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Dallas Morning News: Taking it to the streets: Plano woman spends nearly $200,000 to put message on buses By ESTHER WU The ads on the sides of city buses have become a part of the urban landscape
-- posters touting television shows, the Ice Capades, or a new laundry
additive.
But one ad is causing some people to do a double take. At first glance it
looks like a promotion for allergy medication. A woman sits in a meadow of
flowers meditating. Next to her are the words: Truth, Compassion, Tolerance,
and, finally, Falun Dafa. Then it hits you. This is an advertisement about that
group of people being persecuted in China.
"Well, that's not quite all," said Ms. Luu, a Plano computer
company owner who has spent nearly $200,000 of her own money on the DART ads in
the last 15 months.
"But that is part of the message I want to get across. If just one
person sees the ad, and if it raises their consciousness about Falun Dafa, then
it will have been worth any amount of money."
Falun Dafa is the spiritual component of Falun Gong, a movement the Chinese
government outlawed two years ago [...].
Its followers, however, say it is a practice that combines meditation with
exercises to improve the body, mind and spirit. Practitioners, as they prefer to
be called, also follow the teachings of its founder, Li Hongzhi, who advocates a
simple life guided by the principles of truth, compassion, and tolerance.
Ms. Luu estimates that there are more than 30 million adherents worldwide.
The Chinese government has reportedly jailed thousands and pressed them to
denounce the practice. Practitioners say the Chinese government has killed at
least 250 of their peers and tortured countless others.
"We need to let others know about the persecution that is taking place
in China, and we need to let people know that Falun Dafa is not evil, as the
Chinese government has said it is," Ms. Luu said.
Ms. Luu said she was fortunate to be able to finance her one-woman ad
campaign.
She took a Falun Dafa poster to Obie Media and told them she wanted to get
her message out on the DART buses.
"This is highly unusual," said general manager Greg Duval, whose
company handles the advertising contracts for some 40 transit companies
nationwide. "Our business usually focuses on retail or consumer goods and
services. It is very rare for an individual to make [an advertising] buy like
this.
"We've received a handful of calls about the ads -- mostly requests for
more information," said Mr. Duval. "We just refer the callers to the
group's website that's on the ad."
The first ad appeared in August 2000, and the last ones will be removed by
Nov. 30. Ms. Luu started out with a contract for 10 bus ads and gradually added
more until there were 30 buses sporting Falun Dafa ads on their sides or backs.
Judy Henneberger, assistant chaplain at Southern Methodist University and
coordinator of religious life on campus, has seen the ads around town.
"Because of my work, I'm familiar with diverse groups and religions. I
know about Falun Dafa, so it didn't raise any questions in my mind. But you
certainly couldn't help but notice the ads."
That's music to Ms. Luu's ears.
The Plano resident has been a Falun Dafa practitioner since 1996.
After attending a 1999 national conference in Washington, D.C., about the
persecution of Falun Dafa followers in China, Ms. Luu decided to start an
advertising campaign to "tell the truth about Falun Dafa."
She kicked off her campaign by buying full-page ads in the local
Chinese-language newspapers.
But that wasn't enough, Ms. Luu said. "I needed a way to reach more
people -- American people."
She said the idea for the bus ads came to her as she was driving through town
and saw a bus with an eye-catching ad.
"I knew those buses would go to parts of the city I couldn't," she
said.
The ads are based on a poster distributed by the Falun Dafa information
center.
The ads list the national website for Falun Dafa, www.falundafa.org, so Ms.
Luu has no way of gauging how effective the ads have been. But she said the
numbers don't matter -- "people do."
She has been paying an average of $15,000 a month for the ads, but the cost
didn't faze her.
"My husband, Teddy, told me I had a certain amount of money I could
spend any way I wanted. But he approves. Teddy was the one who introduced me to
the movement. He saw an ad about a Falun Gong meeting in Houston and he decided
to go.
"We had been going to a Buddhist temple, but Teddy was looking for
something more, something more meaningful. Falun Dafa seemed to have the answers
for him."
Falun Dafa, which is also called Falun Gong, incorporates both meditation and
physical exercise. The movement discourages practitioners from focusing on
personal wealth or material things. Instead, practitioners are encouraged to do
good, think of others and live a pure life.
"After I began doing the exercises, my health improved. I had ulcers and
could not eat anything," Ms. Luu said. "I had a lot of stomach
problems. After Falun Gong, everything cleared up, I knew this was what we had
been looking for, this was the true way.
"Now I have the responsibility to help others ... to save others. If
they just see the ad, then perhaps that would open their minds about Falun Dafa.
If they see the ad, perhaps they will ask questions and learn about it.
Practitioners live by the tenets of truthfulness, compassion, and forbearance.
If we live by these principles, we will cultivate our minds and achieve inner
peace. Society will be a better place to live."
The Luus say they have three very personal reasons for making the world a
better place -- their daughters, Melinda, 14; Stephanie, 9; and Kimberly, 6.
Ms. Luu said her family has never put a lot of emphasis on monetary wealth.
Even as the couple's computer business faltered, she remained committed to
financing the ad campaign.
"We have set aside a certain amount of money to do this ... and I can't
turn back," she said. "As for my girls, well, they have everything
they need. They will not suffer [because of the ad campaign]."
Melinda said she thinks it's great that her mom is so committed to this
cause. In a typical teen-age fashion, the Plano student said she doesn't go
around discussing her family or their involvement with the movement.
"But I did tell one friend, and she thinks it's neat," Melinda
said.
The Luus immigrated to the United States from Taiwan in 1988. After Teddy
earned a degree in computer science, the couple opened Superior Micro
Distributors, a company that assembles and distributes computers throughout the
United States. At the height of their business, the couple grossed $2 million in
sales in one year.
Now, like many high-tech companies, Superior is doing little business these
days, Ms. Luu said. That leaves her more time to devote to Falun Dafa, she said.
She uses her empty offices to hold exercise and meditation classes, and she
recently joined other practitioners who distributed 70,000 fliers at the State
Fair of Texas.
"Mrs. Luu is quite unique," said Mr. Wang, who recently moved to
Dallas from Beijing. "Everyone appreciates her wonderful generosity. But
the practitioner who only has $100 and gives $10 is as important as the person
who gives $100,000. The amount is not what's important."
Sun, another local practitioner, explained that Falun Dafa is not an
organized group.
"There are no membership dues. No one takes roll at classes. It is all
voluntary. Everyone comes and goes as they please. In fact, if people try to
give us money, we don't take it. There are many others, like Ms. Luu, who
contribute in their own way. Some may pay for the printing of brochures, someone
else may pay for a room for us to meet, still others will spend the time to talk
about Falun Dafa. We don't take up collections. It is all voluntary, and no one
keeps track of who gives what."
Ms. Luu said she knows it is difficult for "outsiders" to
understand their devotion to the movement. It is derived from the centuries-old
Chinese tradition of Xiulian, an ancient practice of cultivating one's
mind and body as a means of keeping fit and healing oneself. Through time, the
practice became known as Qigong -- Qi meaning universal life or
energy and Gong meaning exercise in Chinese.
Qigong, which is pronounced chee-gong, traditionally had been handed down
secretly from master to pupil. In 1992, Master Li began teaching a form of Qigong
that was called Falun Gong publicly in China.
Falun Gong refers to five sets of exercises that involve lotus positions and
hand movements. Falun Dafa is the cultivation or improvement of one's heart and
mind through the study of the universal principles of truth, benevolence and
forbearance. Many believe that the spiritual movement incorporates Buddhist and
Taoist principles.
Mr. Sun estimates there are about 20 to 30 practitioners in the Dallas-Fort
Worth area who meet regularly. "And I'd say there are about another 200
local people who only come for the exercise or who may drop in from time to
time," Mr. Sun said.
So why the push to get the word out about Falun Dafa? Mr. Sun agreed that
some might view the ad campaign as a gross contrast to the movement's disdain
for commercialization and material wealth.
"But you see, the end product of the ads is pure," Mr. Sun
explained. "We want to tell more people about Falun Dafa so that they can
find salvation."
Ms. Luu said she knows there is much debate about Falun Dafa.
"I just want to open their eyes and see the possibilities. That is why I
put in the national website on the ads. I want them to read the information and
see for themselves what we are about."
And though the last ad will be removed in two weeks, Ms. Luu is already
looking ahead.
"I've just bought radio time at the local radio stations," she
said. "I'm starting out at the Chinese station and at the Vietnamese
station. The Vietnamese people need to know about Falun Dafa, too."
http://www.dallasnews.com/religion/STORY.ea340fddff.b0.af.0.a4.6b11f.html
Posting date: 11/19/2001
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