for Democracy in Vietnam,
stressed the significance of honouring these two men with the award:
“For 2,000 years, Vietnam was one country, with one
language and one culture. But conflicts of ideology split our country
into two, north and south, separating our people and forcing them to live apart
under different political regimes.
“The two dissidents you are honouring today,
Thich Quang Do and Hoang Minh Chinh, reflect this political divide. Thich
Quang Do in the South, symbolises the peaceful struggle of the Buddhists, Vietnam’s
largest civil society and democracy movement. Hoang Minh Chinh in the North
speaks out for a whole generation of Communist Party veterans and dissidents,
who are calling out today for democratic reform.
“After the Vietnam war, the
Communist Party re-unified Vietnam
into one country, but they failed to unite the people’s hearts. Today,
by recognising these men as members of the global democratic community, you are
marking the emergence of a united democracy movement in Vietnam. At the same
time, you are succeeding where the regime has failed, in unifying the
Vietnamese people’s hearts”.