Chinese universities promote closed minds by banning religious knowledge and Western culture, as students and teachers alike find their futures threatened.
Anti-Religion Activity in Schools
Xinjiang Uses Citizen Informers to “Root Out” Enemies
Using agricultural metaphors, authorities move to “excavate, reduce, and eradicate” their enemies by Cultural Revolution-like citizens reporting on each other.
Chairman Mao’s Birthday Instead of Christmas
For Christmas last year, the spirit of the Chinese government was simple: Forget Christ, celebrate Mao Zedong.
Religious Belief on Campus Suppressed Throughout China
Foreign Christian teachers deported, and Christian students and teachers face penalties, as Chinese schools seek to reinforce the gospel according to Marx.
Students and Teachers Feel Pressure to Abandon Faith
In an expanded push to strangle religious faith, schools in Shandong Province move to pressure students and teachers to pledge to reject God or face consequences.
“Religious Bans” Sweep Across Universities
In an attempt to control the minds of the country’s young people, the CCP is working to infiltrate universities.
Authorities Demand “Church-Free Zones” Near Schools
Regulations to “protect” minors from religion reach a new level of absurdity, as churches near schools are forced to close, asked to share lists of youth members.
Schools as a Stomping Ground for Indoctrination
The Chinese government is going after elementary and high schools to teach students that atheism, not religion, is the best belief system.
The Orwellian Life in Xinjiang Campuses
More than a million Uyghurs are languishing in transformation through education camps, but millions are still at large in the no-mans land of uncertainty where a careless word or administrative whim could put them behind bars.
Students Who Fail Anti-Religion Test May Not Graduate
Some universities in Henan Province have included the assessment of anti-religion knowledge as part of the graduation requirements and are intensifying the promotion of atheism to the newly-enrolled students.









