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Morning Call: Free Falun Gong In America, practitioners nurture what is banned in China By Joanna Poncavage 08/19/01 John and Jean Li of Bethlehem frequently perform acts
that could get them arrested, tortured or killed in
China. Every day, they practice a system of gentle stretching
exercises and meditative poses that are similar to
those of tai chi and yoga. They sometimes meet with a
few other Chinese people in their home or drive to a
Montgomery County park to join about 10 others to
exercise outdoors as a group. [...]
They are practicing Falun Gong, a spiritual movement
that became popular in China in the 1990s. They say it
improves them physically, mentally and spiritually,
and helps them become better people. The Chinese government charges that Falun Gong is an
[Jiang Zemin government's slanderous term omitted] and
outlawed it two years ago. Since then, Falun Gong
followers have been brutally arrested in public, and
thousands have been sent to re-education centers aimed
at extinguishing the practice. Falun Gong supporters maintain that 263 people have
died in police custody since the crackdown began.
Independent estimates have put that number at more
than 100. [...] John Li was born in China and now teaches business at
Lehigh University. He learned about Falun Gong from a
friend while he was a graduate student at Washington
University in St. Louis. "I was very much attracted by Falun Gong's healing
effects," he says. At the time, he was stressed by the
rigor of his studies and was looking for a way to
relax. "Then I read the book ["Zhuan Falun," by principal
Falun Gong teacher Li Hongzhi], and it fit in well
with my philosophy. It advocated truth, benevolence
and tolerance, and helped me be more focused on my
studies. I finished my program, and I had a successful
job search and landed at Lehigh." Li is in this
country on a work visa but plans to become a U.S.
citizen. [...]
Falun Gong spread quickly in China through word of
mouth. Within a few years, thousands of people were
showing up for lectures by Li Hongzhi, a former
government clerk. His books "Falun Gong" and "Zhuan
Falun" now can be downloaded from the Internet in more
than a dozen languages. "When I went back to China in 1997, I found there were
many people practicing Falun Gong. It had gained a
huge following from all walks of life," says John Li.
As is the custom in China, people would get together
in the morning and evening to exercise in the parks. By 1999, Falun Gong had an estimated 70 million to 100
million followers in China, according to a Chinese
government report. In April of that year, 10,000 of
them gathered in Beijing to appeal the beatings and
arrests of 45 Falun Gong practitioners in another
city. In July 1999 the Chinese government officially
banned Falun Gong. Many followers feel Falun Gong was outlawed because it
was becoming too popular. "It is the foremost
meditation practice in China," says John Li. "More
people practice Falun Gong than are Chinese [party name omitted]
party members. Naturally, this got the totalitarian
regime nervous." James Li, a software engineer from China who now lives
in Montgomeryville, says his brother, Baifan Li, was
murdered in April while in custody in a "reform class"
designed to brainwash and break the will of Falun Gong
practitioners. He made many phone calls to China to try to find out
how his brother died. Some people knew about the
situation but dared not speak out, he says, and tried
to persuade him to stop investigating. "Acquaintances in the legal field told me unanimously
that, 'In view of the current political climate, no
lawyer dares to accepts such a case in China
nowadays,'" says James Li, who left China in 1986 and
is now a U.S. citizen. "A lawyer told me bluntly,
'Your brother died for nothing.'" Jingduan Yang of Cherry Hill, N.J., a resident in
psychiatry at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in
Philadelphia who was born in China, says his sister
was jailed for one year for practicing Falun Gong.
"She is OK now," he says. "She was one of the lucky
ones." In July, John and Jean Li and Yang were among about
1,500 people from around the world who convened for a
rally at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., to mark the
second anniversary of the crackdown on Falun Gong in
China. About 90 percent were Chinese, but there was a
large contingent of Americans and many Europeans. Li Hongzhi, who moved to Flushing, Queens in 1998,
before the Chinese government issued a warrant for his
arrest, addressed the group. "He spoke against
violence and hatred. The chief message is that as
practitioners we are supposed to tell the truth about
what's been going on in China, and what Falun Gong
really is," says Yang. To do so is an act of compassion, Yang says, because
others will benefit from this "very, very good
practice." "Our priority is to tell the truth about the
persecution and ask people to support us on
humanitarian grounds," says John Li. "We are engaged
in a truth-telling campaign to clear up the
government's propaganda." "We are an apolitical group," he adds, "but we have
been dragged into the political landscape because in
China, Falun Gong practitioners are being arrested and
killed." Since June, followers who spread information about
Falun Gong can be tried for subversion, separatism and
divulging state secrets, crimes punishable by death in
China, where Falun Gong has been labeled [term omitted]. A resolution before the U.S. Congress calling for the
government of China to stop persecuting Falun Gong
practitioners and to abide by universal human rights
may lead to some kind of action or pressure, says
Matthew Kutolowski, spokesperson for the Falun Dafa
Information Center, a non-profit group based in New
York City. [...] "I don't think the Chinese government has been nearly
so successful in breaking Falun Gong as they claim,"
says Kutolowski. "There are still many millions of
people there practicing, although they are not
protesting as before, which pretty much insures being
arrested. Now people will go out at night and post
flyers and notices with information about
persecution." Although there is no way to know exactly how many
people practice Falun Gong worldwide, there are
volunteer contact persons in 40 countries, says
Kutolowski. Is it a religion? Its followers, who call themselves practitioners, say
no. "I think Falun Gong helps me to have a deeper
understanding of religious beliefs and have a
spiritual faith, but we don't think of Falun Gong as a
religion," says John Li. "It is a spiritual practice. There is no worshipping,
or kowtowing," says Terri Morse, of Media, Delaware
County, who says she experienced a deep, spiritual
awakening when she started practicing about two years
ago. She says she also got relief from painful
physical symptoms of Lyme disease and fibromyalgia.
"In Chinese medicine, it is believed that you cannot
separate the mind and the body," she notes. [...] Jingduan Yang describes the Falun Gong movement this
way: "No organization, no office, no positions, no
head jobs, no money transactions. It is a totally
voluntary, individual practice. Everyone teaches
everyone else. People learn free, you teach it free.
The only thing people pay for is their [hard-copy]
books and videos." Although there is no official or central Falun Gong
organization, practitioners are well-connected. According to the Falun Dafa Web site
(www.falundafa.org) there are practice groups in most
major cities and universities in the United States,
Canada, Australia and Europe. The Web site lists more
than 100 links to other local Web sites listing local
activities, groups, contacts and resources.
Pennsylvania has three Web pages -- Philadelphia,
Pittsburgh and Penn State. A package of materials supplied to The Morning Call
contained professional quality documents, including a
CD with a video about Falun Gong in China. According to John Li, materials such as these are
prepared by Falun Gong supporters volunteering their
time in non-working hours. "Expenses are paid by people out of their pockets.
Most Chinese practitioners in the United States are
very well educated. Most hold Ph.D.s. They are
scientists or computer programmers. In our group,
there are several English-speaking practitioners who
can write. They have the skills to produce those
materials at a very cheap rate, because they don't
need anybody's help. [...] There are no official statistics on how many people in
the United States practice Falun Gong, but the Falun
Dafa Information Center puts the number at tens of
thousands. In southeastern Pennsylvania, there is a core group of
about 200 to 300 practitioners who meet regularly for
group exercises at seven different practice sites. In an effort to get the word out about China, "We do
workshops at libraries, colleges and health fairs. We
are doing public access TV," says Terri Morse, who
practices Falun Gong with a group that meets in
Kimberton, Chester County. "There are volunteers every day at the Liberty Bell
handing out information about the persecution in
China," she says. "We meet people from around the
world, and they are very familiar with Falun Gong, and
anything to do with China. We have to place a
microscope over [the Chinese government] to be sure
they keep their promises on their human rights
issues." For his part, Bethlehem's John Li says, "I'm pretty
happy, and I credit it to my practice of Falun Gong." http://www.mcall.com/html/news/am_mag/falungong.htm Morning Call: Falun Gong on the Web 08/19/01 Master Li's books Falun Gong's texts, "Falun Gong" and "Zhuan Falun" by
Li Hongzhi can be downloaded from the main Falun Gong
Web site. Go to www.falundafa.org and click on "The
Falun Dafa Books" Other information
Falun Dafa Information Center: www.faluninfo.net
Friends of Falun Gong: www.fofg.org
http://www.mcall.com/html/news/am_mag/e_pg004falunbox.htm
Posting date: 8/22/2001
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