×

Vatican official making rare trip to Taiwan for Buddhist charity celebrations

By Thomson Reuters May 11, 2026 | 12:37 AM

(Corrects paragraph 5 day of the week to Monday, not Sunday)

TAIPEI, May 11 (Reuters) – A Vatican official is making a rare trip to Taiwan this week ​for the 60th anniversary of the founding of the ‌Buddhist charity the Tzu Chi Foundation, at a time when the Holy See is working to improve ties with China.

The Vatican is one of only 12 countries to maintain formal diplomatic ties with Chinese-claimed Taiwan, ‌and ​the only one in Europe, though ⁠it does not station ⁠an ambassador in Taipei.

Tzu Chi and Taiwan’s foreign ministry said that Cardinal Peter Turkson, chancellor of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, was in Taipei this week for the ​charity’s anniversary events.

“Taiwan and the Vatican share universal values including religious freedom, human rights, peace, and fraternity,” the foreign ⁠ministry said in a statement, adding ⁠it welcomes and supports international religious exchanges and ​cooperation.

Tzu Chi said Turkson was on Monday visiting its headquarters ​in the eastern county of Hualien.

The Vatican did not ‌respond to a request for comment.

Another Vatican official, Paulin Batairwa Kubuya, under-secretary of the Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue, visited Taiwan last year to attend a conference and meet members of ⁠its different faiths.

But despite their formal ties, Taiwan President Lai Ching-te neither attended Pope Francis’ funeral last year nor the inauguration of ⁠Pope Leo at ‌the Vatican.

On Sunday night, thousands of Tzu ⁠Chi volunteers and staff took part in the ​main ‌celebration at Taipei’s Liberty Square, attended by ​Lai and also ⁠the de facto U.S. ambassador in Taiwan, Raymond Greene.

Tzu Chi works around the world, especially in disaster zones, and while it is a Buddhist organisation it works across faiths.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Additional reporting by Joshua McElwee at the Vatican; Editing ​by Stephen Coates)