Catholicism was introduced into Vietnam in the
16th centery by missionaries from Portugal,
Spain, and France. Particularly active during
the 16th and 17th centeries. Pope Alexander VII
assigned the first bishops to Vietnam in the
1659 and the first Vietnamese priests were
ordained ine years later.
Despite the Roman Catholic Church's rejection of
ancestor worship, a cornerstone of the Confucian
cultural tradition, Roman Catholicism
established a solid position in Vietnamese
society under French rule. The French encouraged
its propagation to balance Buddhism and to serve
as a vehicle for the further dissemination of
Western culture. After the mid-1950s,
Catholicism declined in the North, where the
communists regarded it as a reactionary force
opposed to national liberation and social
progress. In the South, by contrast, Catholicism
expanded under the presidency of Ngo Dinh Diem,
who promoted it as an important bulwark against
North Vietnam. Under Diem, himself a devout
Catholic, Roman Catholics enjoyed an advantage
over nonCatholics in commerce, the professions,
education, and the government. This caused
growing Buddhist discontent that contributed to
the eventual collapse of the Diem regime and the
ultimate rise to power of the military. Roman
Catholics in reunified Vietnam numbered about
3.0 million in 1984, of whom nearly 1 million
resided in the North and the remainder in the
South.
In
1955 approximately 600,000 Catholics remained in
the North after an estimated 650,000 had fled to
the South. That year the Liaison Committee of
Patriotic and Peace-Loving Catholics was set up
in the North by the communist regime in an
attempt to win over those Catholics who had
chosen to remain (but were slower than
non-Catholics to embrace the regime) and to
"reintegrate" them into northern society. The
church was allowed to retain its link with the
Vatican, although all foreign priests had either
fled south or been expelled, and normal church
activities were permitted to continue, albeit in
the shadow of a campaign of harassment. The
appearance of normalcy was misleading, however.
The church was stripped of its traditional
autonomy in running schools, hospitals, and
orphanages. Its traditional right to own
property was abolished, and priests and nuns
were required to devote part of their time to
productive labor in agriculture. Nevertheless,
officials claimed that Catholics had complete
freedom of worship as long as they did not
question the principle of collective socialism,
spurn manual labor, or jeopardize the internal
and external security of the state.
In
November 1977, the Vietnam Courier
reported that the church in the North had
changed from "opposition to acceptance and
participation," but that the transformation had
been difficult for Catholics. In the same month,
the government unveiled a decree on religion
that reaffirmed the constitution's position on
religious freedom, but made it unequivocally
clear that such freedom was conditional and
depended on the compatibility of church
activities with such higher imperatives as
patriotism and socialism. The new decree not
only prescribed the duties and obligations
required of the clergy by the state but also
imposed state control over the conduct of
religious services, education, training,
investitures, appointments, travels, and
transfers.
Applicable to all religious communities in the
North and South, the new law clearly introduced
a period of more active state intervention in
church affairs. The regime apparently acted out
of concern that the church in the North, despite
having coexisted with socialism for twenty-three
years, was not progressive enough to lead in the
socialist transformation of the Catholic
community in the South. The Vietnam Courier
suggested this link between the northern and
southern situations in November 1977, after
noting that the northern Catholic church would
have to shoulder the additional task of helping
to reintegrate Vietnam's entire Catholic
population into the national community.
Catholics in the South in 1975 officially
numbered about 1.9 million, including 15
bishops, 3,000 regular and diocesan priests,
1,200 brothers, and 6,000 nuns. Four-hundred
priests and lay brothers and 56,000 lay
Catholics were estimated already to have fled
the country in anticipation of the communist
victory. At the time of the imposition of
communist rule, the South had 870 parishes in 15
dioceses; Ho Chi Minh City alone had a half
million Catholics, who were served by 600
priests and 4,000 lay brothers and nuns. The
North's less than 1 million Catholics were
served by about 3,500 churches attended by
nearly 400 priests, 10 bishops, and 2
archbishops.
The
government claimed that after April 1975 the
religious activities of Roman Catholics were
quickly stabilized, major services were held,
and many cathedrals and churches that had been
damaged or destroyed in the war were rebuilt.
The regime claimed further that there was no
religious persecution, or if there was
persecution, that it was directed at the
activities of "reactionary forces" bent on
taking advantage of "the backwardness of a
number of the faithful . . . ." Nevertheless,
the authorities acted to isolate and to
neutralize hard-core opposition to party policy
and to persuade less strongly opposed factions
to join a party-controlled "renovation and
reconciliation" movement. A considerable number
of Northern and Southern Roman Catholics,
however, remained opposed to communist
authority.
In
1980 the Unified Bishops' Council of Vietnam was
established to enlist the aid of "patriotic"
bishops in persuading recalcitrant elements of
the Catholic community to cooperate with the
regime. Three years later, in November 1983, a
Committee for Solidarity of Patriotic Catholics
was created to unite all Catholics and channel
their energy into the building of socialism.
This committee, which replaced the Liaison
Committee of Patriotic and Peace-Loving
Catholics, was formed at a time when the
regime's surveillance of the Catholic community
had been stepped up, reportedly due to the
suspicion that some Catholics were involved in
antistate activities. The regime's growing
concern was further reflected in the
establishment in March 1985 of a Religious
Affairs Committee to coordinate and supervise
religious organizations more effectively.
Hanoi's increasing involvement in church affairs
reportedly produced new strains in its relations
with the Vatican. In 1987 it nevertheless
appeared critical to Vietnam's leaders to convey
to the public the impression that the Roman
Catholic Church was active in the affairs of the
nation and that church members were significant
contributors to the socialist cause.