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Beethoven's Opera Fidelio Seen As a Metaphor for the Worldwide Effort of Practitioners to Stop the Persecution in China By a German practitioner January 6th, 2002 In this opera, the tyrant Don Pizarro has incarcerated the protagonist
Florestan in a secret dungeon for revealing the truth about Don Pizarro's
secret, shady dealings. Don Pizarro's gruesome character is exposed as he speaks
about "cooling his revenge." In the meantime, Florestan, from his
lonely prison cell, says that he harbours no resentment, because "he has
done his duty to speak the truth," which has given him strength and peace
of mind. At the same time his wife Leonore, disguised as Fidelio, gains access
to the prison and attempts to rescue him. At the climax of the opera, she stands
before Florestan as a human shield as Pizarro attempts to kill him. In the end,
justice triumphs through the advent of compassion and the scene ends in
overflowing jubilation.
Falun Gong practitioners in China intervene with truth-clarifying activities
about Falun Gong that bring to daylight the unjustified persecution and the
torture of practitioners in China. They are similar to the choir of prisoners in
Fidelio, which surfaces and sings of freedom and the desire to lift their
hearts and hope for God's intervention. The prisoners in the opera even sing
about how they are visually and auditorily monitored, which brings to mind how
the Chinese practitioners' telephones are tapped and their conversations
recorded.
Because practitioners in China hold fast to the virtues of Truthfulness,
Compassion and Forbearance, they are being incarcerated, like Florestan, without
due process of law, to be "re-educated" (brainwashed) away from public
scrutiny, through torture and abuse. Sometimes they are even killed. Just like
Don Pizarro, the political group gathered around dictator Jiang persecutes the
practitioners even more cruelly the closer the public -- represented in the
opera by the minister from Seville -- gets to the facts. Just as Leonore did for
her husband in the opera, so the practitioners who enjoy freedom of belief
intervene and extend worldwide support to the incarcerated practitioners in
China. The motive for Leonore's courageous deed is her love for her husband, a
motivation that is easily understood and quickly accepted by the opera audience.
Can the public, however, grasp the motivation of us practitioners?
We want people all over the world to know that the efforts of overseas
practitioners for the persecuted practitioners in China come from feelings of
deep compassion, and that this compassion is bigger than all of us--just like
Leonore's, who stood protectively in front of Florestan and risked her life to
save him. In times like these when values are crumbling, this compassion is
something for which one could easily give one's life, especially if the only
alternative is to live life without it. Perhaps the world will understand that
this is the reason why practitioners from China and abroad repeatedly return to
Tiananmen Square to secure the freedom of those practitioners in China who are
incarcerated and are being tortured. This compassion is like a "perpetual
mobile," a self-generating energy source, a continuum, which allows us to
endure all manner of difficulties. That is why we practitioners outside of China
will never stop our appeals, not until our fellow Chinese practitioners have
been set free. The end result has already been established, for just as
compassion rescued and freed Florestan, so will it also lead the persecuted
practitioners to freedom.
I wish that in front of every theatre showing the opera Fidelio there
would be practitioners distributing this information and truth-clarifying
materials about Falun Gong. Fidelio is not only an opera for a theatre
stage performance; it has become reality on the stage of life in China.
The opera addresses ideals. Those ideals have become reality through the
efforts of Falun Gong practitioners. Like Florestan, everyone can help to unmask
the evil, reveal the truth, and save lives. Source: http://www.clearharmony.net/articles/2558.html Posting date: 2/1/2002
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