
WASHINGTON, DC (Catholic Online) – Secretary of State John Kerry chose  an interesting place to deliver his first foreign policy address. The  former Massachusetts senator spoke at the University of Virginia. He was  introduced by the university’s president, Teresa Sullivan. Dr. Sullivan  noted that the university’s founder, Thomas Jefferson, had served as  the first Secretary of State. 
 
Unlike today’s foreign policy  elites, Mr. Jefferson thought religious freedom was fundamental to our  political liberties. He authored the Virginia Statute for Religious  Freedom, which he introduced into the state’s General Assembly in 1779.  It was a world historical event. When James Madison, Jefferson’s loyal  lieutenant, pressed that bill through to adoption in 1786,  Jefferson  was serving as this country’s second Minister Plenipotentiary to France.  He took pains to have the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom  translated into French and circulated widely in Europe. All of  this is worth noting because religious freedom is not on the back burner  in this administration. It ain’t even in the kitchen. 
 
We have  seen numerous summits, official state visits, and extensive bilateral  negotiations with the People’s Republic of China. None of this has  slowed China’s brutal one-child policy. That policy has led to forced  abortions and tens of millions of unborn baby girls being killed. This  continuing horror has barely gotten a nod from the Obama administration  or the State Department. 
 
With the signal exception of granting  asylum to the blind Chinese human rights activist, Chen Guangcheng (for  which we thanked them and gave them our sincere praise), the Obama  administration’s record on Christian persecution in China has been one  largely of indifference.
 
Now, we see a new report on how China’s  rulers plan to wipe out House Churches. In China, you have to  "register" your church. That is something Christians in America resisted  in the 1770s, and something the Virginia Statute forever abolished. A  House Church, therefore, is one not recognized by the atheist regime.  And China’s Communist rulers are not interested in American views of  human rights.
 
China Aid is a human rights group that monitors  the religious persecutions undertaken by Beijing. We should add that it  is not just Christians who are being suppressed in China. The Falun Gong  sect and the mostly Muslim Uighurs (WEE-gurz) in Xinjiang Province in  the Northwest have also suffered brutal repression under the heel of  Communist rule.
 
In a story in Christianity Today, China Aid  reports instances of Christian persecution have increased 42% in the  last year. Beijing-the capital-witnessed the highest number of incidents  against Christians. This is significant because many an oppressor state  will 
try to put on a friendly face in its own capital, while  leaving the bloody work of persecution to the provinces. What this means  is that Chinese authorities have no concerns about Western protests.  They know they can crush Christians all along the travel routes taken by  such figures as John Kerry with little fear of protest.
 
Sec.  Kerry did, of course, lodge a loud protest at U.Va. He denounced in  strong terms any congressional inaction on budget matters that would  jeopardize U.S. foreign aid.
 
He believes foreign aid is  essential to the U.S. mission in the world. So, presumably, the regime  in Egypt will continue to pocket billions in American aid as it runs  armored personnel carriers over Coptic Christians protesting in Cairo.  The deaths of Christians at the hands of the Morsi administration evokes  little concern from our leaders. 
 
It will be left to NGOs to  raise alarm over this continuing cold indifference toward Christian  persecution from our State Department. We thank monitors such as the  Institute on Religion & Democracy (IRD), the Ethics & Public  Policy Center (EPPC) and Prof. Thomas Farr and the Berkley Center on  Religion, Peace, and World Affairs at Georgetown University. 
 
Our  group, Family Research Council (FRC), plans to host China Aid Founder  Bob Fu in Washington on April 24th.  We can help by giving a Washington  platform to human rights activists like Bob Fu. In January, we hosted  Women without Frontiers leader Reggie Littlejohn, who has done so much  to raise awareness of the war on baby girls in China. In these ways, we  hope to keep alive the spirit of religious liberty and of human rights.   
 
John Kerry is a successor to Thomas Jefferson. We challenge  him to honor Jefferson’s commitment to religious freedom, in China and  around the world. And we remind him of Jefferson’s understanding of the  basis for human rights: "The care of human life and happiness-and not  their destruction-is the first and only legitimate object of good  government."



