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The Record (Troy, New York): Tale of Oppression, Persecution Mother of RPI student held in labor camp for practicing Falun Dafa By Kate Perry The Record
Monday, December 23, 2002
A 34-year-old Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute student from China is at the
height of academic success doing post-doctoral work in branches of science that
most people have never heard of, but behind all of her success, there is a
disturbing story.
Xueyuan Wu, a petite Chinese woman whose childlike features and sanguine way
conceal the wealth of information and insights, some of them grave, that lie
within her, will tell you matter-of-factly about persecution in her homeland.
She'll tell you that between 1992 and 1999 close to 100 million people in
China began practicing a cultivation exercise called Falun Dafa or falun gong,
which its followers claim has the power to heal everything from heart trouble to
insomnia.
Practitioners of Falun Dafa do five exercises or motions, which look similar
to yoga or tai chi, but they also live by three principles: truth, compassion
and forbearance, which add a more spiritual element,
Wu will also say that in 1999, just months after the government praised the
practice for bettering the country's public health, China's president, Jiang
Zemin grew wary of the practice, fearing that it would touch the souls of the
Chinese deeper than the communist party, so he ordered all practitioners to
cease. If they resisted, they would be sent to prison, mental hospitals or
rehabilitation centers where they would be beaten, occasionally to death.
Then she'll tell you that her mother, Lingwen Zeng, a 67-year-old physics
professor, is at a forced labor camp that is notorious for beating and torturing
its prisoners. Her family is allowed to visit once a month, but when they do,
discussion of the camp conditions is prohibited. The only indication of life
inside the camp is Zeng's rapid weight loss which her family has begun to
notice. Zeng was never given a trial.
"That followed no law, but that is China," Wu said. "It's the
only way I can explain it."
Zeng was sentenced to the camp for two years in February, but at her age,
even that short amount of time could prove perilous. Even if she can sustain her
health for the length of the sentence, Zeng's freedom is uncertain. Before this
sentence, Zeng served two shorter ones with no trials.
During one sentence Wu said she was held in a detention center in a cell
originally made to hold 30, with 100 people, including children, elderly and
pregnant women.
Wu said, in China, detention centers like that have been known to use
electric prods and other instruments, including inmates incarcerated for violent
crimes, to torture the Falun Dafa captives.
Amnesty International makes many of the same assertions and verifies some
cases of torture as well.
Wu said each time her mother was arrested or transferred to a harsher
detention center or camp, it was because she simply refused to stop practicing.
So why not forsake the practice in favor of freedom?
Wu, who also practices, said that the three principles of Falun Dafa run
contrary to submitting to the government's desires.
However, Wu said the benefits of Falun Dafa are so great, true practitioners
would never give it up.
Wu said soon after the ancient practice was made public in 1992, she went
home to visit her parents and noticed something amazing about her mother. Zeng,
who suffered with arthritis, was moving around the house briskly with no
problems.
"I couldn't believe it, she always used to use hot water bottles for the
pain, but this time, she climbed the stairs faster than I did," Wu said.
Her mother's blood pressure, which was also problematic, also lowered to a
safe level after she began practicing Falun Dafa. Stories and experiences like
these are what lead to the rapid spread of Falun Dafa not only through China,
but around the world, where people in dozens of countries practice.
Yu Chen, a 32-year-old from China who has lived in Albany for six years, is
the [contact person] for those wishing to practice Falun Dafa in the area, and
she too began practicing after hearing about the changes it reportedly brought
about for others.
Chen, who was working toward her master's degree in computer science when she
first began Falun Dafa, said she saw some physical benefits from the practice,
such as cured insomnia and athlete foot, but what she found more impressive were
the mental and emotional changes that took place.
"The school work I was doing was very stressful, and after practicing, I
found I could do the work well and the stress went away. I was very
peaceful," she said. "My relationships with friends and relatives also
became very harmonious, I became a much nicer person."
Testimony like this bounds forth from Falun Dafa practitioners, and if one
questions its authenticity, perhaps the answer lies in the Zeng's and thousands
of others' willingness to suffer.
People in free countries, including the United States, and groups like
Amnesty International have condemned the oppression of Falun Dafa practitioners.
Compassion, an international journal of Falun Dafa, reported this year that
more than 100,000 practitioners in China have been detained, 20,000 have been
sentenced to forced labor camps without trial and 420 deaths have been verified.
The majority of those detained, sent to labor camps or killed are Chinese,
but citizens from other countries including the United States have also met
those fates while protesting or practicing in China.
Neither Chen nor Wu will travel to China to visit family, claiming that they
would be detained as soon as they arrived.
While the U.S. government has condemned the persecution, Chen feels that
there needs to be a more proactive campaign by other countries in order to stop
the persecution. She said if the United States requested the release of the
captives, China would at least release some of them.
"The Chinese government denies the persecution," Chen said.
"They claim this is the best human rights period in Chinese history, which
is a lie, if it is exposed, they will do something in response."
Chen said the best way to act out against the persecution is to write letters
to congressmen urging them to pass legislation to request the release of
captives or to contact representatives at the Chinese embassy in Washington D.C.
Locally, Chen and other Falun Dafa practitioners have written enough letters
to earn the support of several politicians, including Senators Bob Prentis, Neil
Breslin and U.S. Rep. Michael McNulty. The legislators have spoken at press
conferences and co-signed letters to the president with the hope that their
support will aid the end of the oppression.
Breslin agreed with Chen about contacting local and national political
leaders to voice their concern on the issue but also said that publicizing the
problem is another key step to making progress.
Breslin said that when Americans are aware of persecution, they act out and
pressure the government not to do business with countries that are violating
human rights. However, he also called on the American people to become more
watchful of America's foreign dealings.
"People have to become more interested in countries that we do business
with, China being the largest in the world," he said. "The persecution
in China is crying out for a response and we have made some progress, but we
have a long way to go."
Posting date: 12/24/2002
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