Phanxicô Xaviê Nguyá» n VÃÂn ThuáºÂn, also known as Francis-Xavier Nguyá» n VÃÂn ThuáºÂn (; 17 April 1928 â 16 September 2002), was a Vietnamese cardinal in the Catholic Church. He was a nephew of South Vietnam's first president, Ngô ÃÂình Diá»Âm, and of Archbishop Ngô ÃÂình Thục. ThuáºÂn, targeted for his faith as well as his family connections to Ngô ÃÂình Diá»Âm, was detained by the communist government of Vietnam in a re-education camp for 13 years, nine in solitary confinement.
Pope Francis declared him venerable on 4 May 2017.
Nguyá» n VÃÂn ThuáºÂn was born in Huế in 1928, the son of Nguyá» n VÃÂn Ấm and Elizabeth Ngô ÃÂình Thá» Hiá»Âp, daughter of Ngô ÃÂình Khả. He joined the seminary at An Ninh as a teenager, and was ordained a priest on 11 June 1953, by Monsignor Jean-Baptiste Urrutia. After three years of further studies in Rome, he was appointed in 1959âÂÂ1967 as a faculty member and rector of the Seminary of Hoan Thiá»Ân, Huế.
He was appointed Bishop of Nha Trang on 13 April 1967 and received episcopal consecration on 4 June 1967 at Huế from Angelo Palmas, Apostolic Delegate to Viêt Nam (and later Nuncio to Colombia and to Canada), assisted by Archbishops Philippe Nguyá» n Kim ÃÂiá»Ân, titular archbishop of Parium and Apostolic Administrator of Huế, and Jean-Baptiste Urrutia, titular archbishop of Carpato. On 24 April 1975, he was appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Sài Gòn. Six days later, Sài Gòn fell to the North Vietnamese Army. ThuáºÂn, targeted for his faith as well as his family connections to Ngô ÃÂình Diá»Âm, was detained by the communist government of Vietnam in a re-education camp for 13 years, nine in solitary confinement.
In prison, he smuggled out messages to his people on scraps of paper. The brief reflections, copied by hand and circulated within the Vietnamese community, have been printed in the book, The Road of Hope. Through a network of influential Overseas Vietnamese, including dignitaries, like his former classmate Monsignor Trần VÃÂn Hoài, The Road of Hope was distributed worldwide. Another book, Prayers of Hope, contains his prayers written in prison. The bishop fashioned a tiny Bible out of scraps of paper. Sympathetic guards smuggled in a piece of wood and some wire from which he crafted a small crucifix.
On 21 November 1988, ThuáºÂn was released by the communist government but kept under house arrest in the archbishop's house in Hanoi, impeded from returning to his see, Há» ChàMinh City. He was allowed to visit Rome in 1991 but not to return. The following year, he was given a post at the International Catholic Commission for Migration in Geneva, Switzerland. On 24 November 1994, he was appointed President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, and at the same time resigned from his post of Coadjutor Archbishop of Saigon. As President of the Pontifical Council, he handled issues such as Third World debt. In 1995, he was appointed Postulator of the Cause of Beatification of Brother Nguyá» n Tân VÃÂn, also known as Marcel Van. On 21 February 2001, ThuáºÂn was created a Cardinal Deacon of Santa Maria della Scala. He died of cancer in a clinic in Rome, Italy, on 16 September 2002, at the age of 74.
On 16 September 2007, the fifth anniversary of the cardinal's death, the Catholic Church began the beatification process for ThuáºÂn. Pope Benedict XVI expressed "profound joy" at news of the official opening of the beatification cause. Catholics in Vietnam also positively received the news on beatification process opening for the cardinal. In the words of a catechist from the Archdiocese of Há» ChàMinh City, "Nguyá» n VÃÂn ThuáºÂn is an example of holiness for Vietnamese Catholics and for the entire world." Waldery Hilgeman is postulator of the cause.
In his 2007 encyclical, Spe Salvi, Benedict XVI referred to ThuáºÂn's Prayers of Hope, saying: "During thirteen years in jail, in a situation of seemingly utter hopelessness, the fact that he could listen and speak to God became for him an increasing power of hope, which enabled him, after his release, to become for people all over the world a witness to hopeâÂÂto that great hope which does not wane even in the nights of solitude."