Le Devoir (a Montreal French newspaper): End of Jinyu Li's Nightmare
Marie-Andrée Chouinard
February 25 2002
She has been dreaming of this for two years now and the moment has finally
arrived. After having imagined her husband under the worst possible conditions
in detention, even thinking that she would perhaps never see him again, Jinyu Li
will take the long road to Dorval Airport this morning to greet this man that
the Chinese government had imprisoned for practicing Falun Gong.
"Yes, I have spoken to Shenli, he is fine. He says that the whole time
he never once renounced his faith in the practice of Falun Gong and that this is
what kept him alive," states his wife Jinyu Li yesterday. This Canadian,
who had emigrated from China 13 years ago, never thought for a moment that when
she joined accountant Shenli Lin in marriage in 1999, her life would be in such
turmoil because they both practiced Falun Gong.
A spiritual movement banned in China since July 1999, Falun Gong--or Falun
Dafa-- combines exercises, meditation and Buddhist faith. Since its founding in
1992, it would count nearly 100 million followers in the world, according to
estimates of the movement itself, and thousands of them have been sent to forced
labor camps and nearly 370 have lost their lives under China's torture.
"Shenli did not yet tell me in detail the conditions of his detention,
because he believed the telephone line was tapped," explained his wife
yesterday, who had multiplied her many endeavours since December 1999 to free
her husband, "He spoke of unbearable mental torture, but he said that all
that he had learned and remembered from Falun Gong and his daily practice helped
him to cut himself off from the horrors that he was living. He kept the good
things within." Fervent followers of this Chinese spiritual practice from
the Buddhist school try to refine the body and mind by special exercises and
meditation. ShenLi Lin and Jinyu Li went to a government office in Beijing nine
months after their marriage to ask that China cease the persecution of Falun
Gong. They were arrested at once.
Yang, spokesman of the movement in Montreal explains, "Mrs. Li was
lucky, because of her Canadian citizenship. She was released after 48 hours and
sent back to this country."
Her husband was not so lucky. Initially he was imprisoned for a month, and
then he was transferred to a forced labor camp in Dafeng, in the Chinese
province of Jiangsu. "I sent dozens of letters. We tried by all possible
means to reach him, I even went to Geneva to ask the Red Cross for help to
communicate with him, all to no avail," explains Jinyu Li, who confirms
having spoken on the telephone these last few days to a man who resembles
exactly the one she saw for the last time in December of 1999. Her endeavours and repeated demands that she made to the Chinese Embassy in
order to go to China herself seems to have aggravated the situation, she
believes. Her own brother was detained 3 times, and members of Shenli Lin's
family were also detained, one of which, his own brother, was incarcerated with
him as well. "He says that he never had the right to see his own
brother," says Jinyu, who believes that "mental torture" was
carried out by her husband's jail-keepers.
Last July, Jinyu Li once again found her smile after learning of her
husband's pending freedom. "However, the Chinese authorities prolonged his
jail sentence another 6 months without giving any explanation," she says.
"For him, it was the same thing. He was to be freed and then the sentence
was prolonged without specifying any reason." "I am happy my husband is finally back with me,"áshe explains,
still disturbed by the imminence of the outcome which she had been awaiting for
months. Before his arrest, Shenli Lin was awaiting his visa of immigration for
Canada, a step that the couple still hopes to pursue as soon as possible.
Other detainees affiliated in some way with Canada have been able to have
happy endings to their imprisonment, perhaps because of pressure maintained by
certain humanitarian organizations, the media and the population at large,
believes Yang. "Without the help of all these Canadian people, this would
never have been possible," explains Jinyu Li. "My husband and I would
like to extend our thanks and appreciation. Many thanks. Thanks
again."á
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