Advertisement

Advertisement



Advertisement


About Shanghaiist

Shanghaiist is a website about Shanghai, China. More

Managing Editor: Dan Washburn
Editor: Kenneth Tan
Publisher: Gothamist

tips@shanghaiist.com

info@shanghaiist.com

advertising@shanghaiist.com

RSS (FB) | About | Advertising | Archives | Facebook | Mobile | Staff | Twitter | Write For Us

Recent Comments
Public Calendar
Contribute

Latest tip:

<a href="http://breningstall.blogspot.com/2008/08/red-light-green-light-pedestrians-must.html" re [more]

 

Latest link:

 

Latest Photo:

 

Favorites
Newsletter
Too busy to check the site? Receive a daily email with links to all Shanghaiist posts from the previous 24 hours.

Enter your email


Powered by FeedBlitz
Subscribe
Use an RSS reader to stay up to date with the latest news and posts from Shanghaiist.
Advertisement


Advertisement

January 3, 2008

'Godless' China to be world's biggest supplier of Bibles?

A Deutsche Presse Agentur story released on the eve of the New Year's reveals that Nanjing is about to be home to the world's largest Bible factory to be housed in what's been described as an "aircraft hangar-sized plant" capable of producing 1 million copies a month, or one Bible per second.

Amity Printing's current factory is already 800,000 Bibles a month in 90 languages, from Braille to Slovakian to Swahili. Megan Hunt, a volunteer English teacher with Amity in Yizhou, Guangxi Autonomous Region has graciously shared with Shanghaiist her pictures of what the current plant looks like. Click for more after the jump:

amity1.jpg
This looks like just any other factory in China.

amity2.jpg
Another view of the plant.

amity3.jpg
Reams and reams of paper that reach to the ceiling. A lot of this paper has been donated by the UK-based United Bible Society and other overseas Christians.

amity4.jpg
The word of God being printed by these old rickety macines that have served Amity for years.

amity5.jpg
Women ripping out faulty pages.

amity6.jpg
And this is where they all end up!

amity7.jpg
Pages for the Bibles being collated before the binding. Does it not strike you how most of the work seems to be done manually? A state-of-the-art US$4 million Timson publishing press has just been shipped in from Europe for the new plant that will replace the old system.

amity8.jpg
The finished products. More than 50 million Bibles have been produced this way, with over 80% of them in the Mandarin-language edition.

amity9.jpg
Bibles that have passed quality inspections are tagged "合格" (approved) before they are sent to be sold at state-sanctioned churches throughout China for as little as 9.50 yuan (US$1.30) each. Other language versions are exported to other parts of the world.

For another equally interesting look at Amity Press, refer to BENSLCHAN's photo set. The Amity Foundation has its official website here.

Maybe you, too, have an interesting photostory to share with Shanghaiist readers? Get in touch with us at info AT shanghaiist DOT com!


Email This Entry







Advertisement: Shanghaiist Continues Below!


Comments (2)

geesh, it's like overnight this country can turn from the biggest bible censor into the UNIVERSE'S BIGGEST bible producer. I can just see Mao rolling over in the Mausoleum and asking "What has happened to my army?". But this all falls into place if you consider the national religion here to be Capitalism (disguised under Democracy).

And this is just planting a seed, maybe one day China can compete to become the World's Most Ethical Christian population. Yeah, maybe i'll still be alive to read that headline.

 

Speaking of China and Christianity...

Pat Robertson of the CBN and The 700 Club recently revealed what God told him about what will happen in 2008. He said "God will give us China." He predicted China will become the biggest Christian country in the world when 250 million Chinese become Christians.

I guess the Bibles won't be exported. That would kill the trade deficit.

 
Post a comment (Comment Policy)

2003-2008 Gothamist LLC. All rights reserved. Terms of Use & Privacy Policy. We use MovableType.

Site Meter