THE DIOCESE OF HUNG HOA
Canonically established in 1895 by Pope Leo XIII, Hung Hoa is geographically
the largest diocese in Vietnam. Its territory covers the nine northernmost
provinces of the country, which are located along the China and Laos
borders. Catholics number over 200,000 among a population of 10 million.
Almost all Catholics live by small-scale farming.
[Religious Vocations]
The Episcopal See has been vacant since the death of the late Ordinary,
Bishop Nguyen Phung Hieu, in 1992. The diocese’s administration has been
entrusted to the Reverend Dinh Tien Cung, who also serves as the rector of
the Cathedral. Older clergy was trained in the Pre-Vatican II years of the
30s, 40’s and early 50s; younger ones were privately tutored in their
preparation for the priesthood by local pastors during the years of
oppressive Communist rule in the 50s, 60s, 70s and 80s.
For the first time since 1954, one priest was permitted by the government in 1995 to go abroad
for studies in Canon Law in Rome. The diocese is now staffed by only 18
priests including the Episcopal Administrator despite his poor health, and a
98 year old priest who is serving as pastor in a remote and mountainous area
far away from civilization.
Ten are full time pastors (acknowledged by the
government). Some are responsible for several parishes serving between
15,000 to 20,000 faithful; parish boundaries encompass from a dozen to over
twenty parishes and missions.
Four others are weekend pastors authorized by
the government to serve in a parish on a temporary basis to be renewed every
six months. They are only allowed to minister at their assigned parishes on
weekends while living in the diocesan pastoral and administrative center
that serves as a safe haven for the “sans abris” (homeless) clergy and
seminarians.
By the conclusion of this mission, two of them had not had
their temporary residency permits renewed; this means they are “jobless”.
Their next good luck will have to result from “costly and laborious
negotiations” between the church and local authorities. Ministry of the
permanent deaconate is not customary in Vietnam.
On weekends, a pastor
usually celebrates the Eucharist at about 8 of his parishes and missions,
commuting from one to another on motorcycles along bumpy dirt roads and
across ferries, which makes traveling arduous and time consuming. The
diocese’s privately owned motorized means of transportation terminated with
the departure of all Missions Estrangers de Paris priests in 1955. Priests
including the bishop traveled within the diocese mostly on bicycles. The
diocese received a donation of two Peugeot motorcycles from the Paris-based
Missions Estrangers in 1978; three additional ones arrived from Paris in
1978. By the mid 1980s, priests were seen riding Japanese made motorcycles
on their pastoral rounds.
In addition to Sunday Masses, other pastoral
cares for the sick and the dying, parish organizations and overseeing repair
work on century-old church buildings would take up the remainder of the
pastors’ week. Catechesis to this mass of faithful is most of the time
impossible. I wonder how much time they can find to prepare their homilies.
Four seminarians having completed their theological studies in June 1997
were awaiting government authorization to be ordained to the priesthood.
Ten others are in either philosophy or theology studies at the seminary of
Hanoi. Every two years, this seminary serving 8 dioceses in the Episcopal
province of Hanoi is allowed to admit a new freshman class of about 120.
The diocese of Hung Hoa is allocated 10 slots for the upcoming freshman
class in the Fall of 1998. Over 100 students are being tested to compete
for these 10 slots pending government’s sanctions on each individual
admission. Thirteen men are sent to the South for their philosophical and
theological studies, which are “privately” arranged and taught by faculty
chosen from various male religious orders in Saigon. Others are enrolled in
the University of Hanoi and local community colleges. These “free standing”
seminarians are partially supported by the diocese in the hope that the
authorities will allow them to enter a seminary or religious institute some
day in the future.
The Sisters of the Holy Cross is the only religious congregation of about 80
members in the diocese. Non-resident candidates and younger members attend
local high schools or community colleges where they usually specialize in
preschool, primary education and languages.
The community was founded in
the early 50’s, several years prior to the communist rule in North Vietnam.
Members who entered before the late 80’s had no formal education. Formation
of new members is found to be challenging to the leadership and formation
teams. As a result, a few have been entrusted to formation houses of other
diocesan religious communities in the South; these young sisters now serve
on the formation teams at their Mother house in Son Tay. Their ministries
primarily consist of teaching catechism to children in parishes (without
pay) and running four preschool facilities throughout the diocese. They
farm for their own food supplies.
[Religious Education]
The diocese is continuously training 60 master catechists who are
predominantly farmers. Their formation programs and commissioning to local
parishes are planned around their times away from farming. When they are
not occupied by planting or harvesting seasons, these catechists gather a
few times each year for a one-week or two-week on-going catechetical
formation program, followed by their commissioning to local parishes to
train fellow catechists who number about one thousand throughout the
diocese.
Master catechists received basic training in catechesis; everyone
is acutely conscious that their knowledge base needs to be deepened and
expanded. In May 97, the diocese came up with funds to pay for 12 master
catechists to attend a twelve month catechetical formation program directed
by a Jesuit in Saigon.
The program was tailored to meet the needs of about
40 master catechists from several dioceses in North Vietnam; by mid July the
authorities discovered it and caught the whole operation in full session.
Students were arrested and detained for two weeks, then released with stern
warning of more severe consequences if they would commit the same offense
again. The program director is still detained in jail.
Religion classes
are crowded; many a time churches have no pews or kneelers, while children
sit on the church floor or in the churchyard to receive instruction. For
many, neither parents nor parish can afford textbooks; they therefore have
to hand copy the week’s lesson to bring home. Children crawl on the floor,
which serves both as seat and desk, to tackle the task of writing.
The only
Catechism Text available is the one compiled by a diocese in the South; it
consists of two levels (First Communion and Confirmation). Scriptures and
prayer components are obviously integrated in the lesson format; however
abstract concepts and language are still very evident in the Questions and
Answers parts that children have to memorize. Teaching aides such as
posters, pictures, or audio and video tapes are unknown to them.
Many children are not going to school, but this is not by their own choice;
their parents are financially unable to pay for their tuition. Catholic
families are usually large in size; feeding the whole family is a real
struggle, let alone paying tuition for their primary or high school
education. It is scary to see this mass of young Catholics at risk of
becoming unskilled and uneducated adults in the future. It is a threat not
only to their material well-being but also to their faith as well as to the
church in Vietnam.
Boys aspiring to the priesthood or religious orders seem to fare better than
girls. For the former, families and their pastor make coordinated efforts
to financially assist them in completing their high school education, while
the latter ones have less priority as they might be needed at home or in the
rice field; yet admission to any woman religious congregation requires high
school diploma.
[Catholic Life]
The church is the center of people’s lives even in parishes or missions
where their pastors are not in residence. People gather daily for morning
and evening prayer, sometimes for over one hour each. Children are required
by parents to be present too. When the pastors happen to come unannounced
even in the middle of the day, people leave rice fields or homes to gather
in the church within 30 minutes for Mass at the sounds of church bells or
drum beats.
Sunday Masses are usually celebrated on the grounds outside the
church to accommodate a much larger number of people coming from surrounding
parishes and missions. Confession lines are endless every time the pastor
comes into town.
Coming out of a group session for the Eucharist at about
8:00 p.m. one evening, I saw something like a big baby all curled up being
lifted above the crowd around the confessional that was set up on the front
steps of the parish house. A moment later, the same scene reemerged
followed by the priest. Communion was distributed to just one person.
A
youngster exited holding a tiny kerosene lamp in his hand; sitting on the
bicycle saddle was an elderly lady in her late 80s. She was being
supported by one hand of the walking bicycle conductor while he navigated
the bike with the other hand. The lady is paralyzed and bed ridden but
occasionally insists to be brought to church in such a fashion.
My heart
got heavier as my eyes followed the cortege gradually disappearing into the
dark night... Suddenly I experienced a powerful sensation that Christ was
so vividly present entwining the lives of these people with those of the
Sisters in my religious family through His Divine Compassion. He indeed
touched deeply the core of my being...
They [...the youngster and the elderly lady] straddled on a 3 ft wide rough
and bumpy dirt road on which I stumbled quite a few times only making a
distance of about half a mile with the help of a bright flashlight. Later
that night I conferred with the pastor on the use of wheelchairs; the
response was that it would cost over 100 US dollars, which was beyond the
means of the parish. By the way, there are at least two similar cases in
almost every parish; the pastor’s octogenarian father is in the same boat
and transported around in the same fashion. There is no other choice.
Catechumens and coming-home Catholics are numerous. The entire H’Mong tribe
converted to Catholicism several years ago as a result of their listening to
instructions on Radio Veritas aired from Manila and from another Protestant
broadcast. Should a “comrade” (Government agent) decide to confiscate their
short wave radio, they would fiercely and fearlessly fight back to retain
their cherished property.
Scattered in the high mountains along Lao's
borders, everyone - old and young, adults and children - gathers every 6
months to make a pilgrimage of 3 days to the closest parish church of the
centenarian pastor to receive the sacraments of Reconciliation and
Eucharist. It takes them 12 days to walk through mountains and jungles each
way. Their offerings usually come in the form of a pair of chickens they
raise at home. In return, the pastor finds ways to feed them and send them
home with some provisions for their return journey. Stories have been
circulated that the pastor would have everything given to him as gifts, even
a dozen mangos, sold in the city market for cash to be spent for these
highland faithful of his.
The diocese has no sources of income, being stripped of properties
generating income in the early days of the Regime in the 50’s and given the
fact that the majority of the faithful are struggling to survive on their
meager rice crops as described above. A lucky parish collects a few hundred
US dollars in yearly Sunday Offerings; consequently offertory assessments
are unthinkable. Small grants from the Propaganda Fide help defray some of
the costs incurred (each priest is entitled to 3 bottles of altar wine per
year), and etc. Clergy receives no salary at all.