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Clarifying the Truth About Falun Gong at Q&A Sessions of Public Lectures and Seminars By a practitioner in Australia
(Clearwisdom.net) Melbourne is very active in promoting academia, and many
seminars concerning China issues have taken place here. Local practitioners
realized that using the Question & Answer sessions during such seminars is a
good way to clarify the facts about Falun Gong.
Recently, Australia's ABC TV Station has sponsored a series of Asian Lectures
at the University of Melbourne. On the evening of September 5, 2002, a China
expert from Singapore University gave a seminar entitled "Unusual Moments in
China." It was hosted by an ABC TV anchor in front of an audience of about 500
people. At the start of the program, the host announced that the program was
being recorded and would be broadcast all over Australia and to some other Asian
regions as well, and that the audio scripts would be posted on the Internet at
ABC.net.au. Our practitioners immediately realized that this was an excellent
opportunity for revealing the facts about the practice and persecution of Falun
Dafa.
After the expert gave his presentation, a practitioner stood in the line of
people waiting to ask a question.
As a result of our previous Fa-spreading and truth-clarification, a woman
(not a practitioner) asked the following question: "In a country with only one
political party, how can you guarantee the full functioning of the law? For
example, the way the Chinese government treated pro-democracy people or Falun
Gong practitioners is not really following the law." The professor did not offer
a clear response to this question. He just mumbled a few meaningless words.
When it was the practitioner's turn to ask a question, he quoted facts from
Resolution 188 recently passed by the US Congress that condemned the persecution
of Falun Gong in China, moved on to the general situation of the persecution,
and then commented on the speaker's remarks about Chinese society's moral
crisis. Next, he said that the US Congress supported Falun Gong because Dafa's
"Truthfulness -- Compassion -- Tolerance" is helpful in sustaining the harmony
and stability of society. Then the practitioner asked with humor, "If you had
the opportunity to whisper in their ears, what would you recommend to the
Chinese leaders?"
Upon hearing this question, the audience burst into friendly laughter. The
informal atmosphere had an effect on the speaker too. He replied with some sense
of humor, "I would not be given any chance to propose anything. Besides they
would not listen to me." At this answer, the audience laughed even longer and
louder. The laughter indicated their understanding and feelings towards Jiang's
dictatorial regime as well as friendly support for the Falun Gong practitioner.
Then the professor remarked in a frank way that they (the Chinese leaders) had
not anticipated the suppression would last so long and thus put them in an
awkward position.
Thus, in this way not only did the professor and the audience have an
excellent opportunity to learn the facts and to position themselves correctly,
but also the later broadcast of the recording would benefit even more people.
On the same night, we heard about another seminar to be held by the China
Issues research group at the University of Melbourne on the next day. A
well-known reporter for the Sydney Times and Sydney Morning Tribune had just
returned from a 2-year stay in China and was going to speak on "How Do You Spell
Jiang Zemin? -- Another Report about China for Australians."
So we went to the University the next day for another seminar. The reporter
talked about the difficulty and awkwardness of being a reporter stationed in
Beijing. Foreign reporters are often regarded as spies (by the Chinese central
government). Reporters have to notify the Chinese authorities even if they want
to merely interview a passerby on the street. The foreign reporters club is
labeled an "illegal organization." Their only news source was from
government-controlled Xinhua.
During the Q&A, without knowing how much this reporter had been influenced
negatively toward Falun Gong due to his long stay in China, our practitioner
tactfully started the question as follows: "The issue of Falun Gong is very
sensitive and really a taboo subject in China. Under the tight control of
information by the Chinese government, how did you find out all the official
propaganda against Falun Gong was fabricated lies?"
By phrasing the question in this way, the audience tacitly learned that the
propaganda from Jiang's regime was all lies. Two researchers from China happened
to be present at the seminar. They listened with intense interest to what they
could never hear while inside China.
The reporter replied that he realized the truth little by little over time.
Then he added that frankly, foreign reporters stationed in Beijing all disagreed
with the Jiang regime's mistreatment of Falun Gong.
Since this reporter was so well known in Australia, his words had a very good
effect on the audience.
Utilizing a seminar to clarify facts about Falun Gong has certain advantages.
The audience is already there so there is no need to find them. Also by asking a
question after a speech that relates to the content of the talk, we can focus on
a certain point and bridge the gap between the practitioner and the speaker as
well as that between the practitioner and the audience. Therefore, we think that
this is an excellent way to tell people the facts about Dafa.
Posting date: 9/27/2002
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