Vietnam is to have its first Catholic university
The establishment of the new university marks a historical turning point for the Church in this communist country and a step towards complete freedom of education
Vietnam’s first Catholic university is no longer a
mirage. It is very soon going to become a reality, in fact according to
Paul Bui Van Doc, Archbishop of Ho Chi Minh City, the structure could
be ready within a year. It is going to mark a crucial turning point in
the history of the Vietnamese Catholic Church, the sign of an eagerly
awaited return to the freedom of education, which the communist
government has denied the people for 60 years.
The Archbishop of former Saigon, proudly explained
to Vatican Insider that “the dialogic approach adopted with the
government is producing results.” As bilateral relations gradually
relax, he said, bishops have pointed out that more and more universities
and private campuses run by foreign Asian, Australian and European
entities and universities have been popping up over the past decade. The
first of these was established in 2001. “Why then should the Catholic
Church in Vietnam be deprived of this right? Particularly given the
shortcomings in the national education system, which are evident from
the figures on Vietnamese education.” The Catholic Church can offer its
educational philosophy and experience to educate people into becoming
responsible individuals, for the good of the entire society,” the
president of the local Episcopate said.
Having been kept out of the state-monopolized
educational system for decades, bishops developed the project and took
action once they found a gap in the institutions. They looked into
forging a partnership with the prestigious Catholic University of Paris
and came up with the idea of establishing an advanced Institute of
theological studies in Ho Chi Minh City. Simultaneously, bishops sought
pontifical status for the new Institution from the Vatican Congregation
for Catholic Education. Archbishop Paul Bui Van Doc said this will be
granted “very soon now.” The project quickly ended up on the desks of
officials in the Vietnamese ministry of education and judging from the
first interviews and informal communication established, a lot of
headway has been made in the process of obtaining government
authorization.
“We are confident. It will mark an important step
forward for the common good of the country, a sign of great hope for a
brighter future for Vietnam, “Bui Van Doc said. Education is key
and for the Church, educational freedom is a crucial means of carrying
out the mission of evangelizing today’s society.” Bishops will discuss
the concrete steps to be taken for the establishment of the new
institute, at their next assembly, which is to be held between 27 and 30
October 2014, in Nha Trang.
It would not be an exaggeration to call the
establishment of this long-awaited institution a “historical turning
point”. The Catholic Church’s right to freedom of education in Vietnam
was taken away in 1954, when the Communist Party came to power. This ban
was later implemented in Southern Vietnam, in 1975, when Catholics ran
over two thousand educational structures, from kindergartens to higher
education institutes. In recent years, the Church regained full freedom
to admit candidates to the seminaries (previously authorized by the
State) and to run kindergartens. Congregations and religious
institutions often open these in remote villages and in areas affected
by marginalization and poverty.
The idea to open a Catholic university first arose
three years ago. In a Pastoral letter issued in 2011 and titled “Let’s
build together a civilization of love and life”, the Vietnamese Church
(Catholics make up 7% of the country’s over 80 million inhabitants)
declared that it was ready to contribute to the country’s development in
the field of education, a key sector in terms of shaping young people
and their consciences. The letter officially requested that the
government “open the door to religious people of good will who wish to
get involved in school education.” At the time, there were 23 private
universities in Vietnam (many of them foreign), that is 11% of the
total. But this percentage increased in the last three years, reaching
almost 30%. "As citizens the Catholics from Vietnam have an obligation
to love and build their country,” the text read. Partly and above all
through their service to education.
This “constructive approach” paid off, the
archbishop explained, because it made the government more open to the
Church’s project. The seed grew and now everything is set for the first
Vietnamese Catholic university of the new age and it is even being
granted pontifical status. The president of the Vietnamese Episcopate
will get the chance to talk to Pope Francis about the project in Korea,
in about a month’s time. Here, Francis will be meeting representative of
the Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences.
source: vaticaninsider
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