A Great Gift Idea for the New Year: The CCP Anti-Xie-Jiao Calendar

Say good-bye to 2020 and welcome 2021 with something reminding you every day that the persecution of banned religions should be supported—or else

by Massimo Introvigne

The CCP has launched an exceptional campaign to eradicate The Church of Almighty God, the largest among the groups classified as xie jiao (“heterodox teachings,” sometimes less correctly translated as “evil cults”), and continues its cruel repression of Falun Gong and other banned religious movements.

One difference between this and the campaigns of Chairman Mao’s era is the continuous attempt to elicit the citizens’ support (and, if possible, some sympathy abroad) for this brutal repression.

Bitter Winter recently reported about the proliferation of anti-xie-jiao theme parks in China. For the (Western) new year, another initiative is the massive distribution of anti-xie-jiao calendars. In Yancheng City, Jiangsu Province150,000 calendars were printed and distributed door-to-door.

The calendars remind citizens every day that those supporting xie jiao will be severely punished. But there is also good news: those reporting to the police on neighbors or co-workers who are members of The Church of Almighty GodFalun Gong, or other xie jiao will receive attractive monetary rewards.

The calendars are not new. Bitter Winter has learned that in some provinces, they had already appeared in 2015. But it seems the initiative is gaining momentum.

The 2020 calendar. The 2021 one is promoted even more extensively
The 2020 calendar. The 2021 one is promoted even more extensively (source: Government of Jinghe County, Xinjiang).

The calendars’ distribution offers additional evidence of a massive nation-wide effort to persuade Chinese citizens that what the world denounces as a shameful violation of human rights and religious liberty should be regarded as a product of the CCP’s superior wisdom and supported—or else.

Calendars were distributed in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region as well
Calendars were distributed in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region as well (source: Government of Jinghe County, Xinjiang).

Source: Bitter Winter