ASIAN AND PACIFIC
PRESENCE: ARMONY IN FAITH
UNITED STATES CONFERENCE OF CATHOLIC BISHOPS
Notes
Bibliography
Appendix A: Map of the Continent of Asia [available in print edition]
Appendix B: Map of South, Southeast, and East Asia [available in print edition]
Appendix C: Map of the Pacific Islands [available in print edition]
Appendix D: Asian Countries and Territories
Appendix E: Pacific States
This
"being Asian" is best discovered and affirmed not in confrontation
and opposition, but in the spirit of complementarity and harmony. In this
framework of complementarity and harmony, the Church can communicate the Gospel
in a way that is faithful both to her own Tradition and to the Asian soul.
—The Church in Asia (Ecclesia in Asia), no. 6
Dear brothers and sisters: In a spirit of heartfelt pastoral concern for
the Asian and Pacific people in our midst, we Catholic bishops of the United
States write this statement to all Catholics and especially to our Asian and
Pacific brothers and sisters to recognize and affirm with loving assurance
their presence and prominence in the Lord's house. We pray that this pastoral
statement will facilitate a fuller appreciation of their communities in our
local churches and will encourage Asian and Pacific Catholics to take on active
leadership roles in every level of church life.
In our solicitude as pastors, we hope that, by their vital participation, our
Asian and Pacific sisters and brothers will help the Church in the United
States shine as a sacrament of unity and universality. The post-synodal
document The Church in Asia (Ecclesia in Asia) promulgated in 1999 by
Pope John Paul II in New Delhi, India, echoes the Second Vatican Council as it
describes the Church:
In accordance
with the Father's eternal design, the Church, foreshadowed from the world's
beginning, prepared for in the old Covenant, instituted by Christ Jesus and
made present to the world by the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost,
"progresses on her pilgrimage amid this world's persecutions and God's
consolations," as she strives towards her perfection in the glory of
heaven. Since God desires "that the whole human race may become one People
of God, form one Body of Christ, and be built up into one temple of the Holy
Spirit," the Church is in the world "the visible plan of God's love
for humanity, the sacrament of salvation."1
In November
2000, in the pastoral statement Welcoming the Stranger Among Us: Unity in
Diversity, we bishops outlined ways that the Church in the United States—a
church of many races and cultures—might become more fully a sacrament of unity
and universality. As a direct application of that statement, we welcome our
Asian and Pacific sisters and brothers and encourage all members of the Church
in the United States to do the same.
We will briefly present a portrait of the members of the Asian and Pacific
communities—Catholics and non-Catholics—celebrate their gifts and
contributions, reflect on the pastoral needs and concerns of the Catholics
among them, acknowledge the efforts that have begun, and suggest helpful
pastoral approaches to build our common future. It is our hope as bishops that
Asian and Pacific Catholics will experience a warm welcome and sense of
belonging in our local churches, building on the many gifts with which they
have enriched our church communities over many decades.
Christ Was Born in Asia
Pope John Paul II begins his apostolic exhortation Ecclesia in Asia by
saying, "The Church in Asia sings the praises of the ‘God of salvation'
(Ps 68:20) for choosing to initiate his saving plan on Asian soil. . . . In
‘the fullness of time' (Gal 4:4), he sent his only-begotten Son, Jesus Christ
the Savior, who took flesh as an Asian!" He points out that "because
Jesus was born, lived, died and rose from the dead in the Holy Land, that small
portion of Western Asia became a land of promise and hope for all
mankind."2
Many may be surprised to realize that Jesus was born in Asia. The Asian Synod
of Bishops, the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, and the United
States Immigration and Naturalization Service commonly describe the continent
of Asia as comprising Western Asia (or the Middle East), Central Asia, South
Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Asia.3 (See Appendix A.) This
description is broader than the commonly held understanding of Asia as
comprising South, Southeast, and East Asia.
The history of the Church in Asia is as old as the Church herself. "From
this land, through the preaching of the Gospel in the power of the Holy Spirit,
the Church went forth to make ‘disciples of all nations' (Mt 28:19)."4
Christianity spread from Jerusalem to Antioch to Rome, and beyond. Ancient
tradition relates how in the first century, St. Thomas the Apostle preached and
was martyred in India; thus the subcontinent traces its Christian roots to
apostolic times. The Church of Armenia traces its origins to Sts. Thaddeus
(Jude) and Bartholomew—two of the twelve apostles.5 Because of this
apostolic evangelization, Christianity began to take root in Armenia, and three
centuries later the country became the first to embrace Christianity as a
nation. Also in the third century, ascetic communities of Syria were a major
force of evangelization in Asia. By the fifth century, the Christian message
had reached the Arab kingdoms, and Persian merchants took the Good News to
China where it flourished for nearly two centuries. In the thirteenth century,
the Good News was announced to the Mongols and the Turks, and was reinforced to
the Chinese. The apostolic labors of St. Francis Xavier and thousands of heroic
missionaries continued to bring the faith to Southeast Asia, East Asia, and the
Pacific from the fifteenth to the twentieth centuries, and this mission
continues today.
Christianity first made contact with the peoples of the Pacific in 1595 during
the Spanish expeditions from Latin America to the Philippines and in 1668
during expeditions to the Marianas. Full-scale missionary outreach began in the
early nineteenth century through the great works of religious orders and
congregations.6
This profound history of mission and journey of faith is the inspiration and
joy of the Asian and Pacific Catholic communities who have migrated to the
United States. The precious gift of the Catholic faith is manifest in a
splendid variety by reasons of origin, historical and cultural development, and
diverse spiritual and liturgical traditions. Yet all are united in proclaiming
the Good News of Jesus Christ through Christian witness and solidarity.
A Teaching Moment
Today the Asian and Pacific communities in the United States—both native-born,
that is, born in the United States, and immigrants who came to the United
States—span several generations. Many among the Chamorro,7 Chinese,
Filipino, Indian, Japanese, and Samoan Americans trace their heritage to more
than a century of migration; yet Asian and Pacific peoples have remained, until
very recently, nearly invisible in the Church in the United States. A further
increase in the number of Asian and Pacific Islanders in the episcopal
leadership will be a positive development. Some among us bishops have
endeavored to become informed through a genuine pastoral love and concern, and
some have responded to the generous invitation extended by Asian and Pacific
episcopal conferences and individual bishops to be present at gatherings in
their homelands. The many pastoral visits of our brother bishops from Asia and
the Pacific have made us more aware of the urgency for the Church in the United
States to recognize the gifts of our Asian and Pacific brothers and sisters.
The tremendous increase in Asian and Pacific Catholics across the United States
at the beginning of the third millennium is a teaching moment. It is also a
teaching moment because of the welcoming spirit to which we are called in The
Church in America (Ecclesia in America) and in the recent pastoral
statement Welcoming the Stranger Among Us: Unity in Diversity: the
Church in the United States is enjoined "to offer a genuine and suitable
welcome [to newcomers], to share together as brothers and sisters at the same
table, and to work side by side to improve the quality of life for society's
marginalized members."8 To underline the spirit of conversion,
communion, and solidarity with newcomers called for in Welcoming the
Stranger Among Us, this pastoral statement focuses attention on the
little-known Asian and Pacific communities rooted in the United States, as well
as new immigrants about whom we should learn more, and whom we should
acknowledge as integral parts of the Church in the United States.
Though this pastoral letter is a teaching instrument about all of our Asian and
Pacific sisters and brothers, most sections will focus on Asians from the
South, Southeast, and East Asian regions (see Appendix B) since more than
two-thirds of Americans of Asian heritage and a majority of recent immigrants
are from these regions. In addition, this pastoral statement will refer to
Pacific Americans from countries in the Pacific Basin including Micronesia (see
Appendix C).
II. Harmony Among Diverse Realities
Homelands. Asian and Pacific Americans come from many national backgrounds, speak
many different languages, and encompass a wide variety of physical and social
characteristics. Their homelands include fifty-three Asian countries and
territories in geographic regions commonly referred to as Near East (or Western
Asia or Middle East), Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Asia
(see Appendix D), as well as twenty-six Pacific Island states (see Appendix E)
of three indigenous population groups—Polynesians, Micronesians, and
Melanesians.9 Two-thirds of the world's population live within this
vast continent.
Language. Linguistically, Asian and Pacific communities are even more
diverse. Each country has its own language or languages. For example, India has
many languages as well as an official language, Hindi, and China has more than
one hundred dialects, which are distinct spoken languages. The Philippines has
eight major languages and eighty-seven dialects. Indonesia's official language
is Bahasa Indonesia, but hundreds of other languages are used by distinct
ethnic groups such as the Balinese, Batak, Dayak, and Madurese. In the Pacific
Islands, French and English are commonly used as well as almost one thousand
indigenous languages. Asian languages are a source of unity and joy for Asian
ethnic communities when they gather among themselves.
Religion. The Asian continent is the birthplace of many of the great
religions of the world: Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, and Judaism, in addition to
Christianity. It is also the birthplace of other social and religious
traditions including Confucianism, Sikhism, and Taoism.
Ecclesia. The presence of Eastern Catholic churches brings an ecclesial
diversity. They are cultural as well as ecclesial minorities struggling to
maintain their identities. There are twenty-two Eastern Catholic churches, most
of which are represented by faithful and clergy and, in many cases, hierarchies
in the United States.
In short, there are many Asian and Pacific communities and identities. Respect
for the differences among the varied cultures is a significant part of
accepting our sisters and brothers into U.S. society and the Church in the
United States.
The Asian and
Pacific American Population in the United States
The Asian and Pacific American population in the United States is growing
rapidly. The almost twelve million10 Asian Americans, as reported by
Census 2000, reflect a growth of 48 percent since 1990, making them the
fastest-growing racial group in the country. The Asian American population is
expected to double by 2010,11 and the six largest Asian
groups—Chinese, Filipino, Asian Indian, Vietnamese, Korean, and
Japanese—account for 87.5 percent of Asian Americans overall (see table one).
Smaller Asian ethnic groups listed in the census include Bangladeshi,
Cambodian, Hmong, Indonesian, Laotian, Malaysian, Pakistani, Sri Lankan,
Taiwanese, and Thai.
Pacific Americans total 874,414, among which are U.S. citizens from Hawaii,
Guam, the Northern Marianas, and Samoa (American). It also includes people from
the Federated States of Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, Palau, Tonga, and
Western Samoa, among others.
The Asian and Pacific American population is present in large numbers
throughout the country. More than two-thirds of this population live in six
states: California, Hawaii, Illinois, Texas, New Jersey, and New York (see
table two). Thirty dioceses count more than 100,000 persons of Asian and
Pacific heritage.
Asian and
Pacific American communities exhibit great complexities and disparities. Their
challenge is that of diversity—ethnicity, language, culture, place of birth,
religious tradition, recency of U.S. arrival, and endowment of human capital.
They are among the best endowed and yet the least endowed of all Americans.
They are among the best and least educated. Many Asian and Pacific Americans
are socially and economically well integrated as a result of a tradition of up
to five generations of American citizenship. Some Asian and Pacific Americans
enjoy the advantages of having arrived lawfully as students or skilled workers
or with the support of family members who sponsored them. Yet others struggle
with inhumane conditions as irregular migrants in dead-end jobs—if they have
jobs at all. Some Asian Americans earn more than other U.S. ethnic groups,
while other Asian Americans do not receive even the minimum wage. Low
proportions of Asian and Pacific American households receive income from public
assistance or social security; yet some households are clearly
welfare-dependent.
Asian and Pacific Catholics in the United States
Except for the Filipinos, the majority of Asian and Pacific people in the
United States are followers of Buddhism, Confucianism, Hinduism, and Islam.
Asian and Pacific Catholics have been present in the Church in the United
States since the beginning. The presence of Eastern Catholics in the United
States is primarily the result of late nineteenth-century migration from
Eastern Europe and the turmoil and upheaval in the Middle East in the opening
decades of the twentieth century. As Pope John Paul II describes in Ecclesia
in America, the sizeable numbers of Eastern Catholics from the Middle East
were added to the Catholic population already in the United States including
Eastern Catholics from Europe:
This made it
pastorally necessary to establish an Eastern Catholic hierarchy for these Catholic
immigrants and their descendants. . . . Therefore, we cannot but rejoice that
the Eastern Churches have in recent times taken root in America alongside the
Latin Churches present there from the beginning, thus making the catholicity of
the Lord's Church appear more clear.12
As early as
1763, a Filipino settlement had been established at Saint Malo in the bayous of
Louisiana. Known as "Manilamen," these settlers jumped ship to escape
brutalities during the galleon trade between the Philippines and Mexico. They
lived together, governing themselves and living in peace and harmony. Although
most were Catholics, a priest rarely went to the village to minister to them.13
In the early 1920s, Archbishop Edward J. Hanna of San Francisco founded the
Catholic Filipino Club in Stockton, California, to provide hospitality to
newcomers. Among the Asian workers who toiled on the U.S. transcontinental
railroad and among the agricultural workers who opened up the American West
were Catholics deeply rooted in their faith. In 1856, Joseph Sadoc Alemany, OP,
the first archbishop of San Francisco, invited a Chinese priest to minister to
the Chinese migrant laborers. On December 9, 1884, the Paulist fathers took
over the administration of Old St. Mary's Cathedral in San Francisco to begin a
mission to the Chinese that continues to the present day. To strengthen the
apostolate to the Chinese, in 1884 San Francisco's Archbishop Patrick Riordan
invited the Helpers of the Holy Souls Sisters (now known as the Society of
Helpers) in St. Louis, Missouri, "to establish a foundation in San
Francisco to help the poor, the immigrants, and the Chinese."14
In 1912, finding no one who spoke his language, a young Japanese Catholic in
Los Angeles wrote to the Bishop of Hakodate, his hometown in Japan, to ask
whether it was possible to confess his sins by registered mail and be pardoned
in the same way. The Church's pastoral care for the Japanese on the West Coast
originated with this incident. At the request of the Bishop of Hakodate, the
Maryknoll Catholic Foreign Mission Society sent their priests and women
religious to Los Angeles in 1915 to establish Japanese schools and orphanages,
where many children of Japanese immigrants, American citizens by their birth on
U.S. soil, would encounter Catholicism through education both in English and
Japanese.
Today the number of Asian and Pacific Catholics in the United States presents a
difficult and complex question. Hard data are difficult to obtain or are
non-existent. Bishop Joseph A. Fiorenza has pointed out that "Catholics
from Asia, especially from the Philippines and Vietnam, make up the third
largest group of people of color and account for about 2.6 percent of the
Catholics in the United States."15
One way to estimate the number of Asian and Pacific Catholics in this country
is to look at the percentages of Catholics in their homelands. These
percentages range from 8 percent in Korea to 85 percent in East Timor (see
table three). While the percentages are small, the numbers may be large—for example,
less than one percent in China are Catholic, but this percentage represents
about ten million Catholics. It is also worth noting that the Philippines is
home to the third largest Catholic population in the world, after Brazil and
Mexico.16
Today the Catholic Church in Korea exhibits the highest annual adult baptism
rate in the world, a trend also true among Korean Americans. Korean Catholics
have a strong sense of mission, sending missionaries to various parts of the
world.
Vietnamese
Catholics in the United States—who have blessed the Church in the United States
with many priests and religious—are estimated to number 300,000, or 30 percent
of Vietnamese Americans. The percentage of Catholics in Vietnam, however, is
only 8 percent because many Catholics left Vietnam as refugees during the war.
Pacific Islanders have a high percentage of Catholics in the homelands. Samoans
are 22 percent Catholic, while in the Marianas 84 percent are Catholic.
Many Asian and Pacific Islanders—native-born and immigrants—belong to the
Eastern Catholic churches. Accurate figures for the number of Eastern Catholics
originating in Asia are likewise difficult to determine. It is estimated that
there are 500,000 faithful from the Armenian, Chaldean, Maronite, Melkite, and
Syriac churches, which include Syro-Malabar and Syro-Malankara, in the United
States.
While the number of Asian and Pacific Catholics as a percentage of U.S.
Catholics may be small, many Asian and Pacific Islander non-Catholics have
attended Catholic schools and have been the recipients of services offered by
the numerous and well-respected social programs conducted by local churches,
Caritas, and other international Catholic organizations in their countries of
origin. In Hong Kong, for instance, one-third of the children graduate each
year from Catholic schools. In other countries, Catholic schools are the
preferred institutions of learning. John Paul II explains further,
"Throughout Asia, the Church's involvement in education is extensive and
highly visible. . . . Catholic schools play an important role in
evangelization, inculturating the faith, teaching the ways of openness and
respect, and fostering interreligious understanding."17 Because
the graduates of these educational systems carry a great deal of influence, it
is important for evangelization and outreach to continue the ties that have
already been established. The challenge in the United States is then to
strengthen that Catholic connection.
The Growing Role of Leaders
Leaders are emerging from among Asian and Pacific peoples here in the United
States. Among them are two governors, a U.S. senator, several representatives
in the U.S. Congress, and cabinet members. There are also Nobel Prize winners,
U.S. Olympic athletes, national sports champions, respected scholars and
scientists, information technology entrepreneurs, hundreds of thousands of
professional managers, and small business owners.
The Church is blessed with Asian and Pacific pastors, social workers,
educators, diocesan directors, and lay leaders who are actively and selflessly
contributing to building the Kingdom of God in this country. The number of
Asian and Pacific Catholics who have been given responsibility in church
structures or are well known in their fields of endeavor is growing. Among them
are a mother general of a community of women religious, the president of the
Catholic Theological Society of America, the former chair of the National
Advisory Council of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, and a
Maronite priest elected as the first Eastern Catholic president of the Canon
Law Society of America.
Following the Witness of Martyrs
Besides these living role models, Asian and Pacific Catholics come to the
United States with a long heritage of extraordinary witness of life and
martyrdom. The Church recently recognized many Asian saints and martyrs;
however, the total number of saints and martyrs could fill an entire Asian and
Pacific Litany of Saints.
From India, Gonsalo Garcia was canonized in 1629 and John de Brito in 1947.
More recently, Pope John Paul II beatified Blessed Joseph Vaz in 1995.
From Japan the heroic witness of St. Paul Miki and his companions, including
Gracia Hosakawa, Ludivico Ibaragi, Michael Kozaki, and Takayama Ukon, have been
honored by the Church.
The Church in Korea suffered more than 10,000 martyrdoms. In 1984, Pope John
Paul II canonized 103 martyrs in Seoul. Outstanding among those saints are St.
Andrew Kim Taegon, the first native Korean priest, and Chung Hasang and Kim
Hyoim, who were heroic lay leaders.
The Philippines' first martyr, San Lorenzo Ruiz de Manila, was canonized in
1987. Catechist Pedro Calungsod was beatified in 2000.
It is estimated that more than 130,000 Vietnamese Catholics died for Christ's
sake during persecutions from 1625 to 1886. On June 19, 1988, Pope John Paul II
canonized 117 of them, including St. Andrew Dung Lac, St. Phanxico Xavier Can,
St. Vincent Diem, St. Phaolo Le Bao Tinh, St. Phero Nguyen Khac Tu, and a
woman, St. Agnes Le Thi Thanh. On March 5, 2000, Blessed Andrew the Catechist
was beatified by Pope John Paul II in Rome.
Also on March 5, 2000, Blessed Nicholas Bunlert Kitbamrung, the Thai Church's
first martyr priest, was beatified.
From China, 120 martyrs were canonized by Pope John Paul II on October 1, 2000.
Of these, thirty-three were foreign missionaries and eighty-seven were native
Chinese, including Ahan Wen Lan, Pei Xio, Zhan Da Pun, Liu Shui Tin, Cao Gul
Ying, Liu Wen Yuen, and Liu Han Zhou.
Among the many Eastern Catholic martyrs and saints are Blessed Mary of Jesus
Crucified, born of a Syrian family in Galilee, who was beatified in 1983;
Blessed Joseph Kassab Hardini, who was beatified in 1998; and from India,
Blessed Kuriakose Elias Chavara and Blessed Alphonsa Muttathupadath, who were
beatified in 1986, and St. Marian Theresia, who was canonized in April 2000.
Experiencing Racial Discrimination
Part of the sad reality for minorities and many immigrants—among them Asian and
Pacific Islanders—to the United States is racial discrimination and prejudice.
Racially restrictive laws have ranged from those that affect all non-white
populations, including Asian and Pacific groups, to those that target specific
Asian groups. Prior to the 1950s, Asian immigrants were denied the right to
become naturalized citizens—a right granted to all other immigrants to the
United States. Laws in many states forbade marriages between non-whites
(including Asians) and whites, although social pressures were probably the
major impediment to interracial marriages. The Chinese Exclusion Law of l882,
which remained in effect until 1943, barred additional Chinese laborers from
entering the United States and prevented Chinese aliens from obtaining American
citizenship. A 1909 law denied citizenship to 50,000 persons from Arabia
because they were considered Asians. Japanese laborers were brought to the
United States in lieu of Chinese laborers until 1907, when the Gentlemen's
Agreement with Japan curtailed Japanese immigration temporarily; and the
Johnson-Reed Act of 1924, known as the "Japanese Exclusion Act,"
banned immigration of Japanese laborers. Perhaps the most tragic instance of
racial discrimination was Executive Order 9066 of 1942, which forced Japanese
immigrants, including two-thirds who were American citizens mainly from the
west coast, into internment camps under the guise of military necessity. This
experience cannot be described without noting the heroic efforts of many
religious, such as the Maryknoll fathers, brothers, and sisters, who
accompanied the Japanese internees to the camps and stayed with them. Without
such loving ministry, many Japanese American Catholics might have felt
abandoned and left their Catholic faith.
While legal provisions have changed, discriminatory actions by individuals and
groups sadly perdure. Throughout history, Asians in the United States,
native-born and immigrant, have been characterized as "permanent
aliens," a race of foreigners given externally imposed labels and racial
identities and only referred to in passing or even omitted altogether in
classic immigration history. Asian and Pacific contributions in building the
nation have been mostly unrecognized and ignored. The recent episodes of racial
attacks against Asian persons and businesses in Los Angeles and Detroit are tragic
reminders of the ongoing need for conversion against any form of racial
discrimination.
Some Asian immigrant groups are still relegated to jobs that pay low wages,
require them to work long hours, and provide substandard working conditions and
unfair labor practices. To escape from such exploitative conditions, some Asian
entrepreneurs resort to establishing small businesses in their own communities,
sometimes with the help of affirmative action programs, through which Asian and
Pacific Americans also have obtained college and advanced degrees.
III. Sharing Gifts and Promoting Harmony
From its inception, the United States of America has been enriched by the
gifts brought to its shores from countries and cultures the world over.
Likewise, the Catholic Church in the United States has been blessed by the
traditions of Catholics from almost every nation on earth.
In 1997 the contributions of Asian and Pacific communities were presented
during a consultation for the bishops' Committee on Migration, which stated,
We believe
strongly that this is a moment of special grace for the Catholic Church in the
United States. As Asian Pacific communities, we bring a strong sense of family
with a loving respect for the elderly and a profound and fervent religious faith.
We contribute a spirituality which is eastern [and] rooted in Asian Pacific
cultures. We also seek to live in harmony with each other and with the whole of
creation. We deepen and challenge our understanding of the meaning of the
universal Church, enabling all of us to be a church which is complete and
whole.18
This Church
that is complete and whole brings to fulfillment the gifts of the Asian and
Pacific people:
To bear witness
to Jesus Christ is the supreme service which the Church can offer to the peoples
of Asia, for it responds to their profound longing for the Absolute, and it
unveils the truths and values which will ensure their integral human
development. . . . [The Church has sought to discover] the Asian countenance of
Jesus [in light of] the universal saving significance of the mystery of Jesus
and his Church.19
Harmony Is
Asian and Christian
Harmony is central to the lives and cultures of Asian and Pacific communities.
According to the bishops of Asia, "harmony embodies ‘the realities of order,
well-being, justice and love as seen in human interaction. . . . Harmony is not
simply the absence of strife. . . . The test of true harmony lies in acceptance
of diversity and richness.'"20
Typically, harmony in the family binds generations together for the spiritual
formation of the young. Culturally, the traditional arts of many Asian and
Pacific societies link a person's actions with grace in society. Most of the
time, harmony is characterized as well by a deep spirit of courtesy—a
recognition that human solidarity derives from all persons' common relationship
to God, who is the source of all life.
Harmony is authentically Christian and intrinsically Asian. Harmony draws its
inspiration and strength from the harmonious relationship of the Trinity.
Asians and Pacific Islanders teach a threefold harmony: (1) harmony with a
personal God, the source of all genuine harmony; (2) harmony among all people;
and (3) harmony with the whole universe. It is, according to Pope John Paul II
in his address of May 13, 1981, "an integral part of the Christian concept
of life"; he said that harmony's "object is: the sacred dignity of
human person, the image of God; its purpose: the realization of justice as the
advancement and liberation of the human person; its foundation: the truth about
human nature, learned from reason and illuminated by revelation; and its
propelling power: love as the Gospel commandment and norm of action."21
Family and Education Are Central
For most peoples, the family is of the highest value. Asian and Pacific
cultures place a particular emphasis on loyalty to one's family. Asian and
Pacific families affirm many basic family values including love, integrity,
honesty, thrift, and mutual support. Respect for elders and authority and
sacrifice for children figure prominently in shaping their experiences. Harmony
is crucial, along with the notion that the individual must sacrifice his or her
interests to serve the greater needs of the group, which may be the state, the
community, or, especially, the family.
Faith is an important element of life. For Catholics of Asian and Pacific
heritage, Catholic identity is intimately connected with family and local
community. Parents and grandparents are the primary teachers of gospel values
and nurturers of the faith among the young. Vocations to ministry are fostered
in the family.
After the family, education is most valued by Asian and Pacific peoples.
Thirty-eight percent of Asians in the United States have bachelor's degrees or
higher education, compared with 20 percent of the total population. For
example, among Asian Indian men, 66 percent have a bachelor's or higher degree.22
Profound Spirituality and Popular Piety
Asian and Pacific Catholic Americans and immigrants migrated with the
experience and sensibilities of the great religions and spiritual traditions of
the world—Buddhism, Confucianism, Hinduism, Islam, Jainism, Judaism, Shintoism,
Sikhism, Taoism, and Zoroastrianism—together with Christianity. Their
experience of the great religions and spiritual traditions teaches them to live
with a profound sense of the sacred, a holistic approach to life and salvation,
and a spirituality adapted to their needs and a life-giving vitality. Indeed
the Holy Father said on April 19, 1998, "We want to listen to what the
Spirit says to the churches of Asia that they may proclaim Christ in the
context of Hinduism, Buddhism, Shintoism and all those currents of thought and
life which were already rooted in Asia before the preaching of the Gospel
arrived."23
Even though many Christian immigrants from Asia have suffered persecution in
their homelands, we are mindful that their popular piety has roots in their
Asian spiritual traditions. Their experience demonstrates the values of these
religions and spiritual traditions, and how these values await their
fulfillment in the revelation of Jesus Christ.
In the small traditional communities from which these Christians come,
authority has a predominant place in the Church. Priests and religious hold
positions of respect. The elders of the community are also the leaders of the
parish community.
The Church is experienced not only as a place for public worship but also as a
community where family and friends can find personal warmth and caring, where
there is sharing of pains and joys, where there is constant sharing around the
table of friendship. These communal activities are celebrated around the
seasons and feasts of the church year, feasts in honor of the saints, and
popular devotions. The sacramental celebrations of baptism, confirmation, first
communion, marriage, and funerals are not only religious milestones, but also
occasions for gathering and strengthening bonds of family and friendship.
Asian and
Pacific immigrants bring popular devotions from their homelands and share them
with fellow parishioners. Many in the United States sustain their faith through
devotions to Mary and the saints. Asian and Pacific Catholics have a special
love and affection for the Blessed Virgin Mary, revering her as their own
mother and the Mother of Christ, and holding many vibrant celebrations in her
honor. Throughout Asia are thousands of Marian sanctuaries and shrines where
not only Catholic faithful gather, but also followers of other religious
traditions. Muslims particularly honor Mary in the Qur'an.
A Long Tradition of Lay Leadership
Even before the Second Vatican Council, Asians entering the Church in their
homelands were imbued with the understanding that the mission of the laity is
crucial to the growth of the Church. Partly because of her recent mission-based
history, the Catholic Church in Asia and the Pacific Islands emphasizes the
baptismal call to mission for all members of the Church. Church leaders place
great importance on lay leadership and the active role of women. Many Asian and
Pacific Catholics who migrated to this country came with a rich experience of
being active lay members and ministers of the Church.
Catholicism in Korea, for example, has a unique history. It began through the
initiative of Korean Confucian scholars in 1784 who had visited China and
became Christians after reading Christian texts found in Beijing. Korean laity
not only kept the faith alive but also shared it with others until the first
missionaries arrived in 1836. In Japan, from the sixteenth to the nineteenth
century, lay Catholics similarly kept the faith alive while the country was
closed to Christian missionaries.
Many Asian and Pacific communities are familiar with the term
"catechist." Catechists are people of strong faith, well trained in
the basics of the Catholic faith, and well respected as religious leaders in
the community. They are also sent to remote villages to gather the people in
prayer and to teach catechism. In some areas of the Philippines, lay liturgical
ministers regularly hold weekend para-liturgical services in capillas,
chapels in the remote barrios, that might be visited by the clergy only a few
times each year.
Lay persons are the primary evangelizers in many parts of Asia and the Pacific
Islands. And the tradition lives on among many Asian and Pacific lay leaders
now in the United States. In parishes where they are invited, encouraged, and
nurtured, they have been active pastoral ministers for many decades. Asian and
Pacific lay leaders share their joy and talents in almost all avenues of lay
ministries—the liturgy, hospitality, social services, and parish and diocesan
leadership.
The
Contributions of Clergy and Religious
Many priests and religious sisters and brothers from Asia and the Pacific
minister to the Church in the United States. Most not only serve their ethnic
groups, but also are pastors and associates in parishes, and teachers and
principals of Catholic schools throughout the country. In many instances, Asian
and Pacific priests and religious have established parish religious education
programs in their native languages. Volunteer teachers in these programs are
usually from particular ethnic groups; for instance, Hmong, Samoan-speaking,
and Tongan priests, religious, and deacons often work with lay leaders in family
evangelization programs.
Vocations are quite high in Asian and Pacific American communities both in
number and in proportion to the current population. In 1999, 9 percent of those
ordained to the priesthood in the United States were of Asian or Pacific
heritage, yet Asian and Pacific persons composed only 2.6 percent of the
Catholic population in the United States.
The Heritage of the Eastern Churches
The Eastern Churches, principally of the Middle East and India, merit special
attention. "From Apostolic times they have been the custodians of a
precious spiritual, liturgical and theological heritage. Their traditions and
rites, born of a deep inculturation of the faith in the soil of many Asian
countries, deserve the greatest respect."24
Although their own priests served some of the Eastern Catholic faithful from
Asia, the faithful were under the jurisdiction of the local Latin Church
bishops until the 1966 appointment of the Maronite and Melkite bishops. Bishops
were later appointed to serve other communities. The appointment of bishops to
serve the Armenian, Chaldean, Syrian, and, most recently, the Syro-Malabar
churches followed.
Today the eparchies and exarchates of patriarchal or metropolitan sui iuris
churches in the United States include the Eparchy of St. Maron of Brooklyn and
Our Lady of Lebanon in Los Angeles for the Maronite Catholics; the Eparchy of
Newton, Massachusetts, for the Melkite Greek Catholics; the Eparchy of Our Lady
of Deliverance in Newark, New Jersey, for Syrian Catholics; the Armenian
Catholic Exarchate of the U.S.A. and Canada with parishes in several states;
the Eparchy of St. Thomas the Apostle of Detroit for the Chaldean Catholics;
and the most recent Eparchy of St. Thomas in Chicago for the Syro-Malabar
Catholics.
IV. Building Communion and Harmony: Challenges and Our Responses
The whole world is facing the phenomenon of increasing ethnic diversity.
Technological advances in communication and travel facilities, globalization of
business, and international migration are taking place on every continent.
In the United States, the unprecedented growth of immigration from Asia and the
Pacific in the last century calls all Catholics to truly understand a different
way of thinking, acting, and feeling. The arrival of immigrants—even of those
who come bearing gifts of time, talent, and treasure—creates challenges and
tensions. The very gifts they bring challenge the Church to view itself and the
world in a different perspective. Asian and Pacific communities present
different ways of relating to other people, of believing, of praying, of being
Church.
Laying the Foundation
To face the pastoral challenges of ministering to and with Asian and Pacific
communities, steps have been taken by the Church at the national, diocesan, and
parish levels. The following is a brief chronology of significant measures.
In many
dioceses, offices or ministries focus on pastoral care for Asian and Pacific
communities as well as support apostolates for particular ethnic groups. Some
dioceses have begun annual Asian and Pacific gatherings that strengthen the
unity of all the communities and celebrate their traditions and cultures. In
addition, a few seminaries have conducted workshops on the Asian presence and
spirituality.
Some bishops have established Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese parishes or
missions. Pastoral centers for small ethnic communities, such as the Cambodian,
Hmong, Khmhu, Laotian, Samoan, and Tongan communities, have been organized in
several dioceses, and multiple pastoral centers in different parts of the country
provide ministry to the Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese Catholics.
These centers not only offer catechesis, Bible studies, prayer services, and
linguistically appropriate religious education materials, but also provide a
place for members of these communities to experience their own language and
culture and to affirm their own cultural and ethnic roots. Special tribute must
be given to priests, religious, and lay leaders from the United States who have
worked hard to learn Asian languages and cultures in order to become more
effective ministers.
On the part of particular Asian and Pacific Islander groups, creative and
effective initiatives in the parishes and sometimes in the region have helped
to bring together and support community development and interaction among
themselves and with other cultural groups. Chinese, Korean, Samoan, and Tongan
families gather for Bible study. Indonesian, Khmhu, Korean, Laotian, and
Vietnamese youth hold summer camps at which catechesis is conducted in their own
languages. Chinese, Filipinos, Koreans, Samoans, Tongans, and Vietnamese have
vibrant music ministries and choirs.
Some Asian and Pacific ethnic communities have successfully formed national
structures to build collective identity: for example, the Hmong-American
Catholic National Association; the Federation of Vietnamese Clergy, Religious,
and Lay Leaders; the Korean Priests Association of America and Canada; the
Indian American Catholic Association, Inc.; and the National Filipino Ministry
Council. Unfortunately, these communities sometimes exist side by side, mainly
in isolation, with little or no connection between diocesan structures or
between other ethnic and cultural communities in the Church.
We bishops pray that this pastoral statement will motivate members of the
Church at every level to build on these achievements and strengthen ties to the
local church. The following section describes some challenges and offers
suggestions around which national, diocesan, and parish responses can be
planned.
Maintaining the Integrity of the Family
Family. Though the family is a highly prized gift, Asian and Pacific
Americans experience grave difficulties in maintaining the integrity of
traditional family structures and values. Traditional values, such as marriage
stability, the discipline of children, filial reverence, respect for the
elderly, veneration of ancestors, and emphasis on extended family relations,
are lived out in very different ways in each culture.
Adaptation to the dominant culture is never easy for immigrants. Because
migration puts a great strain on family life, many traditional families have
become dysfunctional as Asian and Pacific immigrants adapt themselves to
changes and demands of their new life and their new country. The numbers of broken
homes, gangs, teenage pregnancies, runaways, drug abusers and their victims,
and attempted suicides continue to rise as parents find it difficult to balance
the demands of making a living and spending sufficient time with their
families. Whereas in their native countries, most wives and mothers were able
to remain at home to care for their families, in the United States, they must
join the labor force in order to pay their bills. The context of the extended
family system, which provides a healthy, nurturing, and supportive family life,
is sorely missing. Migration cuts people off from their extended family and
leaves them isolated.
In Asian and Pacific cultures, the traditional roles for men and women tend to
be clearly delineated. In American society, the roles are different, especially
in regard to childrearing and discipline, money management, gender relations,
and generational relations. While change is inevitable, it often leads to
tension and other problems within the Asian and Pacific family.
The economic pressures placed on families force young couples to work long
hours. Asian and Pacific parents usually leave their children with babysitters
or with their elderly parents. The transmission of faith, however, is not part
of a babysitter's job. In addition, even if grandparents desire to transmit
faith or traditional values to their grandchildren, they are often unable to do
so because of language handicaps or lack of religious environments. For the
most part, children grow up exposed daily to a secular society, and their faith
formation is relegated to the background, if not neglected completely. Through
family enrichment programs, dioceses and parishes should intentionally invite
and aid Asian and Pacific parents to become more effective channels in
developing the faith life of their families.
Youth. Second- and subsequent-generation Asian and Pacific youth
struggle not only with the pains of growing up but also with the conflict of
cultural values between their parents and American culture. On the one hand,
they experience an environment at home where family is the most important
consideration, where mutual support among family members is fostered, and where
smooth interpersonal relationships or family harmony is stressed. Outside their
homes, they experience emphasis on different values: individuality,
independence, and competition. Caught between seeming contradictions, many
Asian and Pacific youth experience a deep identity crisis that becomes more
serious as the communication and generation gap between the youth and the
elders widen.
In their desire to be like their U.S.-born counterparts, Asian and Pacific
youth, like other immigrant youth, tend to reject the traditional values of
their families and begin to assert themselves. Those left without any form of
guidance and supervision after school spend their time in the company of their
peers and sometimes are led astray. These youth must be taught Asian and
Pacific histories, cultures, values, stories, and myths as a way to help them
appreciate their cultural heritage. At the same time—as a way to develop
understanding of the Asian and Pacific peoples, the gifts they bring, and the
challenges they face—parish and diocesan educational materials can utilize
evocative pedagogy using stories, parables, and symbols respectful of Asian and
Pacific heritage, faith practices, and teaching methods.
Single Asian and Pacific young adults are often left alone to find their place
either in society or in the Church. They need guidance during the difficult
period of cultural adjustment, career change, vocation discernment, and other
important decisions young people have to make. They should be encouraged to
take part in parish youth and young adult formation and leadership programs and
become actively involved in the organization of program activities. More
importantly, as Pope John Paul II has stated,
the many
complex problems which young people now face . . . impel the Church to remind
the young of their responsibility for the future of society and the Church, and
to encourage and support them at every step to ensure that they are ready to
accept that responsibility. . . . The Christian formation of young people . . .
should recognize that they are not only the object of the Church's pastoral
care but also "agents and co-workers in the Church's mission in her
various apostolic works of love and service."25
Elderly. Elderly
parents experience an identity crisis of a different nature. Once figures of
authority in their native country, Asian and Pacific elderly parents in America
might become totally dependent on their children. This contrasts painfully with
the reverence traditionally shown to elders in their native lands. Unable to
communicate even with their own grandchildren, they are often engulfed in a
deep sense of loneliness and isolation. Unless they become part of a senior
center, many spend their time within the confines of their homes, unable to
articulate their needs, to socialize, and to feel a sense of family belonging.
Parishes are encouraged to develop family ministries that incorporate more
sensitive ways to reach out to elderly immigrants for social and spiritual
nourishment.
Yearning for Catholic Education
As mentioned earlier, a great number of Asian and Pacific immigrants (both
Catholic and non-Catholic) have received Catholic education in their homelands
and desire it for their children as well. Catholic schools can be more open and
inviting to all, especially to those of other religious traditions who might
have attended Catholic schools in their homelands. This would continue the long
tradition of educational and social service structures, serving as effective
channels of evangelization.
In addition, families with children in the public schools wish to continue
religious education for their children. Creative options need to be developed
to offer Catholic children in public schools opportunities to learn and
celebrate their faith.
Moreover, Catholic schools are attractive for their solid education and
discipline. Many Asian and Pacific parents would like to send their children to
Catholic schools in the United States; however, these schools have become very
expensive, especially for many young families with two or more children. As a
remedy, some scholarship options are being explored by Catholic schools.
A Threefold Dialogue with Religions, Cultures, and the Poor
Since the Second Vatican Council, our brother bishops in Asia, who gather
regularly as the Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences, have developed a
pastoral approach that emphasizes a threefold dialogue: with other religions,
with cultures, and with the poor. Such dialogue can also be explored for its
enriching fruitfulness at all levels of the Church in the United States.
Dialogue with Other Religions. Like other immigrants before them, those
from Asian and Pacific communities want to be companions on the faith journey
with the American people. Essential to an understanding of Asian and Pacific
communities is the dialogue with other religions. This means recognizing key
themes of the spirituality and theology of religions, especially Buddhism,
Confucianism, Islam, Taoism, and some i