Protestantism among the Hmong People in the Mountainous Region of Contemporary Northern Vietnam
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“Q: What do you think about Vang Tru? or What is Vang Tru?A: Vang Tru is God. Vang Tru is Jesus. Jesus is the Son of God. Vang Tru is Protestantism.Q: When did you convert to Christ?A: I converted to Protestantism in 1986. I converted to Protestantism in 1990. I have accepted Jesus Christ for 20 years.Q: How often do you attend a religious service?A: Twice a week, on Sunday morning and Thursday evening (all interviewees answered).Q: What do you think about the impact of Protestantism on the Hmong?A: My life has been improved. In the past, we had to eat cassava but now we can eat rice. We no longer have to practice folk religious rituals. Hmong Protestants no longer steal, gamble, overdrink, and smoke; there is no adultery in the Hmong Protestant community. Hmong animist or Protestant life is the same.Q: Why did you convert to Christ?A: Because a Hmong man told me that I should take the Hmong altar away to stop animism or shamanism. We no longer have to kill pigs, hens, buffaloes for folk religious rituals. Prior to being Protestants, the Hmong had to kill 2–3 buffaloes for funerals or weddings, so they were very poor. Because I no longer have to conduct old worship. Because of poverty.”
2. The Hmong and Vàng Trứ
2.1. The Hmong or Miao
2.2. What Is Vàng Trứ?
3. Introduction and Growth of Protestantism among the Hmong People
3.1. 1987–1992: Vàng Trứ Begins to Appear in This Region
3.2. 1993–2004: The Number of Hmong Protestants Skyrocketed
3.3. 2005 to the Present: Stabilization of the Protestant Situation
4. Protestant Influence on the Hmong People
4.1. Spiritual Life
4.2. Economic Life
4.3. Social Life
4.4. Cultural Life
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The region consists of the provinces of northern Vietnam such as Điện Biên, Lai Châu, Sơn La, Hà Giang, Lào Cai, Cao Bằng, Bắc Kạn, Thái Nguyên, Tuyên Quang, Yên Bái, Thanh Hóa, and Nghệ An. Some of these provinces share borders with China and Laos. |
2 | In fact, these places are private houses of Hmong believers. |
3 | In the past 30 years, approximately 30,000 Hmong from the region have migrated to the Central Highlands of the country. |
4 | Xiong and Xiong (2008) point out that shaman rituals are an integral part of Hmong traditional religion. However, Hmong traditional religion is not defined by shamanism alone; another crucial aspect is “ancestor worship”. Furthermore, the Hmong traditional religion can be characterized as polytheism because many practitioners evoke and believe in the existence of multiple yet limited numbers of natural and supernatural spiritual forces. |
5 | Hmong men who had been actively delivering Vàng Trứ’s message. |
6 | In 2004, Lai Châu province was divided into Lai Châu and Điện Biên provinces. |
7 | Vàng Trứ, or the Good News of Jesus Christ, was recorded by fellow active Hmong, and then cassettes were played to the other Hmong people to convert them. |
8 | The conversion is named the people’s movement (Covell, Liberating Gospel; Vang, Coming a Full Circle). |
9 | As of 2021, 11 Protestant institutions were recognized or registered, 184 Protestant local churches were recognized, and 1702 Protestant congregations in the country were registered, according to GCRA, The Protestant Situation, 2022. |
10 | According to Điện Biên, Lai Châu, Lào Cai, Sơn La Committee for Religious Affairs, May 2021. |
11 | According to Điện Biên, Lai Châu, Lào Cai, Hà Giang, Sơn La Committee for Religious Affairs, May 2021. |
12 | See note 11. |
13 | On 11 November 2022, the author and a Lai Châu provincial official took a field trip to Sin Suoi Ho village. We were welcomed by Pastor Hang A Xa. He shared information about the village’s innovation processes in recent times. |
14 | Presented by a male provincial official of Sơn La province at a conference organized by the Institute for Religion and Belief, Ho Chi Minh National Academy of Politics, 17 November 2023. |
15 | The Hmong people in Sa Pa town, Lào Cai province, disseminate the proverb “A Hmong son owes his father a buffalo”, meaning, in a Hmong family, when the father dies, the son has to slaughter a buffalo to worship a ghost and invite the villagers. This is a very expensive funeral for the poor Hmong. |
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Province | Protestant Organizations or Denominations |
---|---|
Điện Biên | Evangelical Church of Vietnam (North) (ECV), Christian Fellowship Church of Vietnam (CFCV), Inter-Evangelistic Movement (IEM), Inter-Evangelistic Movement in Vietnam (IEMV), Evangelical Mission Church of Vietnam (EMCV), Seventh-Day Adventist Church of Vietnam (SACV), Southern Baptists in Vietnam, Baptist Churches in Vietnam, Living Water Gospel Church (LWGC), Word of Life Church, Assemblies of God of Vietnam (AGV), Vietnam United Methodist Church (VUMC), Gospel Church of Peace |
Hà Giang | ECV, CFCV, AGV, Vietnam Full Gospel Church (VFGC), Presbyterian Church of Vietnam (PCV), EMCV, IEM, LWGC |
Lai Châu | ECV, CFCV, AGV, PCV, EMCV, IEM, SACV |
Lào Cai | ECV, CFCV, AGV, IEMV, EMCV, PCV, VFGC, SACV, VUMC, Pentecostal Assemblies of Vietnam |
Sơn La | ECV, CFCV, PCV, VFGC, SACV, IEM |
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Duc, N.K. Protestantism among the Hmong People in the Mountainous Region of Contemporary Northern Vietnam. Religions 2024, 15, 187. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020187
Duc NK. Protestantism among the Hmong People in the Mountainous Region of Contemporary Northern Vietnam. Religions. 2024; 15(2):187. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020187
Chicago/Turabian StyleDuc, Nguyen Khac. 2024. "Protestantism among the Hmong People in the Mountainous Region of Contemporary Northern Vietnam" Religions 15, no. 2: 187. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020187
APA StyleDuc, N. K. (2024). Protestantism among the Hmong People in the Mountainous Region of Contemporary Northern Vietnam. Religions, 15(2), 187. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020187