IBIB
- UBCV <ubcv.ibib@buddhist.com> wrote:
From: "IBIB - UBCV" <ubcv.ibib@buddhist.com>
To: ubcv.ibib@free.fr
Date: Mon, 4 Feb 2008 19:18:46 -0500
Subject: VIETNAM - Thich Huyen Quang issues New Year Message
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
From house arrest, UBCV Supreme Patriarch
Thich Huyen Quang issues New Year Message to Amnesty International and
Vietnamese at home and abroad
Firstly,
Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang, 89, sent special thanks to Amnesty International
for adopting him as a “prisoner of conscience” and launching a worldwide
campaign for his release. In this campaign, Amnesty International Group 65 in
Toronto, Canada, sent over 3,500 letters and petitions to the Vietnamese and
Canadian governments and Amnesty sections in Massachusetts and California also
sent thousands of letters to the US and Vietnamese governments, along with
hundreds of post cards to Thich Huyen Quang wishing him courage and good
health. The International Buddhist Information Bureau, who received copies of
these letters, informed the UBCV Patriarch of this campaign.
On
behalf of the UBCV, Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang thanked Group 65 for “the thousands of letters they have
sent to the Vietnamese and Canadian governments calling for the
re-establishment of the UBCV’s legal status, and campaigning for my release and
religious freedom… Your selfless actions warm my heart, and that of every
Buddhist in
Patriarch
Thich Huyen Quang also extended warm thanks to “the government and people of
Expressing
his deep appreciation of recent statements made by the Vietnamese Diaspora in
Australia, the US and worldwide in “support [of] the Unified Buddhist Church
of Vietnam in our struggle for religious freedom and human rights”, Thich
Huyen Quang also commended UBCV Buddhist monks, nuns, and lay-followers abroad
who “diligently respected and observed Edict No 9, which I promulgated, as
well as the recent Notices and Circulars issued by the UBCV’s Executive
Institute “Vien Hoa Dao”. These texts are aimed to reorganize and reinforce the
UBCV in this period of new challenges, to honour two thousand years of
Vietnamese Buddhism, and shed lustre on the contribution of our forefathers and
all those who have given their lives to protect our people, defend our
territorial sovereignty and preserve our faith”.
Edict No.
9, issued by Thich Huyen Quang and the “Notice on the Implementation of Edict
No. 9”, issued by Thich Quang Do in September 2007 are two important UBCV
documents which provide for a new, streamlined structure of the overseas UBCV
in order to prevent strategies orchestrated by the Vietnamese Communist Party
to create schisms within the UBCV and undermine the UBCV movement for religious
freedom and human rights.
l Mr.
Stan Jolly, Coordinator of Amnesty International Group 65 explained their
campaign for the release of Thich Huyen Quang in an interview broadcast on Radio
Free Asia the same day. Mr. Jolly said that Group 65 had been working on
the case for over 17 years. Each month they met to draft new letters,
sending literally thousands of petitions, letters and postcards to the
Vietnamese and Canadian governments. “We were “assigned” the case of Thich
Huyen Quang by the London headquarters of Amnesty International”, he said,
adding that he had become more personally involved after a visit to Vietnam
with his family in 1994 : “The hospitality and the friendliness of the
Vietnamese people really touched us. We felt that this was a way we could help
to pay back some of the kindness and hospitality that the Vietnamese people had
extended to us in 1994”.
“The group gradually realised that our campaign is not just about the
Venerable Thich Huyen Quang. It’s ultimately about the struggle to promote and
defend internationally-recognised human rights. [It is] a struggle on behalf of
all the 80 million citizens of Vietnam, whether that person be a humble rice
farmer, a university student, an ethnic montagnard or someone as important and
respected as the Supreme Patriarch of the UBCV”.
Refuting
Whereas Group 65 receives regular replies from the
Canadian government and its Ambassador in
Noting that
the Canadian International Development Agency is funding several projects in
“I think
that in the future we will be tightening the screws on the Canadian government.
Not to hurt good projects that help Vietnamese people, but rather to put
pressure on the Vietnamese government, and tell them that if Canada is to
continue trading with Vietnam and giving millions of dollars for legal reform
projects, then Vietnam has an obligation to bring its laws into line with
international standards. I know this takes time, but I think the Canadian
government has the right to say: “Our patience is running out”. Also, as
Canadian taxpayers, we will be asking more and more questions about why our tax
dollars are being used to repress organisations like the
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PARIS, 5th February 2008 (IBIB) - From house arrest at the Nguyen Thieu Monastery in Binh Dinh province, the Supreme Patriarch of the outlawed Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam (UBCV) Thich Huyen Quang has sent an audio Message to the international community and Vietnamese around the world. The Message was recorded in secret and broadcast on Radio Free Asia on Monday 4th February. This is the first time in five years, since the Patriarch was placed under tight surveillance following a crack-down on the banned UBCV in 2003, that his voice has been heard on the international media.
Firstly, Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang, 89, sent special thanks to Amnesty International for adopting him as a “prisoner of conscience” and launching a worldwide campaign for his release. In this campaign, Amnesty International Group 65 in Toronto, Canada, sent over 3,500 letters and petitions to the Vietnamese and Canadian governments and Amnesty sections in Massachusetts and California also sent thousands of letters to the US and Vietnamese governments, along with hundreds of post cards to Thich Huyen Quang wishing him courage and good health. The International Buddhist Information Bureau, who received copies of these letters, informed the UBCV Patriarch of this campaign.
On behalf of the UBCV, Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang thanked Group 65 for “the thousands of letters they have sent to the Vietnamese and Canadian governments calling for the re-establishment of the UBCV’s legal status, and campaigning for my release and religious freedom… Your selfless actions warm my heart, and that of every Buddhist in Vietnam. There is an old saying: “Across the four oceans, all men are brothers”. Today, your concern for the plight of others in such a far-away country as Vietnam demonstrates this spirit of humanity, which transcends all borders, political opinions and religious beliefs. In Buddhism, we call this Universal Compassion, the commitment to save all beings from suffering, regardless of origin or race”.
Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang also extended warm thanks to “the government and people of Canada, who, for so many decades, have shown such generous hospitality to Vietnamese Boat people in their quest for freedom. You have given them refuge, a safe haven in which to settle and live freely in accordance with their ideals and beliefs. This is a fine example of civilisation, one that should teach a lesson to developing countries such as Vietnam”.
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http://www.queme.net/eng/news_detail.php?numb=939
Interview with Stan Jolly of Amnesty International by Y Lan (Penelope Faulkner) of Que Me.
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VietAm Review has attached a message from the Vietnamese Canadian Federation which describes the government and Vietnamese community support noted by Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang which was forwarded by Can D. Le, Project Director of Freedom at Last.
The Report from the Vietnamese Canadian Federation regarding the Vietnamese refugees referenced
•
As of January 31, 2008, 149 persons have been assisted by various community supported groups in their application for resettlement in Canada.
•
Entry visas have been approved for 9 cases (families or individuals).
•
Altogether close to half a million dollars has been raised in this project.
•
The refugees are expected to arrive in Canada this Spring.