Zhengding Missionary Murder Explained

The Zhengding Missionary Murder is an incident in which nine Catholic priests were kidnapped and killed in Zhengding, Hebei province, Republic-era China on October 9, 1937.

Details

During the Sino-Japanese war, troops of the Japanese empire progressed to take in the city of Zhengding. Up to 5,000 local residents sought refuge from the local Bishop, Frans Schraven. Of those 5,000, it is estimated that 200 young women were amongst those seeking refuge, who were thought to be at risk of being abused as comfort women.[1]

The clergymen initially resisted the Japanese troops demands and were later abducted and according to reports burned alive. Besides Schraven, those who died were Fathers Gerard Wouters and Antoon Gerts (Netherlands), Father Thomas Ceska (Austria with Croatian heritage), Fathers Lucien Charny, Eugene-Antoine Bertrand, André Robial (France), Brother Wladislaw (Poland) and Anton Biskupits (Slovakia).[2]

The act of the bishop and his priests has led to calls for his beatification and canonisation as patron saint for victims of sexual abuse.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Bishop burned alive by Japanese troops in 1937 may become patron saint of abuse victims. Japan Today. 2017-01-13.
  2. Web site: Dutch martyr in China and pioneering missionary up for canonisation Sunday Examiner. sundayex.catholic.org.hk. 2017-01-13.
  3. News: Bishop who protected Chinese girls from Japanese soldiers could become patron saint of sex abuse victims. Tokyo. Julian Ryall in. Telegraph.co.uk. 2017-01-13.