MEMOIR
In a
Country Embroiled in Civil War, Section II
From Hungtung to
Peking, January 8-11, 1946
Travel was still slow, so I didn’t arrive
at Shih Chia Chuang until the evening of Jan. 8, 1946. I made a stopover the
night before at Yang Tsuan. The house was still just as crowded as it was when
I stopped there the previous month. The bishop of Shunteh, Monsignor Kraus, was
there along with his two priests – two very energetic Poles who wanted to go
with me to Peking. After the meal that evening, we discussed our plan for the
next morning. I proposed that we get to the station early and be prepared to
take any available train to Peking.
The next day, Jan. 9, we hurried to the
station and found a train with seven or eight cars. We boarded the first car where
we managed to find three seats. We were hardly seated when I nevertheless
informed Monsignor Kraus that I would prefer to be in the rear of the train. Experience
had taught me that if we touched off a mine it would be the car at the head of
the train that would take the brunt of the explosion and suffer the most of
damage. Also, having explored the entire train, I found three seats in the
sixth car, where we finally settled in. The weather was sunny and we had a
pleasant conversation. We were traveling in third class, which gave us the
opportunity to meet the good people of China. At lunch time we were able to buy
egg noodles and soup. Everything went well, and we dozed off.
Toward 4 p.m. the train stopped abruptly,
and at the same time we heard two explosions and the crackling of a machine-gun
in the east. I pressed my nose to the window to see what was going on, and I
saw the lead car of the train perched crosswise across the tracks. Very soon we
heard shouts telling us to get off the train and take shelter below the tracks
on the west side. There was an interminable delay and word that some people
were wounded. Finally we were advised to make our way to the nearby station and
take shelter there. It was not till almost 10 p.m. that we travelers found ourselves
regrouped and sheltered in the waiting room. There were people moaning. I went
toward the sound and I managed to help some of them with the little pack of
first aid items that I always carried with me. Exhausted, we inquired as to
where we could lie down for the night. I informed the station master of our
condition and told him that I was accompanied by a bishop. The accommodating
man led us in the darkness to a small Japanese hut, and suggested we shelter there.
We groped our way in, sliding along the Japanese tatamis, worn out, but safe. At dawn, I was the first to awaken,
and I discovered Monsignor Kraus stretched out not far from a stranger. It was
the wife of the station master, a circumstance which became fodder for good-natured
banter that whole day!
There was another long delay. At 2 p.m. we
were told that a Japanese armored train would be arriving at Paoting and that
it could take us on board. I asked that last night’s wounded also be loaded on,
and we arrived at Paoting two hours later.
It was not until Friday, January11, that we
were able to complete the last stage of our journey toward Peking, with
Monsignor Kraus still with us.
Sojourn in Peking,
January 11-17, 1946
At Peking I usually stopped at the chancery
of the Diocese of Suanhua where my friend and colleague, Paul Gilson, worked.
It was he who welcomed me in February 1939 when I arrived from Belgium. At that
time we forged a very solid friendship which lasted until his death.
The chancery was not very large, but at
that moment it sheltered my colleagues, Michel Keymolen and Nicolas Wenders,
both of whom I hastened to find. They were awaiting news of Shansi, and I had
to persuade them to accompany me there despite the risks and perils of the
civil war. I had a solid argument to budge them: the Chinese bishops of Shansi
(Fenyang and Hungtung) had agreed to reopen in Hungtung the regional seminary
that had been at Suanhua.
On Monday, Jan. 14, 1946, I paid a visit to
the Apostolic Delegate, Monsignor Zanin, hoping to receive from him subsidies
and advice for our mission. Alas, he was so preoccupied with his own problems
that I had to hear about them for half an hour. Sensing that I would receive
neither advice nor sustenance, I ended my visit as politely as possible and
decided to go to Tientsin the next day. At the Franciscan house in Tientsin I
received a warm welcome from Father Ormazabal, an understanding and joyful
Spanish Basque. Monsignor Comisso, first secretary to the apostolic delegate,
lived there and, as we were old friends, we had many things to tell one
another. Nevertheless, my primary goal was to reach Shanghai at all costs. It
was there that our subsidies could be found, but to date the treasurer had not
been able to transfer them to the north. The only possible means of transport –
trains and ships – were taken over by the central government to send as many
troops as possible to the north to establish a bridge-head against the
Communists who intended to take over Peking. Father Ormazabal had more than one
trick up his sleeve. He gave me some hope of gaining passage by air with the
cooperation of the Superior of the Franciscan Sisters, Mother Montana. The
latter had among her students the daughter of the commandant of the air base,
held by the 3rd Amphibious Group. It was thus that on January 17 I was received
at the base and, after a long interrogation by intelligence officers, was given
a round-trip air ticket to Shanghai. “You can report whatever you want,” the
commandant told me. Confidence reigned.
Voyage to Shanghai,
January 18-25, 1945
At 8:30 a.m. Friday Jan. 18, 1946, I
arrived at the airport of the French municipality. We took off at 10 a.m., and
after a stop in Tsingtao we landed in Shanghai at 4 p.m. I was welcomed at the
Franciscan headquarters by Father Miravigli and I asked him to prepare the
money from the subsidy provided by Rome which I was to take to the north. I
then went to the Scheut Fathers’ residence where I stayed until January 25. I
took advantage of my stay to meet with as many former Weihsien friends as
possible who were now living in Shanghai. But above all, I had to make contact with
the directors of UNRRA.
UNRRA, the United Nations Relief and
Rehabilitation Administration, was created in the United States by 48 nations
to serve as an agency of emergency aid and rehabilitation in the countries that
had suffered from the war. In the period immediately following the Sino-Japanese
war, from which China emerged severely impoverished, I chose – with the
approval of my bishop – to work for that agency as a means of bringing more
effective aid for the relief of China.
But that was not an easy undertaking.
Nevertheless, starting Monday morning, I spent several hours with the agency
and the next day I was received by Solano and above all by two young recently
demobilized American officers, Colonel Rose and Captain Moore, with whom I arranged
a study project in north China for the coming six weeks.
On January 25, despite the fog, I went to
the Bund where I had an appointment to get me to the military airport. The
plane took off at 9 a.m. As we had hoped, I had been able to fill two suitcases
with Chinese banknotes in the southern currency. They amounted to several
million francs which would be distributed to six northern dioceses. The
Shanghai money was at a premium in the north, and so by this transfer the
missions would gain 10 percent when the money was exchanged in Tientsin. The
flight was rough, we were shaken violently. We made a stopover in Tsingtao at
11:15 a.m. and reached Tientsin at 2:15 p.m., where I urgently set about
remitting the money to the respective treasurers – Father Mommaerts at the
Scheut Fathers and Father Ormazabal at the Franciscans.
Journey Across
Communist China (Journal and trip notes, February-March, 1946)
We left Taiyuan on Feb. 21, 1946, in the
company of representatives of the Nationalists, the Communists and the
Americans in search of a cease fire in the southeast region of Shansi. To that
end, the governor had arranged a special armored train, which had already been delayed
by 24 hours. For better or worse, we found ourselves en route, sumptuously
installed in a first class wagon, to butter up either the American colonel or
the Communist General Hsui and his staff. On the way we also had long
conversations with Doctor Tchang, chief of the office of health for UNRRA, who
was making the voyage with me and who would become extremely valuable, proving
himself to be a joyous and courageous 45-year-old companion.
Our progress was slow and, even though we
had left towards noon, we did not arrive in the general area of the provincial
troops until 4 p.m., at which time we found ourselves no more than 70
kilometers from Taiyuan. We were very well received by General Tchao,
commandant of the 33rd Army, who lodged us in his quarters and who authorized
me to participate as an auditor and sometimes as an interpreter in the
discussions relative to the cessation of hostilities. In him was found once
more a China in all her beauty and diplomatic courtesy. Upon our arrival we had
noted some Japanese soldiers in the village. Casually the American colonel
asked General Tchao why he still had Japanese troops in his sector. “Oh,” the
general replied, “we’re going to put them in a concentration camp.” The next
day as I went out for a little walk I saw, coming out of the neighboring house,
a dozen armed Japanese!
During our trip across the territory
occupied by the provincial troops we were struck by the number of uncultivated
fields. We were told the reason was that the taxes were too heavy and too
arbitrary. The consequence was a population – ready prey for communism –
fleeing to the mountains, east and west. About 30 to 40 percent of the farm
land was thus abandoned. In every station where our train stopped we found
numerous peasants waiting to tell us of their grievances with regard to the
miserable state of the province in the midst of the civil war. Refugees from
the Communist regions (generally the rich who had lost a good number of their
goods) came to cry on the colonel’s shoulder while the majority of the
population asked for restoration of transportation facilities between the
various zones and for the freedom to do business.
On February 22, we left Nan T’oan Pei in
the company of the military delegations. I took advantage of the occasion to
speak with General Tchao regarding the situation of the population in the
region he commanded. He gave me the impression he knew very little about it.
Little by little we entered into the mountains where the landscape became more
and more of a wilderness. I realized that the region was favorable to bandits
or to guerillas, as is now the case. At every little village where the train
stopped I spoke with the residents, who had truly suffered profoundly from the
war. Their faces were emaciated as their diet was still meager: millet twice a
day with no vegetables. The children, meanwhile, looked better than the adults.
The proportion of houses that were destroyed by the Japanese ranged from 30 to
60 percent, and in some villages 100 percent. All that destruction was not the
result of blind bombing but the organized project of selected workers: the
arson battalion. One village previously had 200 camels; now there remained only
one. Another village had 50 horses or mules; there remained only eight.
We arrived at Lai-Yuan toward 5 p.m., after
having gone about 30 kilometers into the mountains. It was a small village
where lodging facilities were scarce, so we remained in our first class
compartment. I took a little walk to stretch my legs before nightfall, and noted
with some amusement that the Japanese guards at the three or four defense posts
around the station had been surreptitiously replaced with Chinese guards. Thus
they could demonstrate to us that the Japanese had indeed been placed in a
concentration camp!
On February 23 I celebrated Mass on the
little table in our first class wagon. We then waited some long hours for the
officer who had been sent to the Communist headquarters to return with the
general in charge. At noon the liaison officer returned without his general,
and we were faced with a moment of decision: were we to take our chances by
venturing into the Communist lair? For eight years we had heard so many
dramatic stories about them that some of us might have had good reason to
hesitate about going forward. I had even been given a secret code message to
use if I were taken prisoner. Better, an American officer had given me a
miniature saw capable of cutting whatever, in case of imprisonment! But we knew
that the situation was not as dire as had been described, so we climbed on the
mounts furnished by General Tchao. The liaison officer led the way. Having
little experience at horseback riding, we had quite a bit of difficulty in
following suit. Personally, I had become wary of the equine species ever since
a clumsy mule had flung me into a river seven years earlier, and I felt more
secure on my own two feet. But practice changed my sentiments, and after 10
days on a mule I had almost become an accomplished equestrian.
For our safety the liaison officer took the
lead and, as we spotted the shadowy figures of guerillas, we advised him to
give the password. He ignored us and a little while later we spotted a guerilla
charging down the mountain, revolver in hand and grenade ready to be thrown. By
chance he noticed the Communist officer’s armband and ordered us to wait while
he communicated the password to the other positions. That done, we continued
unhindered, escorted by several soldiers who joined us at the next village. The
surrounding countryside abounded with soldiers, but we continued without
incident, at the pace of our mounts, arriving that night at the local
headquarters. We had come around 15 kilometers and were able to rest peacefully
at this small village where we were the honored guests of the Communist
military authority. We continued to be considered as such, receiving unexpected
welcomes wherever we went.
On that February 24 I arose early to celebrate
Mass in the heart of Communist territory. We went on at daylight, as we wanted
to travel as long as possible. We started up a long and slow climb to the Ch’ang
Liang Ling pass, which we crossed about 11 a.m. Our elevation revealed a superb
view over 40 kilometers of valleys bordered by mountains, as well as the T’ai
Hang chain of mountains at a distance of more than 100 kilometers, which we
would cross in several days. I discovered that going downhill was difficult in
my GI footwear, and the Chinese took advantage of that fact to sing the praises
of their cloth slippers. After a bowl of good millet soup to warm us up, we
continued to descend the entire length of the steeply enclosed valley. Several
kilometers down, the valley broadened out, and we made better time.
Nevertheless, if we could have avoided the delegations from the villages at every
crossroad and their reports of their local situations of supplies, housing and
sanitary conditions – nearly identical everywhere – we would have made better time.
But that was evidently impossible. Led by a brass band, the population would
line up neatly in two ranks, children separated – of whom a certain number, even
those under 15 years of age, carried grenades and mines hanging from their
necks. We had to honor the tea and the kind words which we received.
Along about 2 p.m., we arrived at Yun Chou,
a big village which the Japanese had half-destroyed, and where many widows
mourned their assassinated husbands. The population extended us an exceptional
welcome, due in large measure to the Mandarin who still lived in the district,
at least for the moment. He received us at the entrance of the village, and I
had to pass between two rows of applauding villagers for 500 meters. To save
time, we announced that we would speak directly to the population, and a
meeting on the field was organized. But that gained us nothing as, with the
traditional Chinese slow pace, we had to stay till evening to visit the
dispensary, do justice to the meal prepared for us, meet the government
delegates and, in the end, spend the night there. We had come only 30
kilometers, and we promised ourselves to do better in the coming days.
Early in the morning of February 25 we had
breakfast with the assistant-prefect before resuming our journey. On the way, a
group of children welcomed us with Chinese music. I was surprised by their cleanliness
and their deportment. It turned out they were the official choir of a Christian
village. I took the occasion to exchange a few words with their leader and to
remind him of the duties of a Christian. The village had been without a priest
for six years. Our Communist companion watched us with an air of wonderment,
but so what – even if he did make entries in his notebook. They told us
repeatedly that they were in favor of freedom of conscience.
Toward noon we arrived at Yushih, a town
that the Japanese had destroyed by fire. Over the past year, around 50 houses
had been rebuilt, and we stayed the night in one of these large humid
structures (whose mortar was not yet dry). While we were crossing the river
which bordered on the village, a snow storm had flared up and it would not have
been prudent to venture into the mountains, not even on mule-back. As it was a
market day, people from neighboring villages were in town. We took advantage of
their presence to give a short talk and to ask some questions. With the help of
my companions I then spent the remainder of the evening drying my clothes, as
my mule had slipped while crossing over an unstable bridge, dumping some of my
baggage into the water. Happily, my sleeping bag and my eating utensils remained
safe and sound. (Edited to this point)
The next day, February 26, the weather was
nicer and it had stopped snowing. The mountain trail had been repaired, which
enabled us to make good time. We covered 40 kilometers with hardly any rest. In
a little mountain village where some of the inhabitants no longer had the
clothing needed to go outdoors, we were attended by the secretary of a regional
center who had arranged for fresh horses for us. We embarked on a pleasant
descent toward Shih-Hsia. On our way we came across several thousand soldiers
marching westward.
Once again, snow forced us to stop for the
night. In addition, I came down with a fever and, if not for the strong
alcoholic drink served at supper, I would not have been able to get up and
journey on the next day. Nevertheless toward 8 p.m. I had to get out from under
the covers to hear the reports of some 30 delegates of the local population on
the current situation, and to apprise them of our work.
On February 27, as soon as the weather
cleared up, we left for Liao Hsien, where we were the guests of the assistant
prefect. There too a meeting had been arranged, and we addressed a crowd of
about two-thousand. Afterwards we went to see what remained of a fine
Protestant hospital which the Japanese had all but leveled.
Once again we embarked across the
mountains, still escorted by two soldiers. At nightfall we arrived at a small
village where this time we were not expected. The welcome there was simpler,
but we nevertheless found heated lodging and something to eat.
Fair weather greeted us on February 28. A
light mist covered the T’ai Hang chain that we were to cross that day. We
climbed slowly, lost in the fog and the clouds once we reached the pass. The
climb up – by the main route, so we were told – was quite perilous, and it was
impossible to stay mounted. The rocky trail had no doubt been built more than a
thousand years ago, and had endured despite the centuries and usage.
After about a dozen kilometers of descent
the sun finally appeared, illuminating magnificent gorges. As we rounded a bend,
a temple suddenly arose. It was entirely sculpted into the mountain. Two
columns, creased into the face of the rock marked the entrance, and a series of
small niches covered the top of the temple. We were in the presence of a curious
blend of natural architecture and Chinese ingenuity. Beside the temple a
charming bridge arched across the swift river current.
We continued our descent till the end of
the day, covering at least 40 kilometers, hoping at every turn of the valley to
be quit of the mountains. We spent the night in a little town where the
Communists had a printing plant which had been active during practically the
entire war, halting its presses only during Japanese attacks. Their literary
and intellectual production those last few years and since the earlier defeat
of China by the Japanese was something remarkable.
On March 1 we arrived at last at WenTs’uen,
a large mountain village where the frontier government resided for several
years. Certain offices with responsibility for the administration of a part of
Shansi province were operating there, and they gave us an excellent welcome.
Having been advised of my impending visit, the government had sent a former student
at Lyon to receive me. This Mr. Suen Yi accompanied us for the rest of the
voyage in Communist territory, looking out for our welfare and proving to be a
pleasant companion, albeit a staunch Communist.
The various regional chiefs of the South
and East of Shansi, representing 70 sub-prefectures were meeting there at that
time, so we were able to meet them and discuss our work with all of them. They
invited us to dinner the next day, an invitation I had to accept even though it
was to take place in the church, which the regional chiefs had occupied.
For my part, I asked to see the Christians
of the village and was given permission to celebrate Mass and preach on Sunday.
The Communists even promised me to welcome a new priest with the agreement of
the bishop. They had banished the former priest seven years earlier, citing
problems with the Japanese as the reason. We stayed at Wen Ts’uen three more
days to discuss with the authorities the needs of the village and our work.
We left on the morning of March 3 to return
to the town of Shih Hsien, 10 miles away and to a road suitable for driving and
the special truck which would take us to the seat of the government at the same
time as the chief of state, Mr. Ly Ta. We were received by one of the senators,
a very accommodating old man. We were lodged at the sub-prefecture, where the
staff proved eager to meet our every need. We walked to the marketplace where I
hoped to find a wool blanket for the voyage, but we did not find anything to
our taste.
We left the village on March 4, accompanied
by school children who had entertained us the night before with Communist songs
and dances. We met up with General Ly Ta and his quartermaster general. The
road was quite bad. From time to time we had to use the river bed which had
been cleared of its largest rocks. Nevertheless we managed to make the first
part of the trip without having to get out of the truck except for one time
when the incline was too steep.
The sub-prefect at Wu An put on a banquet
for us, which delayed us for two hours. The road from there was better, and we
arrived at Han Tan toward 5 o’clock. For two days we were the celebrated guests
at the seat of the local government responsible for 26 million inhabitants. The
official entertainments were topped off by a banquet in our honor, in the
presence of the Council president, his two vice presidents, and leaders of the
army and of the Communist Party.
On March 5 we spent the entire day
discussing the possibilities of fulfilling our mission in these provinces now
under the control of the Communists. We wanted to have complete freedom of
action, but on the other hand we had to take into account that the Communists
had a working organization which could help us substantially. We thus arrived
at an agreement on six articles that we decided to sign, as well as several of
their requests which we promised to transmit to Chungking along with our
comments acknowledging the agreement.
The delegates and members of the government
were generally capable. Several of them had studied abroad, and most were
university graduates, even though their appearance and simple living
demonstrated that they were sincere Communists. We strongly admired the spirit
in which they carried on their work with complete indifference toward personal
wealth.
That evening we took part in a banquet
offered in our honor by the army, followed by a theatrical celebration. It
opened with the raising of banners 20 meters long and two feet deep with words
of welcome for us. Inevitably we were exposed to a representation of Communist
beliefs in response to a speech by the vice president of the Council. The audience was almost entirely in uniform.
The first presentation portrayed, in modern dress, a theme of cooperation between
soldiers and peasants. The second was a traditional Chinese drama with a
patriotic theme.
In the regions that we studied, the
consequences of the war were everywhere similar: numerous houses destroyed, especially
where the Japanese did not intend to stay; absence of draft animals, mules,
cows and camels; latent epidemics (malaria, scabies and syphilis); dire need of
material for clothing, dyes, salt and charcoal in some districts.
We met again on Thursday morning, March 6,
to study the terms of the agreement and to ratify it. The accord, containing
six points, was to be signed with great pomp at the end of a dinner at the home
of the council president, Mr. Yang Sui Feng. I recall the scene as if it were
yesterday. I had received advance notice that the representative of the
military forces, General Liu Po Ch’eng, would be one of the signers and that
there would be a third signer whose identity would not be revealed to me in
advance. But when I entered the hall, there he was in a corner wearing his blue
quilted jacket with a Mao collar, his cap tilted to one ear.
“Bonjour, Monsieur An,” he said to me,
extending his hand. As I expressed surprise in returning his greeting at his
command of French, he answered that he had studied “in your country at the
Labor University in Charleroi.” I leave it to you to gauge my astonishment, but
I did not let it show, and continued the conversation in Chinese.
“When did you return to China (from
Belgium)?” I asked
“In 1924,” he answered.
“And what did you do then?”
“Tixia
kung tsuo” (underground activities, or preparations for the Chinese
revolution), was his response.
The man speaking with me was short, direct
and somewhat good-natured. He must have been about 40 years old. This was the
important person whose name would be central to the document because he had
been delegated by the Communist party of the entire region (officially he was
the general representing the military region). His name: Deng Xiao Ping! This
was the strongman who would head the People’s Republic of China during the
decade of the 1980s. The evening ended with wine and toasts and the customary
photos.
During our free hours we were questioned by
journalists who insisted that we give our opinions on the subjects under
discussion. As we were leaving, I was asked for a last word. I took advantage
of the occasion to say a few words about our peace-maker role. But we were in a
hurry to go on with our journey as our goal was to stop at Shun Teh, 15 miles
away, where I was hoping to stay the night at the mission headed by Msgr.
Krause, with whom I had traveled the previous month. As it turned out, while
crossing a shallow portion of a river, our truck – which stalled every ten
minutes because of its bad alcohol fuel – became mired in the sand. It was only
after three hours of effort and the help of four oxen that we were freed, but
by then it was too late to get to our destination.
Our arrival at Shun Teh was once again
delayed on March 7 upon crossing a partially destroyed bridge. We obtained some
planks to bridge the gaps in the face of a freezing north wind. Happily we
received a warm welcome from our Polish missionary friends at Shun Teh, which
was not pleasing to the Communists. Nevertheless, they were won over when I
took them to visit the hospital, and especially the orphanage of three hundred
children receiving the tender care of the good Sisters of St. Vincent.
We did not have enough fuel for the return
voyage, as our truck had burned too much alcohol over the difficult roads. But
the orders were to take us to the limits of the Communist territories, so we
left in the afternoon – too late, alas, to make the trip in one stage. There we
were, obliged to stay the night at an inn at the side of the road, only to find
ourselves, upon awakening, surrounded by snow.
March 8. The truck, after warming up its
engine for a full hour while burning grass and alcohol, took us to Kao -I
around 10 a.m., but not without problems: the radiator froze because nobody
thought to drain it the night before. At Kao-I the truck arrived at its final
destination of its difficult voyage. We appealed to the local headman to
provide us with a cart. Despite the bad weather, that worthy led us, toward 3
o’clock, into no man’s land. There we hired another cart and despite the hour
and the snow we decided to take on the 40 kilometers required to reach Shih
Chia Chuang, where we would once again entrain for Taiyuan the following day.
The mule pulling the cart was wonderful, and trotted at a good pace.
As night fell, we had to negotiate our way
past each of six strong-points. It was 11 p.m. before we managed to have the
gates of Shih Chia Chuang opened to us. We decided to stop for the night as it
was forbidden to circulate on the city streets after lights out. It was our
great fortune that the military forces standing guard at the gates offered us
lodging. All that remained for us to do was to return to Taiyuan to report on
what was accomplished. Perhaps we could follow that by doing the same in
Shanghai.
Two months in
Communist Territory, August and September, 1946
I know that in casting your eyes on that
heading you are going to roll your eyes and exclaim, “What? He has more
adventure stories to tell? After running around North China for six months
wouldn’t he have tried to stay out of trouble for a while?” The answer is, yes,
I did try, but I was not free to do what I wanted. I was sent on a special
mission in Communist territory, and completely involuntarily (you be the judge
of that) I became involved in some new difficulties. Those difficulties, while
not directly involving our mission, did nevertheless cast some light on
Communist modus operandi of the period. They will no doubt help you to
appreciate what it was that deeply disgusted me, to say the least. Nevertheless
I am greatly consoled by the fact that I have always tried to be objective in
my evaluations.
Return to Chin
Hsien
We left Taiyuan on August 8, 1946. The
60-kilometer southerly voyage in first class was fairly comfortable. We got off
at Tung Yang at a small station where we were not even asked for our tickets (I
was no longer traveling free by then). An hour’s walk to the east brought us to
a village which reflected a bygone dating to the good old days, but had now
been abandoned by a good many of its former citizens because of the proximity
of two armies – the Communist army and the provincial (Nationalist) army. When
the Communist soldiers asked the cook who was preparing our meal which had been
the good army and which had been the bad one, he replied that they had been
equally bad.
As we had to carry our baggage ourselves,
we decided to have a brief nap first. Upon awakening I was surprised to find
myself surrounded by guerrillas. What a predicament! I had no way of knowing
whether they were Communists or Nationalists as they were not in uniform, as is
normal for guerrillas. I resolved my doubts by engaging them in conversation,
which revealed that they were Communists. To be perfectly clear, it was
probable that only their leader had heard anything – even vaguely – about Karl
Marx or Stalin. What these men knew was that in being on the side of Communists
their taxes were lower and it was easier for them to own a weapon. So they took
advantage of those benefits.
Two hours later we were at Fants’uen, the
first Communist town at the foot of the mountains. It had been occupied for a
month by the Provincials, who stripped it of everything of value. And so we
were the recipients of the people’s sad stories. As one member of our group
broadcast his opinion that the people were not short of clothing, we were soon
presented with several fine specimens of people dressed in tatters.
We had about 250 kilometers to cover to
reach our train station at Chin Hsien. We therefore did not delay, and evening
overtook us in the mountains. As the sun had already set we bathed in the
river, but we were soon chased out fairly brusquely by troops making their
rounds. They told us that the area was unreliable, which I did not doubt for an
instant, but not for the same reasons.
Each morning we got under way as soon as
possible after a light repast, and we usually stopped for a more substantial
meal around 11 a.m. By then it was too hot to continue, and it was necessary to
take a siesta until almost 4 p.m., after which we walked until nightfall. That
day, after having just left a village with a mule loaded with the luggage of
the four members of our team, when we came to a river whose swift currents lured
us to refresh ourselves. The ass seemed to enjoy the experience even more than
we did, as he took it upon himself to sit right down in the water, with the result
that our bedding and written materials of all kinds were soaked.
The days passed, the road, mountainous in
the extreme, was not traversable except with donkeys or mules. There was no
hope of using a cart, no matter how small. As for the inns that we came across,
they were well-stocked with bed-bugs, fleas and other animal life prone to
unwelcome intimacy.
On August 10, at an altitude of 1,600
meters, we encountered our first fog of the summer which soon changed into
rain. But the sun returned, so hot that we were soon wishing for the cool mist
of the morning. That evening we reached Liao Hsien, a town perched high up in
these mountains which were considered the last bastion of the Communists in
these four northern provinces. We met with the military commandant and the
administrator of the region, sharing with them our mission in these districts
of southeast Shansi. They promised their complete cooperation and received us
in admirable fashion. These were the most skillful propagandists that I had encountered.
They knew, without a doubt, how to promote the value of their stock in trade.
On the 12th we resumed our journey, but due
to a misunderstanding, whether intentional or not I don’t know, we found
ourselves without mounts and without anyone to take care of our baggage. The
only document we had was a letter from the district authorities asking the head
man of each village to help us. At the end of the day we had only traveled 25
kilometers, which was much too little. We decided to go it alone on foot,
provided we were furnished a donkey for the baggage, which we obtained without
great difficulty. At every stage we met with the Communist authorities, but we
sensed a growing animosity the farther we advanced toward the south. We saw
many anti-American inscriptions on village walls, and as the villagers didn’t
perceive any difference between an American and a European, that could very
well have been the reason.
People’s Court at
WuHsiang
At Hung Shui, the ranking communist warned
my Chinese companion that I was likely to have trouble in Wu-Hsiang. What had
happened was that the area I had visited the preceding June had experienced a
stinging defeat by the Nationalists, with 60 killed and 180 wounded on the
Communist side. At the time I had been in the region I was accompanied by a
Communist liaison officer and a Nationalist officer. Now the Communists claimed
that the Nationalist officer had brought about the defeat, and wanted to make
me responsible for it. There was much talk about it in that sector but I did
not attach great importance to it, making the best of the situation.
On August 14, I went out ahead to try to
speed up our pace, and unfortunately I lost sight of the rest of the group.
Nevertheless I continued all alone at a forced march pace for the 27 kilometers
to Wu-Hsiang, where I had been just two months earlier. The Communist
association welcomed me and immediately prepared a meal for me. In the
meantime, I sent my card on to the head man, informing him that I was expected
at Chu Hsien, our warehouse, that I did not have time for a visit, and asking
his help in obtaining a pack animal for the baggage.
After an hour’s wait, he sent me his deputy
and another official who then began discussing my supposed participation in the
June battle. I took him on very directly, saying, “This liaison officer that
you consider the villain, the cause of all your misfortune, was appointed to
accompany me at the insistence of the Communists. Moreover, he had nothing to
do with the work of UNRRA. His only task was to facilitate my entry into the
region.” In addition, I explained that the attack had been a reprisal in
response to the Communist destruction of a railroad, blowing up two bridges and
two locomotives and taking some 20 Nationalist officers prisoner. As these
events had not been reported in their newspapers they did not believe me and
sought to keep me from continuing on my way.
A little while later, my group arrived and
I filled them in on the discussion. I excused myself to the deputy, saying my
work prevented me from staying any longer, and I left on foot. I had hardly
gone out the door when the deputy, in the presence of the head of the UNRRA
team, gave the order to have me arrested in the name of the people, and said
that he would not be responsible if harm came to me because of the people’s
anger. I walked on another 100 meters while behind me soldiers provoked the
villagers and ordered them to pursue me. Children shouted at me to stop, but I
ignored them.
People finally came upon me from various directions
and I found myself surrounded by about 100 persons. I informed them briefly
about the possible consequences of their actions, but they showed no concern,
and cast about for a justification for arresting me. They demanded to see my
papers and pretended that they were not in order. They then ordered me to
retrace my steps. I blurted out that I would only do so if forced under
constraint. That angered them, and they spat in my face, hit my back and tried
to frighten me by working the bolts of their rifles. As I remained calm, that
behavior ceased and I was put in prison from which I emerged an hour later at
the behest of my companions who had vehemently protested my arrest.
We were kept in the courtyard of the
cooperative for two days, soldiers guarding the gates. The public was allowed
to come and view us as they would strange beasts. One after another authorities
came to discuss the matter, and they showed themselves to be very demanding.
They urged me to issue a communiqué for the newspapers in which I was to
disavow and insult the Nationalists. They demanded payment of an indemnity for
those killed and wounded, and a trial in the people’s court to give the
population the opportunity to express their grievances and hear my responses.
Our only course was to carry on a
discussion. As moral force was our only weapon and we had no way to communicate
with a higher authority – who would certainly have disavowed such tactics – all
we could do was play for time. We therefore prepared a statement, and when we
read it to a delegation of the people, they recognized the diplomacy of the
language and made no further demands along that line. In return I agreed to
have a meeting with the people, not as the accused but as a witness -- and as
soon as possible. That last condition did not sit well with them as they wanted
to make careful preparations.
As a result, we were not able to hold the
meeting until the next evening, and it turned out to be the worst such
experience of my life. The harshest questions were posed by the supposed
delegates of the people, who had prepared them in consultation with the
officials. I was interrupted several times in my account of the facts by
insults such as “Down with liars! Down with people who display a sheep on a
sign in front of a shop but sell dog meat inside. Down with spies in the
service of America.” Or, alternately, “We’ve heard enough clever words, what we
want to know is how you are going to pay.”
All of these invectives were hurled at us
in the presence of the officials, who had the effrontery to congratulate me
later for the brilliant way I conducted I pulled myself out of my quandary. I
had kept my composure and succeeded after three hours of debate in sending the
crowd back to their hearths. The tactic that finally disarmed them was raising
my fist along with theirs each time they started with “Down with,” even though
their slogans were only indirectly aimed at me.
The Blessed Mother had protected me, but it
was, alas, the least Christian August 15 (feast of Our Lady) I had ever
experienced.
Chin Hsien
On the 16th we got a pass from the
authorities and assurance that we could travel safely to Chin Hsien. Two
officers and two enlisted men accompanied us. Thus we arrived as prisoners at
Chin Hsien, where Msgr. Kramer, bishop of Luan awaited us impatiently.
Our first business, under duress, was to visit
the headman (the mandarin) who quite flatly reiterated the same demands –
payment of indemnities for the victims of the battle, reimbursement of the
subsidies given to the Nationalist “traitors,” and full disclosure of our
activities. As the situation was quite tense, we acquiesced to the last point,
and requested documents detailing the precise facts supporting the first two
demands.
We never again saw the devious headman, nor
did we receive any documentation. Following our encounter with the mandarin we
did all we could to undermine his status with higher authorities, and I think
we succeeded in doing so.
Getting back to Msgr. Kramer, never had I
seen a more beautiful smile or heard a more comforting outburst as greeted me
when he saw me entering his courtyard. During the week that followed the Nationalist
retreat, Father Veldhuisen and his people suffered the most difficult week of
their lives. Their warehouse was the target of systematic pillaging on a grand
scale. Day and night (up to 10 times on some nights) groups of armed marauders
surged through the doors and windows to seize whatever they wanted. One morning
they discovered clothing strewn about – 150 bundles had been ripped open. If
the two representatives of UNRRA had not been there, we would have had nothing
left of our aid supplies. Because of them, only ten of our packages
disappeared. To escape the distressing memories of these events, all we wanted
was to be rid of this place and to get our supplies quickly to the distribution
center at Luan.
When I revisit these events in my mind, I
cannot help but compare them to those that occurred during the French
Revolution or the Reign of Terror (Commune de Paris, 1792-1794), an unstable
period when the populace, stirred up by their leaders, blindly engaged in
massacres, often without understanding why.
One night, one of our catechists observed
our bishop coming home to the shelter of his domicile. He had dared to express
his hope for a better future for his people. The next day he was assassinated.
Identical dramas had become commonplace in the regions occupied by the
Communists. Nevertheless, the Communists were astute enough never to arrest
anyone for their convictions or their religious orientation; they always
accused them of being “collaborators.” That rubric covered all offenses and
sufficed to evoke the death penalty without need for any other due process, as
long as the people were sufficiently aroused.
Aid Distribution
and Conflict with Communists
Due to Msgr. Kramer’s vigilance our jeep was
not vandalized, but (alas!) the batteries were dead and there wasn’t any
electricity to be had in the neighborhood. We were therefore forced to hitch up
a pair of donkeys to the jeep and thus make our way over hill and dale for 90
kilometers of deplorable roads. The journey required three days, not solely
because of condition of the roads but also because bridges over river crossings
had been flooded and weakened by the summer rains.
But our misfortunes had not ended. Knowing
that we were under the protection of higher echelons, the Communists along the
route decided to target a Christian we had hired to help with the
transportation of the supplies. Following a detailed and illegal search he was
arrested as a collaborator, an oppressor of the people and a fugitive. Despite
our protests he was imprisoned for an entire month.
As soon as we arrived at Luan we notified
the higher authorities of the facts of the case, and they launched numerous
attempts to free him. In the meantime, more charges had accumulated against
him, and contradictions surfaced regarding the procedure to transfer him to
Luan. The affair ended tragically. The Communists had realized their error, and
no doubt were afraid of possible disciplinary measures. The day he was to be
freed we were advised of his so-called suicide by means of American matches! After
all the problems we had already encountered, this turn of events was the last
straw, and we went to Hantan for the sole purpose of lodging a complaint with
the government leaders, who promised an inquiry.
At Luan, our first encounters with the
members of CLARA (the Communist aid organization which was supposed to help us
and collaborate with us) were quite difficult and unsuccessful. Obviously, we
had arrived too early for them; they would have preferred to see us arrive
after our supplies had been unloaded and distributed to the villages. Our
premature arrival upset their plans, and they were not inclined to help us
accomplish our mission. We had to work patiently for three weeks attempting to
make progress with them. Finally, thanks to orders they received from the
government, they got in line with our efforts.
We had arranged to introduce the bishop of
Luan and three priests into the UNRRA team. They would thus be able to
contribute to the aid operations and, above all, resume contact with and help
their Christians. The Communists had no intention of cooperating in that
endeavor and, insidiously, boycotted the work and resumed their campaign of
denigrating the Church. Christian leaders were arrested as collaborators. Some
were fined, and others were imprisoned. Some were killed. The doors and windows
of the churches were torn out to block the return of the priests. Christians
were denied entrance to town on Sundays. During our stay in town there was even
a large public judgment against our Church. On that day, every last Communist
propagandist and student was ordered to gather in the court of the seminary.
For three hours or more the bishop and his priests stood facing the seated
populace and heard themselves accused of the worst sorts of villainy (tearing
the hearts out of patients, plucking the eyes out of infants to make medicines
to be sold for a rich price to poor Chinese, violation of farm women, theft
from the temples, and other ignominies of the same ilk). The entire affair had
been carefully prepared to drive home the point that their presence was
unwelcome. The fine that was assessed had been determined in advance; it
amounted to 50 million Yuan.
The next morning, the bishop and the
priests, deeply discouraged, agreed to give up all their possessions,
understanding that it was impossible to keep anything from the mob. But the Communists
wanted money, and refused to settle for buildings and land. After much back and
forth, I paid a personal visit to the mayor, accompanied by the head of CLARA.
I invoked our friendship, because, as the UNRRA inspector, I was ineligible to
take part in the negotiations. Out of respect for our friendship, the mayor
promised to meet with the representatives of the people and to reduce the fine
to 16 million Yuan, with the possibility of payment in kind. That concession
had apparently been foreseen, as the Communists knew the parties were too far
apart, and were looking for an opportunity or pretext to demonstrate their
magnanimity. Finally, the affair was brought to a conclusion with the priests
thanking the Communists for having so generously consented to take the goods
and furnishings of the Church, their lands and other objects of value, asking
in addition protection for the hospital, the convent and the orphanage – all
still functioning under the direction of valiant Chinese sisters. Under such
conditions, and for the good of the Christians – for whom only a hidden
Christian life was possible – it was necessary, against their will, that the
bishop and priests return with us to Nationalist territory, as their personal
security was also at risk.
And so, with pressure from the Communist
government – which was well aware of the difficulties we had suffered and
wanted us to forget about them as soon as possible – we left Luan on September
24 with the jeep in good repair. The bulk of our contingent left the night
before via donkey carts. But the road was so bad that it took us two days to
travel the 200 kilometers to Hantan in the south of Hopeh Province. I had never
in my life traveled on such a road, chock full of extremely steep hills and
slopes, and one that could only be traversed by jeep. As for the rivers, they
were filled with round boulders which gave us problems. Twice we had to resort
to boats to get across.
Despite our desire to avoid delay, we were
obligated to remain in Hantan for three days, welcomed as Communist princes by
the government which was eager to have us forget our bad experiences, offering
apology after apology. We took advantage of the situation to object to their
violation of the agreement signed in March, and to demand an amendment to the
two clauses that forced us to take responsibility for transport in their
territory and to abide by their code. The latter point was the most important,
as it was impossible for us to obey, as it stipulated that the judgment of the
people was the best means to relieve oppression and establish a true democracy.
After multiple negotiation sessions in the
course of which the Communists accepted all the concessions we required, we
left their capitol, which the Nationalists occupied just three days later. The
administrative offices had already been removed to neighboring villages for
fear of bombardment. They had therefore been eager to have us leave. That
afternoon we made 175 kilometers in one stretch, which was “very good going” in
China. That evening we were at last in the open air of Nationalist territory at
Shih Chuang. What we read in the newspapers there greatly surprised us. Over
the last few months the press in the Communist territory said nothing of the
advances the Nationalists had made. We knew nothing of the liberation of Sui
Yuan, of the attack on Kalgan and of the progress in Honan and Shantung
provinces. Nevertheless, the Communist counter-attacks prevented us from
continuing our journey for several days, until October 4, to be exact, at which
time we loaded our jeep on a flat car pulled by our train to Taiyan, which we
reached that same evening.
WITNESS TO THE
FIRE OF FAITH (August 19, 1946)
The apostolic vicariate of Luan, in
southeast Shansi Province, was writing one of the most beautiful chapters in
the story of the perseverance of Chinese Catholics in the face of Communist
persecution. Over the past year the
mission had been completely occupied by the Reds, who had established their
administration, their schools and their systems of propaganda in all the towns
and villages. One after another the priests had to flee, some of them after
suffering a long imprisonment, others having had to pay fantastic fines for
imaginary offenses. In six months the mission was deprived of its Chinese
clergy who were hounded and watched wherever they went. They took temporary
refuge among the Christians, but it was impossible for them to stay. Despite
all manner of attacks designed to stamp out their faith, the Christians
continued to demonstrate their pride in being sons of the most powerful king of
all.
In one extremely strong Christian
community, fervent and well-populated, the authorities attempted to suppress
all religious gatherings for prayer or celebration. But the Christians refused
to accept the interdiction and, by virtue of the principal of religious liberty
in a government of the people, they declared (among other things) that the
entire group would protest the molestation of any single Christian among them.
The Communists then decided that on certain days they would sleep in the church
to keep the Christians from holding evening prayers. But the Christians met
outside the front doors of the church, and sang their hymns at the top of their
voices. On the feast of the Blessed Sacrament, without a priest and in spite of
the interdict, they refused to give up their annual procession and instead
promenaded their sacred images with great pomp and devotion through the village
streets. On the feast of the Assumption many of them had their rosaries and
prayer books confiscated, or were taken to prison for having prayed too openly.
But the most beautiful event reported to us
was the celebration of the Assumption in the cathedral. As a result of our
efforts several European missionaries were permitted to return to the central
city in Luan with authorization to live there. On the evening of August 14,
several thousand Christians from neighboring districts arrived to take part in
the celebration. They were required to obtain passports, but difficult as it
was, that formality did not diminish their ardor. Nevertheless, there were
villagers who had requested passes to attend the celebration who were forbidden
from traveling. In other villages or districts the presiding authorities simply
eliminated all authorizations. In one community near Luan Christians were told
they would be beaten if they went to the city.
At 9 p.m. police came to find out what it
was that brought so many people to the Cathedral. They were told that the
people came for a variety of reasons, among them to attend the ceremonies. The
police then started examining their passes and prolonged their inspection of
the premises until 3 a.m., after which they retired, taking with them the
papers of 50 men and 30 women. Despite those annoyances and red tape, the morning
celebration was unforgettable in its simplicity, and the devotion and
attendance of the people. Almost a thousand communion hosts were distributed,
after which the people dispersed. Those whose papers had been confiscated were
locked up for half an hour before being released.
The Mission of
Hungtung
When I first came to Hungtung in August
1939, the jurisdiction was an apostolic prefecture, and was not elevated to the
status of a diocese until 1951, when the apostolic prefect was ordained a
bishop. In 1946, the mission had been occupied by the Communists in the months
of March and April, but without suffering great harm. The Chinese priests and
my two Belgian colleagues, Father Keymolen and Father Wenders, came through
safe and sound, without too much material loss. The Reds took their money, but
did not pillage the house. Nevertheless, that temporary occupation did nothing
to improve communication.
The Reds destroyed almost 200 kilometers of
railroad tracks at a time when the territory was being reoccupied by the
Nationalist troops. The Nationalists were more disciplined and organized than the
provincial troops of Yen Hsi Shan, who were often disorderly. Monsignor Kramer,
a friend of mine, was bishop of Luan, a diocese to the east of Hungtung that
was occupied by the Communists. He told me confidentially that he prayed daily
that Generalissimo Chiang Kai Chek would not give the order for a cease-fire
because he would have a better chance of returning to his diocese if the
Nationalists took over.
It was 350 kilometers from Taiyuan, the
main city of the province, where I lived, to Hungtung. Before the arrival of
the Communists we could make the trip in six hours. But starting in the summer
the Communists, who came from Yennan in Shensi province, their bastion for 10
years, came to Shansi. They occupied the center of the province, wanting to
keep open the west to east route. To facilitate these comings and goings they
built a bridge over the Fen River, but cut the railroad track from north to
south.
That posed a problem for travel from
Taiyuan, as one now had to go first to Peking and make a big loop before
arriving at Hungtung. Getting there by airplane was possible only with the help
of American officers working in the pacification teams led by General George C.
Marshall. I had asked one of them to take some correspondence and money to our
apostolic prefect there.
My beloved mission had suffered greatly
from the Communist occupation that summer of 1947. There were no killings to
mourn, but the annoyances and red tape went on ceaselessly. The Communists
became more and more anti-Christian.
In the neighboring provinces, in Swantse,
Mongolia, for example, a battalion of Communist soldiers attacked the oldest
mission there on December 10, 1946. They killed all the Christians who had
defended the mission which the Communists razed. The old bishop, Monsignor
Desmedt, who had been imprisoned the year before and now was living in Peking,
maintained a courageous stand and declared, “We will rebuild.”
In Shunteh, in south Hopeh province, where
the Polish Lazarist Fathers had developed a magnificent mission the previous 10
years, everything was still going well when I visited there in March 1946. But I have since learned that all the priests
and religious were thrown into prison. It is said that the procurator
(director) was burned to death. The report of these events was brought to
Peking by Father Scuniewicz, the celebrated ophthalmologist, who made the
journey by bicycle in small stages.
News from a Nationalist source reported
that at Hantan, which I had visited twice the year before, and at Taming in the
south of Hopeh, Christians had been declared outlaws, and their homes were
ordered to be burned. I think that the Church is in its last days in territory
occupied by the Communists. Shouldn’t we mount a crusade against them?
Our own Hungtung mission finds itself in
the middle of this stew. With some 30 priests the presiding prelate, the
Pro-prefect Monsignor Francois Han, is attempting to continue a form of apostolic
work. In the city or its environs the basic endeavors continue: the regional major
seminary, thanks to the effective efforts of Father Wenders and Father Keymolen;
the minor seminary in a temporary building in town; a middle school; a small
convent of sisters with a novitiate for future sisters; a dispensary where
Father Keymolen performs marvels; also an elementary school outside of town.
All of that has held up well in the face of all that has happened. After eight
years of war and Japanese occupation we could have hoped for a time of peaceful
rebuilding; but alas! Several months of peace in 1946 were followed by bloody
battles and seven weeks of Communist occupation.
The major seminary, the middle school and
the parochial school, restarted in 1946,
made it through the Communist ordeal. Fortunately, the occupation coincided
with school vacations, so classes had not yet begun. It required all the forbearance
of the staff, and especially of the rector, Father Wenders, to keep the
Communists at a distance and get them to respect the bit of privacy that the
seminarians required. During the occupation Father Wenders spent the majority
of his time living, eating, studying and praying with his seminarians in just
one room, thus minimizing the danger of a permanent intrusion.
One seminarian, who had returned to his
parents’ home in the mountains to the east during the vacation period, was
seized by the Communists, accused of being a spy for the (Nationalist)
government. He was stripped of his clothing and dragged, naked, on his back by
a draft animal. He suffered his torment until his father promised never to send
him back to the seminary.
Father Andre Ly, who was at the Episcopal
residence when the Communists entered the town, was called out for investigation
in the midst of a group of Christians. As he had worked for the Nationalist
army during the war – which was a crime in the eyes of the Communists – he was
seized with fear and fainted when he heard his name called out. Fortunately his
companions had the presence of mind to let it be known that he had been ill for
a long time. Thus, after a few days, he was able to escape and reach safety in
Linfen.
Father Benoit Ly, a brave pastor of our
eastern Christians – fervent mountain dwellers – also caused us grave concern,
as we heard rumors and reports one after another of his imprisonment, his
torture, his death and finally, his liberation. In fact, he had been with his
Christian parishioners the entire time, despite the dangers.
Upon their arrival in town, the Communists
– who had spies everywhere – soon learned that the mission had buried what
little Nationalist currency it had in the vegetable garden. As the Communists
had their own currency for the region, they considered the Nationalist currency
illegal for all who lacked special permission to own it. The last fiscal
resources of the mission were therefore confiscated. By good fortune I was
working in the southeast in Communist territory at the time, trying to restore
a group of Dutch Franciscan fathers and their bishop to their mission. Having
caught wind of the confiscation, I was able to send the mission some Communist
currency that I had procured on the black market in exchange for letters of
credit, and that money enabled the mission to sustain itself for several weeks.
During their occupation, the Communists
forced 10,000 peasants of the region to work without pay to destroy the walls
of the city, the railroad tracks and the bridges along the provincial roads.
The seminary had to shelter more than 1,000 of those who were working under
forced labor conditions.
In the eastern section of our mission under
Communist occupation, the parishes that had been left intact in the past were
subjected to total pillaging, occasionally including such things as doors and
windows. All this was done under the false pretense of repaying past debts, or
on the no less odious pretext that the mission had trafficked with the
Japanese. On the latter subject, I recall a recent incident at a mission in
Hopeh province where, during the Japanese occupation, the foreign missionaries
had helped many soldiers of the Communist guerillas to escape the grasp of the
Japanese. That mission had to undergo the process of making “restitution”
imposed on all influential groups or individuals, once the Communists felt
themselves to be strong enough. During the proceedings the mission was accused
of dealing with the enemy, using as evidence that they were able to help the
Communists escape due to their good relationship with the Japanese. Those poor
missionaries were now in Communist prison.
At the beginning of October Nationalist
troops from Linfen advancing north to Huohsien liberated our mission and ended
the nightmare. But after that it was the west that had to suffer. The church in
Hsihsien, the only church building that survived the Japanese occupation
intact, and several others in the western mountains, were occupied by the
Communists who, fearing an attack from the southeast by Nationalist forces,
chose to take up positions in advance by occupying several mountain villages.
The four priests residing in that district hadn’t yet been able to contact us.
We hoped they were still at liberty. At that juncture Father Mattias Keou
returned from his eastern parish at Ma-Chia-Chieh. He was able to escape in
time, but lost all his parish assets and personal effects.
The economic well-being of our mission was
in a precarious state as prices, which had remained reasonably stable during
the better part of the war, had shot skyward during 1946, doing their part to
make of China one of the most expensive countries in the world, and I think
that Shansi was one of the provinces where the cost of living was most
expensive.
While economic transactions were extremely
difficult, bank transfers were even more so. I had nevertheless been able to
transport to Hungtung half of the annual subsidy from Rome in two big suitcases
full of paper money. The mission will therefore pay its most pressing debts and
improve their status, which until now had been very poor. Despite the
temperature of 10 degrees below zero (centigrade), the stoves had not yet been
fired up, and the seminarians had to content themselves with a diet composed
mainly of corn. Their health and that of our priests had suffered greatly as a
consequence.
Le Shansi en 1948
To understand what was going on it is
necessary to have a general ides of the political and military situation.
Military speaking, we were in the presence
of three armies. In the center, and slightly to the south, occupying a territory
of five or six million people, is the
provincial army of about 300,000 men in the pay of the last Chinese warlord,
Yen Si Shan. An absolute dictator, he rules his people with an iron hand,
leading them firmly to their death or to communism. Governor for 30 years, he
has under his orders a council of thirteen who have to obey him without
question, as he does not allow contradiction. Curiously, however, he is
extremely hospitable, and attaches great importance to outside opinions,
especially those of foreigners.
Three or four organizations permit him to
exercise tight control on every one of his subjects, and political deviation is
usually punished by death. Previously, following the Chinese custom, executions
were conducted outside the south gate, but now, to make more of an impression,
they are staged in the provincial stadium, just next door to our offices, providing
us from time to time with macabre spectacles.
The male population aged 18 to 40 must
enroll under his military flag but, alas, military training is practically
non-existent. Recruits are given a rifle and a few grenades and on they go to
the front. The central government provides the soldiers’ pay through the
governor who distributes it in dribs and drabs with various deductions here and
there with the result that the troops receive less than half of what the
central army soldiers get. The male population having fled the territory, we
are headed forward a famine in the spring. Prices are already double those of
the south of the province.
To the south, with a bridgehead leaning
toward a juncture with the provincial group, lie the armies of Hu Tsung Nan,
one of the better young generals of the Nationalist government. The troops are
well trained and evidence a positive morale. They are not numerous enough,
however, to do more than to occupy their current territory, the Prefecture of
Kiangchow (Monsignor Pessers) and a stretch along the north-south railway
across our Prefecture (diocese). Their occupation ends at the very north of our
mission, cut off from the provincial army by the Communists.
The Communists occupy all the mountains to
the east and west of the province, along the provincial river, the Fen Ho. As
they control the granaries of Shansi, their life is not difficult. But they
lack textiles and medicines. Their troops are very militant, audacious and
well-led, but totally lacking in moral code. All the young people from age 16
to age 40 must belong to the militia or the civil guards. Officials at all
levels, from the smallest village to the inter-provincial government, are
proven Communists who strictly obey the orders from Yenan (which in fact come
from Moscow). Individual liberty is non-existent, everything is organized,
regimented, decided in advance by the “brains” of the party.
The people are obliged to arrive promptly
for all general assemblies, where decisions have been made in advance. A
semblance of parliamentary procedure is conducted to approve the party’s
decisions. When the government finally occupies these mountainous regions the
only way to liberate the population will be to displace all the officials.
The political situation fairly well
reflects the military life. Taxes are extremely heavy. There is no commerce
within the province or across provincial borders except for the south under the
Nationalist military regime. There are no commercial transactions between the
Communist zone and the other (Nationalist). The civil administration everywhere
is under the rule of the military and it is often difficult to distinguish between
the two. It’s fortunate for the south which, thanks to the Nationalists, has
seen a reduction of the harmful influence of the provincial government, for its
part always officially under the orders of Governor Yen Si Shan.
What does the future have in store for us?
It appears that this year will be even more
painful for North China than the years of Japanese occupation. Fighting is in
full swing, and in the last two weeks more than 15,000 have been killed in the
center of this province alone. The fact that the Church has held on despite
such torment is a providential miracle. The Christians of the Communist regions
have been subjected to the yoke, forced to observe their Christianity in hiding
or to flee. Many have taken refuge in the towns along the north-south route
where the nationalist or provincial troops are most numerous. But they swell
the ranks of refugees and unemployed.
The Moscow meeting in March will deal with
the problem, we think, as after all nationalist China has the support of the
United States, and if General George C. Marshall has officially decided to
withdraw the American troops stationed in the port cities it’s above all to
have a free hand when he goes to Moscow.
Finally, let me report on two conversations
I have had with generals who have influence with the government. Several weeks
ago in Peiping (Beijing), a top-notch philosopher presented the internal
problem of China as follows: On the one hand Communism full of hatred, on the
other hand a scornful Kuomintang. What to do? The response was on point: The
solution lay with a third party which would bring love and agreement based
firmly in trust and honesty. The other conversation, here in Shansi, was
between an eminent provincial head of government and a representative of the
Nationalist forces. The latter made an appeal for unity in order to save the
Kuomintang Party. The provincial head replied that it was no longer a question
of saving the Kuomintang but of saving all who were not followers of Communism,
that’s what was in play. It is in taking sides with that response that I
express the hope that China and the world will understand the problem with
equal acuity.
Voyage to Chagar
and Suiyuan
As I had been charged with seeing that the
distribution of UNRRA goods went smoothly in the northern provinces of China, I
had to do my best to make sure our supplies actually reached those who needed
them most.
Our stock of flour held great importance,
and served in general as a means of exchange to pay poor Chinese for their
labor on public projects such as repairing roadways and constructing guard
rails, etc. These bags of flour, alas, represented a temptation for those who
noticed our stores. Thus it was that I had to look into the disappearance of
60,000 bags of flour in the Tientsin region worth thousands of yuan. The
employee who had arranged the sale had feathered his own nest in the
transaction, and had already been incarcerated as the sale was supposed to have
been done in public and was to have been supervised by our staff.
I left Peking (Beijing) on Nov. 10, 1946,
and headed by jeep toward Kalgan in the northwest province of Chagar,
accompanied by my Chinese counterpart. Along the way we chatted, which gave me
the opportunity to fill him in on some interesting ideas about our missionary
work in these parts. We stopped off at the Suanhua mission where I introduced
him to several priests with whom he could make contact in the future. I spoke
to the religious authorities about explaining to him a little more about their
charitable activities in the hope that thus they could be better aided in their
work.
Once arrived at Kalgan the next afternoon,
we made contact with the civil authorities, all of whom were disposed to help
us. As was often the case, the authorities who expected much from us believed
themselves obligated to invite us to dine. The new governor, General Fu Tsuo Yi,
was very popular. He had just led a lightning campaign in Communist territories
where he had retaken 18 counties in less than a month. He was an open and simple
man, dressed like all of his soldiers, without any insignia. He helped and
supported the work of the Church with goodwill. I had long conversations with
him, and he provided us with the necessary means to launch our distribution: an
office, a storehouse, a dormitory for our personnel and a residence for the
foreign experts.
The local clergy also welcomed me, as did
the Scheut Fathers, my good friends, who had a mission there. As they were at
the forefront of social progress in Mongolia, of which Kalgan was the port of
entry, I asked them to help us organize a distribution of used clothing to
several thousand poor peasants in the valley that led to Siwantse, where Bishop
Desmedt resided. Winter was coming. The thermometer was already falling below
10 degrees at night. The poor people had no opportunity to buy material for
years, so clothing was eagerly anticipated.
The Chinese priests of the Disciples of the
Lord came to see me. They hoped for our help and explained their plan to open a
secondary school. They were followed by the superior of the Missionary
Canonesses of St. Augustine who had just arrived from Peking and wanted to tell
me about their plan to open a small hospital. She asked my advice on getting
help from UNRRA.
I had to be very prudent in presenting
these plans to my Chinese counterparts because for the most part they were not
Christians and did not understand that I thought of nothing but helping these
missionary endeavors, which were, by the way, well respected.
I left Kalgan the morning of Nov. 15,
taking with me a Chinese Christian, former student at the tannery in Liege in
1920. He had a son who was a Marist Brother, and he agreed to accompany me on
my trip by jeep to Kuisui in Suiyuan Province. The arrangement worked out as he
needed to return to that region and, for my part, I didn’t like traveling
alone, thus I had a companion. The trip went without incident until toward 3
p.m. We had already come 200 kilometers, which wasn’t bad given the condition
of the roads and the unstable bridges. We were in an isolated and deserted
region and had just cleared the mountains that separated us from Mongolia.
My jeep, which had already seen service in India
and Burma, arrived in Shanghai via Chungking. Thirty thousand kilometers of bad
roads had rendered its springs in a pitiful state. At 20 kilometers before the
little town of Tsining, the clamp that held the spring to the chassis broke off
and one of the blades of the spring ended up crosswise, impeding forward
progress. We had to find peasants who had the necessary levers to put things
together again so we could resume our journey at low speed and with great care.
The clamp being broken, it was only the weight of the chassis that held things
in place. At last, at 7 p.m., we arrived at a small inn where we spent the
night.
The next day, Nov. 16, 1946, I left the
jeep in the hands of my Chinese Christian companion. He was willing to take
charge of improvising the repair of the jeep. As there was no garage that could
do the job, he had to assemble a mechanic, a blacksmith and two or three
soldiers whom he would feed for two days to make sure the task was
accomplished.
Meanwhile, I went by train to Kuisui 170
kilometers away where I was the guest of the bishop, Msgr. Morel of the Scheut
Fathers. We had already met, and he promised to let me have the services of one
of his priests, Father Florizoone, a native of Brussels, who accompanied me to
Peking.
There, with the engineers in charge of the
Irrigation Commission, we planned a construction project involving four new
flood control complexes, each comprising 15 metallic sluice gates. This project
would enable the irrigation of 100 million mou (approximately 16.5 million
acres), and reduce from 45 to four the number of irrigation canals that are
connected to the Yellow River, thus reducing the amount of erosion of the canal
banks.
There is much to be done in these regions.
The authorities are asking for almost half a billion yuan to repair the roads
and public works buildings, and for emergency aid to the populace. The
Communists left the area a short time ago, and in stopping by at the Catholic
mission of Tsining we discovered the consequences of their presence: on the eve
of their departure they set fire to five churches in reprisal for a defeat inflicted
on them by Christian soldiers.
It seems that in Mongolia the only way the
Church can avoid the misfortune such as it suffered the previous year of
occupation is open warfare by Christians upon the bandit Communists.
A priest with whom I travelled to Shansi
last December was forced to remain in a Christian region near Fengchen to
protect the Christians and the sisters during the Communist occupation. They
made his life impossible, and he underwent significant maltreatment. Last
summer they kept him awake for five days, preventing him from going to bed
under false pretexts. On the fourth day of his ordeal, when he had managed to
lie down, a Chinese came to call him out. The good Father was so exasperated
that he picked up his old slipper and rapped the man over the head. That man
did not return. But two days later the priest was beaten to a pulp.
Later, after a Benediction of the Holy
Sacrament, he was called to the confessional. Despite the swelling on his head,
he responded to the call. There, to his great surprise, he found a penitent who
had not gone to confession for 20 years, but whose heart was touched by the
priest’s heroic resistance toward the Communists.
Returning to Peking we made a stop at
Tsining to visit Msgr. Fan, a fine figure of a Chinese bishop. His diocese was
land-rich, which permitted him to render aid to eight neighboring dioceses
during the war, a fine example of solidarity. In that corner of Mongolia it was
easy to see the progress brought about by missionaries, as the proportion of
Christians to non-Christians was much greater. The Christian villages were
better maintained, better constructed, some of them even having electricity, furnished
by the Church. This mission was at an altitude of 1,400 meters, and the
temperature was already at minus 15 when we stopped there. The cost of coal was
140 yuan for half a kilo. It was necessary therefore to dress warmly,
preferably with sheepskin.
On the pretext of improving the efficiency
of the motor, a self-styled mechanic changed one of the spark plugs on my jeep,
to my misfortune, as it turned out, as my fuel consumption rose to such a rate
that I would not have been able to reach Kalgan. Fortunately, I was able to
re-establish the status quo ante, by having the original spark plug reinserted.
Once underway it was the coupling in front
of the spring that played tricks on me. We were eight kilometers from the town
of Shang Yi where there was an important mission. This time we arrived on time
as we managed to make the necessary repairs ourselves. By cutting the rivets
and replacing them with nuts and bolts we made an emergency repair which
enabled us to travel the 120 kilometers which still separated us from Kalgan.
We had to reduce our speed to 20 kmh, as the road was bad.
We had to stay at Chang Pei for two days as
guest of the head man, who was able to furnish us with a little gasoline. It’s
one of the “joys” of China not to be able to find this fuel, even in a town of
10,000 inhabitants. When we stopped at another town we were offered gasoline
for $3 a gallon in American money, but we judged that too expensive. Finally an
order arrived from the provincial government to facilitate our return whatever
the cost. We were 16 km. from Kalgan. In the time it took to wash my hands we
were reunited with my UNRRA colleagues, as I wanted to be back in Peking the
next day.
On Nov. 25 we took the train for Peking.
The tracks, more than 60 km of which had been destroyed by the Communists, had
just been repaired, and it seemed best to take advantage of that fact. The
destruction inflicted by the Reds was equally grave to that of the Russians
when they evacuated Manchuria. For example, the central electrical plant of Hia
Hua Yuan, which furnished the power and light to the towns and most of the coal
mines of Chagar, was systematically destroyed. This plant produced 40,000
kilowatts. The Nationalist authorities hoped to restore it to one-fourth of its
original capacity. What a pity!
We were also surprised to find that the cartons
of milk that we had deposited in Kalgan two months ago were for sale
everywhere. The Reds, instead of taking the milk to charitable organizations,
had sold it to merchants. I even saw a guard house constructed of wood from the
milk cases.
I stayed two days at Peking only because I
needed to return to Taiyuan to file my reports. At the airport I came upon
Cardinal Tien who was going to Tsingtao. We took advantage of our meeting to
converse for an hour, and he confirmed his desire to have a Samiste (Father
Hanquet’s Order of Priests) in his diocese.
Back to Peking
At the end of 1946 it became more and more
evident that our province of Shansi and its capital of Taiyuan was about to be
completely occupied by the Reds. Under these conditions it was wise to plan to
move to Peking to be able to continue our work in the four northern provinces
which comprised our field of operations.
Communications between Taiyuan and Peking
(two days by train) were getting more and more difficult. Moreover, we could
not count solely on our own transportation by air. We were at the end of the
line. One of our aircraft had caught fire just as I was about to board it for
one last mission in Taiyuan.
During the year 1947 our office occupied
quarters rented from the Austrian embassy. I and my director, Harold Lund,
rented an upper-class residence north of the Forbidden City, where we found the
Chinese-style comforts to be quite agreeable after the hardships of the months
in Shansi.
Until November, except for a few brief
forays on missions of distribution, I devoted my time to administrative tasks.
As the head of distribution for UNRRA in North China, I was given a return
ticket to Europe after my two years of work. I would also receive the blessing
of returning to Belgium to see my family, which I had left 10 years earlier.
Transportation by ship was hard to get, and
I had to accompany a sick colleague. I was obliged to embark on Dec. 8 on the
Sir John Franklin, a Danish cargo ship which was supposed to deliver us to
Italy a month later. In reality the voyage took four months, giving me the
opportunity to discover some 10 countries at leisure during the various stages
of the trip.
But that’s another story!