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Coming back from a fortnight in China at the beginning of this week, into the
middle of what felt like a general panic about the role of religion in
society, had a slightly surreal feel to it. The proverbial visitor from Mars
might have imagined that the greatest immediate threat to British society
was religious war, fomented by “faith schools”, cheered on by thousands of
veiled women and the Bishops’ Benches in the House of Lords. Commentators
were solemnly asking if it were not time for Britain to become a properly
secular society.
The odd thing was to come into this straight from a context where people were
asking the opposite question. Wasn’t it time that China stopped being a
certain kind of secular society? The political and intellectual world that
is emerging in the new China is having to cope with a vacuum where cohesive
social morality ought to be, a vacuum shaped by the past 50 years of Chinese
history.
The culture of total state provision collapsed during and after the Cultural
Revolution; under Deng Xiaoping, the new tolerance of capitalist enterprise
fostered a driven and selfish climate; the one-child policy designed to save
China from demographic disaster resulted in an ageing population, a
generation of children both indulged and crippled with expectations — and a
record of forced abortion and sterilisation. Frustrations about not having
the “ right” to a male child intensified a contempt for women’s dignity
among the uneducated public.
And now the approach of party and government to social cohesion has
dramatically changed. NGOs working in China agree that their freedom to
operate is far greater than ten years ago; indeed, there is a real
burgeoning of new and local NGOs, as fresh issues are identified (not least
around the welfare of children and the disabled). Government is pragmatic
enough to work out when to back these.
Among such initiatives are a good many that are rooted in the Christian
Church. The Chinese Government now repeats regularly that religion is
essential to the “harmonious society” it aims to create — the sort of
statement that would have been unthinkable ten or fifteen years ago. Of
course, it is religion on the Government’s terms. What China means by
religious freedom is not unrestricted liberty of association. Before the
visit to China, we were told that we should see only what the Government
allowed us to, and that we would be conscripted into a propagandist agenda
that ignored the continuing repression of religion.
You cannot be unaware that religious activity is controlled by strict
regulation and that the manifold possibilities of infringing these
regulations give ample opportunity for malicious or corrupt officials to
intimidate, imprison and maltreat supposed “offenders” who (deliberately or
accidentally) fail to go through the motions of registering. But, for all
the undoubted scandal of this, it is simply not possible to say now that
there is a general strategy to eliminate religious belief or practice. The
rhetoric of encouraging religious co-operation with the goals of national
renewal is here to stay.
This means that religious bodies have a very particular remit at the moment,
to do with the care of those who fall through the sometimes very large holes
in the legal system (one of the most poignant examples being children whose
parents have been executed; up to now, these have been left wholly without
access to proper care and educational supervision). Sometimes they are well
ahead of general social awareness — the Church is one of the few bodies
talking about the challenges of autism. Sometimes they are catching up with
growing social concerns, notably about moral responsibility for the
environment and care for the elderly. Sometimes they are simply caught up in
ambulance work — particularly in the desperately needy area of rural health
care. But there is a clear recognition that both the motivation and the
volunteer base that will make for a sense of responsible citizenship is not
going to be there without the religious communities.
And for those who claim that state-registered believers are not “real
Christians”, I can only say, on the basis of what I have seen in both urban
and rural settings, that some of them put up a remarkably good imitation of
loving their neighbours as well as of personal fervour and commitment. After
all, even now, no one joins a church of any sort in China for an easy life.
To put it in slightly different terms, there is a sense that civil society
needs religion. China historically has a top-down flow of social policy and
action; but without a coherent morality, without a clear vision of what
human dignity entails, short-term, corner-cutting strategies will always be
tempting (forced abortions, forced evictions — a serious problem in
fast-developing urban settings — or local legal processes that are
effectively beyond review or appeal).
The declared intention of the Chinese Government to strengthen the “rule of
law” is a not very oblique recognition of the dangers of running a society
by decree rather than developing a full system of legitimate and accountable
authority. Just how far this will develop, as economic change advances and
information access widens, remains to be seen.
We in the UK do not have anything like this history of top-down rule by
regulation. Yet when people talk about whether we should “become a secular
society”, I wonder if they realise that they are in effect echoing the idea
that the basic and natural form of political organisation is a central
authority that “franchises” associations, and grants or withholds their
right to exist publicly and legally within the State. Up to now, we have in
practice taken for granted that the State is not the source of morality and
legitimacy but a system that brokers, mediates and attempts to co-ordinate
the moral resources of those specific communities, the merely local and the
credal or issue-focused, which actually make up the national unit. This is a
“secular” system in the sense that it does not impose legal and civil
disabilities on any one religious body; but it is not secular in the sense
of giving some kind of privilege to a non-religious or anti-religious set of
commitments or policies. Moving towards the latter would change our
political culture more radically than we imagine.
So the ideal of a society where no visible public signs of religion would be
seen — no crosses around necks, no sidelocks, turbans or veils — is a
politically dangerous one. It assumes that what comes first in society is
the central political “licensing authority”, which has all the resource it
needs to create a workable public morality.
Few places have tried as systematically as China to set this in stone; and now
there is a tacit admission of defeat.
Here in the UK, the daily reality of faith in ordinary communities is bound up
with the maintenance of civil society, with enabling citizens to ask
constructively critical questions of the State and to co-operate with
statutory bodies to meet urgent needs. We could do with some common sense
and realism about this. It would be something of a paradox if we had to look
to the emerging China to find it.
Rowan Williams is Archbishop of Canterbury
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