Make Text Larger Make Text Smaller Email this Article to a Friend Print this Article

Nuns seek seized property return

Published: November 06, 2009

Sister Patrick de la Croix Huynh Thi Bich Ngoc

---

Saying they can prove ownership, Saint Paul de Chartres nuns in southern Vietnam are demanding the government return land it seized and now says it wants to turn into a park.

Sr Patrick de la Croix Huynh Thi Bich Ngoc, provincial superior of Saint Paul de Chartres of My Tho, said that in 1874 nuns from her congregation bought a 10,235 square metre plot in Vinh Long City and built a convent there, UCA News reports.

However, on October 30 this year, the People's Committee of Vinh Long province began building its Vinh Long City Square on the site.

In a November 2 interview posted on the website of the Vietnam Bishops' Conference, Sr Ngoc said her congregation still has the documents of ownership and construction.

Sr Ngoc said the nuns had housed and cared for orphans, disabled people and other underprivileged people at their convent before 1975, when the country was reunified under communist rule.

On September 7, 1977, local security officials raided their convent, confiscated their belongings and forced those under the care of the sisters to leave, she said.

Security officials forced 17 nuns to stop their work after detaining them at a school for one month. Officials also detained the head of the convent at a police station for two months.

Sr Ngoc said the congregation was given no reason for the raid and detentions until August 27, 2005, when they received papers dated July 6, 1977, from provincial authorities. These papers charged that the orphanage "was a place where unhappy children were trained to fight against the people's government."

The nun said the government used their convent as a hospital for years before they started constructing the square.

"Since 2002, we have petitioned all levels of government to return our properties," Sr Ngoc said, adding that her congregation has also sought help from local Church leaders.

She noted that in 2006 government authorities offered the nuns 1.5 billion dong (AUD$100,000) and 3,000 square metres of land on the outskirts of the city.

Authorities recently asked the nuns to lodge plans for a building permit on the new site, a request Sister Ngoc has rejected. "We want a resolution (of the dispute) to be based on truth," she stressed.

Sr Ngoc said if the nuns accepted the government's offer of new land, it would be tacit agreement that the nuns had violated the law during the incident in 1977 and had been "pardoned" by the government.

"We did not violate the law. We have to return to our convent where we lived for more than a century. We want justice and our rights to be upheld," said Sr Ngoc.

The Saint Paul de Chartres nuns have been living in other areas in the city since the seizure of their properties.

SOURCE

Nuns demand return of seized properties (UCA News)

 

Response to articles is welcome though it may take up to 24 hours for the posting to appear. Simply follow the prompts to post your comment. No posting of more than 250 words will be published. While critical comment on stories & issues is welcomed, postings that descend to personal attacks on or impugn the integrity of other commentators will be blocked.
If you have any problems please email news@cathnews.com
Email is requested for identification purposes only.

Recent Comments

  1. I don’t quite understand the purpose of this article. Is its purpose to raise sympathy for the plight of the Vietnamese Catholic Nuns? Our Australian State government acquisitions land for the development of the needs of the state/community and pays compensation to the owners and we are a democratic country. Sister points out the government acquisitioned the land first for use as a hospital in 1977, then as part of rebuilding/ renovations to the city. A considerable number of years have past since the acquisition of the property in question. New land and $100, thousand dollars, Australian money, 1.5 million dong, has been offered as compensation. Australian have a saying: Don’t cut off your nose to spite your face.

  2. How can we contact the Sisters - or otherwise express our solidarity?
    Is this the Order some of whose Sisters have studied in Aust of late?
    Bernard [St Leonards, Vic]

Delicious

More from this section

  1. Pharmaceutical company defends use of aborted fetus

    A statement by pharmaceutical company Neocutis defending of its use of cells harvested from an aborted fetus in the development of burn treatments and anti-ageing creams is being criticised as dishonest by a pro-life group.

  2. Pope John Paul II beatification soon

    The late Pope John Paul II could be beatified in the coming months, the mayor of Rome has been reported as saying, nudging him closer to sainthood.

  3. Miami bans Legionaries of Christ

    Miami Archbishop John Favalora has announced an immediate official ban on members of the Legionaries of Christ from exercising any ministry in the archdiocese.

  4. Rode defends apostolic visitation

    Vatican Cardinal Franc Rodé has said the Holy See decided on the apostolic visitation of women religious in the USA after hearing "the concerns expressed by American Catholics - religious, laity, clergy and hierarchy."

  5. Elderly religious arrested in weapons protest

    US priest Father Bill "Bix" Bischel, 81, and Sister Anne Montgomery, 83 were hooded, handcuffed and held faced down on the ground for four hours before being arrested for a protest against nuclear weapons.

Church Resources provides a range of services for the Church and not-for-profit sector, including aggregating buying power for a wide range of products and services used by health, welfare, aged care, education and parish organisations. More »

Subscribe

Receive CathNews headlines in your inbox daily.

News Feed

Subscribe to the CathNews RSS feed to get the daily edition automatically delivered to you.