Ye Xiaowen

Ye Xiaowen
叶小文
Director of the Bureau of Religious Affairs
In office
July 1995 – 1998
Preceded byZhang Shengzuo
Director of the State Administration for Religious Affairs
In office
1998–2009
Succeeded byWang Zuo'an
Party Secretary of the Central Institute of Socialism
In office
2009–2016
Preceded byLou Zhihao
Succeeded byPan Yue
Personal details
BornAugust 1950 (1950-08) (age 74)
Ningxiang, Hunan, China
NationalityHan Chinese
Political partyChinese Communist Party
Alma materGuizhou Academy of Social Sciences
OccupationPolitician

Ye Xiaowen (Chinese: 叶小文; pinyin: Yè Xiǎowén; born August 1950) is a Chinese politician who held various top posts relating to state regulation of religion in China from 1995 to 2009.

In 1995, Ye became the director of the Bureau of Religious Affairs under the State Council. At the beginning of his work in the Bureau, he held a view to minimize the influence of religion in the socialist China.[1][2] There, he worked to prevent religious unrest, select the 11th Panchen Lama, and ban the controversial Falun Gong group. In 1998, the Bureau of Religious Affairs was renamed the State Administration for Religious Affairs, while Ye Xiaowen remained its director. He acknowledged presiding over religions in China, and changed policy to say that religion has a place in society, although he persecuted groups that he thought brought foreign control to Chinese churches, like the Roman Catholic Church. In 2007 he declared State Religious Affairs Bureau Order No. 5, which attempted to reduce the influence of the 14th Dalai Lama and other foreign groups on the reincarnations in Tibet. All the while, he traveled often to the United States to defend his religious policy against criticism. Ye was relieved of his religious post in September 2009 to direct the Central Institute of Socialism.

  1. ^ Ye, Xiaowen (1996). "'Dangqian Woguo de Zongjiao Wenti' [The Contemporary Religious Questions of the Motherland]". Zhonggong Zhongyang Danxiao Baogao Xuan [Selected reports of the Party Central School]. 101 (5): 9–23.
  2. ^ Leung, Beatrice; Chan, Shunning (2003). Changing Church and State Relations in Hong Kong, 1950-2000. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.