![]() | ||||
|
Indianapolis Star: Meditation in motion - Members of Falun Dafa group at IU say the practice, banned in China, helps them improve their lives. By Sheila Lalwani February 02, 2002 Bloomington, Ind. -- Every morning at dawn, Mary Lan
makes her way to Indiana University's grassy
arboretum, toting a tape player, cassette and mat. After spreading her mat and starting the tape player,
Lan clasps her hands together and steps onto the mat.
Once the tape begins, a steady voice directs her to
raise her arms above her head and put her hands
parallel to her face. She doesn't care who sees her.
Most of the time, her eyes are shut.
A graduate student at Indiana University Bloomington,
Lan is a practitioner of Falun Dafa. While the Chinese
slow-motion exercises and ancient Eastern principles
of Falun Dafa -- also known as Falun Gong -- might
seem exotic among the cornfields of Indiana, Lan has
drawn companions from both the university and the
greater Bloomington area. While there are no exact numbers, anecdotal evidence
suggests Falun Gong has become increasingly popular on
American campuses. "It works," said Anthony, an Indiana resident
who joins Lan and several others for group meditations
on Saturday evenings. "My outlook is more positive." Spreading the word Lan enjoys introducing others to the teachings and
movements of Falun Dafa, calling it mainly a
self-improvement group. "I feel more confidence and
much more assured of myself," says the slender Chinese
woman. "And I feel that practicing Falun Dafa and
living out the principles of Truthfulness, Benevolence
and Forbearance help me in eliminating the feelings of
insecurity and uncertainty." Lan, who never considered herself a religious person,
sees an irony in her new role. Growing up in China,
she says, there was "an obligatory class of Marxism
from primary school to graduate school." On the
societal level, religiosity was seen as passe or
purely sentimental. "The old people who claim to have faith in a deity are
considered to be uneducated," Lan says, while young
people "get married at church because it is a
fashion." Still, she had "positive feelings toward
religious stories, Western and Oriental alike." When her father, a retired college professor,
introduced Lan to the teachings in the mid-1990s,
Falun Gong was still fairly new, and many didn't know
about it. Lan says the serenity of the lessons and the
grace of the movements hooked her. She and her father
began attending regular meetings in friends' homes.
Sometimes members of the group practiced the
meditative movements in public. Lan remembers those
days affectionately, partly because they didn't last
long. As the popularity of the spiritual movement increased,
so did the nervousness of [Jiang's] government. In
July 1999, the government banned Falun Gong,
[...]. Lan tells of friends and acquaintances
who were caught practicing the movements and have
faced internment in labor camps, torture and even
death. Lan and her companions continued group meditations,
more secretly -- and always inside the safety of their
homes. According to Lan, some Falun Gong members
defied the government by practicing in the open, in
the face of certain arrest. "They have no power, but
they dared to stand up for what they believe is right.
This is really amazing," she says. As the situation for followers became bleak, Lan
looked for other places to live. A former lecturer at
China's esteemed Tsinhua University, she landed a
grant through the Li Foundation to study
communication. She decided to do her research at
Indiana University. Appreciates IU Lan enjoys the "open-mindedness and tolerance" she
finds at the university. This school year, Lan's Falun Dafa group became an
official student organization. Lan estimates that at
least a half-dozen people connected to IU or from the
surrounding area regularly spend Saturday evenings
meditating with her. Stranton, a member since July, came to the group
because he read about it in a flier. At the time, he
was experiencing severe insomnia and was tired of
taking medication to go to sleep. He says the
movements helped him recover from his illness. Ruby Huang, a graduate student from Taiwan, got
involved with the group through word of mouth. Before
meeting Lan, Huang had studied Buddhism but felt
unfulfilled. "After learning Falun Dafa, I got new perspectives and
an understanding of life, which gives me true
happiness," she said. Lan says she longs to return to China "to let my
friends, neighbors, relatives and colleagues know the
truth of the Falun Gong and the evil of the
persecution." However, she is confident that "as more
and more people in the U.S. and other countries come
to know the truth, they will carry the information
around, and the persecution will collapse in the end."
http://www.starnews.com/article.php?falun02.html,living Posting date: 2/3/2002
|