Sunday, August 9, 2015

Write to Li Jiatoa - a prisoner for the sake of Christ

Please find time to write to Li Jiatao.  Her story is below.  Here is a link to a website that provides her address and phrases in a language she can understand.  Simply print it out and send to her.  Imagine the comfort of receiving letters while in prison.  Let's support our Christian sister....

http://www.prisoneralert.com/pprofiles/vp_prisoner_243_profile.html

Li Jiatao, a house church member in charge of keeping accounting records, was one of three Christians arrested and sentenced to two years in prison and fined 5,000 yuan (US $800) for “illegal business operations” by the Liunun District Court of Liuzhou.

Police detained school director Cheng Jie at the school on Feb. 18, 2014. Four months later, on June 24, 2014, authorities also arrested church elder Huang Quirui and church member Li Jiatao in their homes.

Authorities claimed the defendants, all part of the Liangren house church which founded the kindergarten, “illegally” made a profit from the creation and publication of kindergarten curriculum. The curriculum used by The Hualin Foreign Language Experimental Kindergarten teaches students about character. It does not mention God or Jesus, but uses stories and games to teach children about honesty and trustworthiness. The school charged students only the cost of printing the books.

“This is absolutely a wrongful verdict,” said lawyer Tan Yongpei, who along with two other lawyers from his firm replaced the three Christian defendants’ original lawyers after they were “disqualified” by the court during the trial on Feb. 9, 2015.

“The act of printing is not an illegal business operation, and Cheng Jie’s act of taking care of the books is not an illegal business operation. The act of shipping the books, which Huang Quirui did, is not an act of an illegal business operation,” Tan said.

Authorities have had a long-running campaign against the Liangren Church and its school for promoting Christianity among young students. Authorities accused the school of violating the “Law of Education” by forcing citizens to believe in a religion. As a result of the arrests, the Liangren Church closed the school, refunded tuition, and reassigned teachers to other locations.

Li Jiatao was home with her two children, ages 4 and 8, when unidentified police officials knocked on the door in the early morning hours of June 24. Her husband, a Liangren church missionary, was in Hong Kong at the time, so she refused to answer the door. The police officials smashed through the door without identifying themselves or providing a warrant. They also confiscated the computer and religious materials from the home when they arrested her.

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