IBIB
- UBCV <ubcv.ibib@buddhist.com> wrote:
From: "IBIB - UBCV" <ubcv.ibib@buddhist.com>
To: ubcv.ibib@free.fr
Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2007 03:15:47 -0500
Subject: VIETNAM - Thich Thien Hanh protests campaign against UBCV - US
official Michael Orona visits Thich Quang Do
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
Security forces surround Bao Quoc Pagoda in Hue –Thich
Thien Hanh denounces plan to suppress the Unified Buddhist Church of
Vietnam - US State Department official
Michael Orona visits Thich Quang Do in aigon
These base attacks against Thich Quang Do on the
State-controlled television, radio and press have caused outrage, not only from
the Buddhist community, but from Vietnamese of all different religious and
political views. Interviewed by Radio Free Asia on 8-9 September, Hoa Hao
dignitary Huynh Van Hiep, Roman Catholic Priest Nguyen Thanh, Cao Dai dignitary
Nguyen Thanh Liem all expressed indignation at the government’s slanderous
accusations, and affirmed their solidarity with Thich Quang Do. Leaders of UBCV
local boards all over the country have sent strong letters of protest to the
Vietnamese leadership (e.g. Tien Giang (1.9.2007), Ba Ria-Vung Tau (1.9.2007),
— In the
central city of
Thich Thien Hanh said Security Police systematically take down the number-plates
of all vehicles approaching the Pagoda. They control all visitors, intercept
members of the congregation and take them to the Police station, where Police
subject them to humiliating body searches and interrogations. Security Police
also follow Buddhists to their homes to threaten and harass them. “The local
Buddhists are terrorized”, he said. Thich Thien Hanh noted that these
draconian Police controls have continued non-stop since August 26th, following
the government clamp-down on UBCV aid for “Victims of Injustice” and the
publication of hundreds of injurious articles against Thich Quang Do in the
state-controlled press.
In a letter
to President Nguyen Minh Triet, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and National
Assembly President Nguyen Phu Trong on 1st September, Thich Thien Hanh
described the government’s media attacks as “the first step in a
government-orchestrated plan to eradicate the UBCV before the
He told Vo
Van Ai: “Step 1 is to blacken the name of Venerable Thich Quang Do and turn
popular opinion against him by slandering him in the nationwide media. Step 2
is to arrest Venerable Thich Quang Do, put him on trial and imprison him for
“inciting people to demonstrate”. Step 3 is to take UBCV Patriarch Thich Huyen
Quang to
In his
letter to the Vietnamese leadership, Thich Thien Hanh called on
Furthermore,
Thich Thien Hanh noted that the so-called “money from hostile forces”
came from overseas Vietnamese – the very same people to whom
Thich Thien
Hanh told the Vietnamese leadership that Thich Quang Do had spent his whole
life helping victims of poverty and disaster, and had often paid a high price
for his kindness. In 1994, Thich Quang Do was arrested for leading a UBCV
rescue mission to relieve flood victims in the Mekong Delta and sentenced to 5
years in prison. Just a few months ago, inspired by the Grameen Bank projects
in
In his
letter, Thich Thien Hanh expressed outrage at the sordid accusations and base
language used against Thich Quang Do in the official press. “Thich Quang Do
is an eminent scholar, writer and respected translator of Buddhist scriptures.
During his 10 years in internal exile and his decades under house arrest at the
Thanh Minh Zen Monastery, all alone, Thich Quang Do has accomplished a task
worthy of a whole nation. He has completed the translation of the “Great
Dictionary of Buddhist Terms”, with six volumes and 7,374 pages”. The
Dictionary, which was printed overseas, “is an invaluable contribution to
Vietnamese culture in general, and a most precious source of reference to all
those who wish to study Buddhism in
Thich Thien
Hanh made five demands to the Vietnamese leadership: (a) to cease its
slanderous media attacks against Thich Quang Do and the UBCV; (b) cease
Police pressure, including surveillance, summonses for interrogation on UBCV
leaders at the Thanh Minh Zen Monastery (Thich Quang Do), Bao Quoc Pagoda in
Hue and other UBCV Pagodas; (c) cease issuing Police summonses to interrogate
Thich Quang Do; (d) lift all restrictions and house arrest of UBCV
Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang and Thich Quang Do; (e) restore the
legitimate status of the outlawed UBCV and place the State-sponsored Vietnam
Buddhist Church outside the control of the Vietnam Fatherland Front so that .
Thich Thien
Hanh concluded his letter by stating: “We (the UBCV) are not opposed to
anyone, we have no political agenda, we do not plot to seize power, we have no
ambitions to exercise political rule. We simply call on the Vietnamese
government to give back to Buddhists everything they have taken from us, so
that we can all sit down together and settle Buddhist affairs between people of
the same faith, with no interference from political powers”.
— On Friday
7th September, Mr. Michael Orona, Deputy Director of the US State
Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour, visited Venerable
Thich Quang Do at the Thanh Minh Zen Monastery in
Thank you,
Mr. Orona at the U. S. Embassy in Hanoi for your prompt action.
Jean Libby, editor
VietAm Review
http://vietamreview.blogharbor
