San Antonio Current: Persecuted Practice
BY GILBERT GARCIA
01/30/2003
(Clearwisdom.net)
In late July, 1999, Zhiwan Dong received a chilling phone call from his
sister. Dong, a graduate student in molecular medicine at the UT Health Science
Center, had come to San Antonio from the Shandong Province of China, where the
rest of his family continued to live. His sister told him that Chinese police
officers had knocked on their mother's door, grabbed her, and taken her away to
an unknown location.
Dong's mother was neither a criminal nor a political dissident. She saw
herself as no threat to Chinese society. A retired provincial government worker
who doted on her family, she filled her spare time trying to attain a higher
degree of enlightenment through the practice of Falun Gong, establishing herself
as a local contact person who taught it on a volunteer basis. [...] "Police officers came to my mother's home the day the [persecution]
initiated," Dong recalls, during a break from his studies at the Health Science
Center. "Afterward, she was detained for 30 days, in a detention center, even
though it's illegal to detain someone for more than 15 days without charging
them with something. They didn't allow family members to visit."
Since China launched its [persecution of] Falun Gong, hundreds of thousands
of practitioners have allegedly faced a similar detention, with more than
100,000 sent to labor camps, and more than 500 tortured to death by police.
Falun Gong advocates believe the systematic persecution has escalated in
recent months, and they have stepped up their own protest efforts. They recently
united for a three-day worldwide appeal, and Texas practitioners are in the
early stages of what they plan to be a year-long protest outside the Chinese
consulate in Houston, with demonstrators camping out in shifts.
To many Westerners, who are only casually aware of the practice, the
subsequent public-relations battle between the Chinese government and Falun Gong
loyalists has been confusing and bewildering. If Falun Gong is, as its followers
state, merely a spiritual discipline that emphasizes "truth, compassion, and
tolerance," why does it scare the Chinese government so much? [...]
Such social critiques surely made Chinese communist leader Jiang Zemin
anxious, particularly considering Falun Gong's growth of popularity in the '90s.
Jiang's all-out offensive against Falun Gong also recalled Mao Zedong's brutal
Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution of the '60s, which tried to rid China of
all its pre-Communist traditions. Some Falun Gong advocates have suggested that
Jiang doesn't want to compete with anything that reminds China of its ancient
history.
"I think there are some personal reasons from the top leaders of China," says
Victor Fong, a local Falun Gong practitioner. "He's not an elected official, he
took the reins of power after the 1989 Tiananmen Square events, so he's not yet
very justified in people's hearts. He's very nervous about his position, and he
personally initiated this [persecution]."
In San Antonio, a small, but committed group of practitioners (usually
between five and 12 people) meet Saturday mornings at Unlimited Thought
Bookstore, on Blanco Road, to cultivate and enhance their xinxing
("mind-nature"). One of the regulars at Unlimited Thought is Hongyi Pan, a
research fellow specializing in studying the AIDS-related virus at UT Health
Science Center. In 1995, he moved from Beijing to San Antonio for graduate
study.
About five years ago, Pan explains, his father-in-law started practicing
Falun Gong in China; his brother-in-law subsequently took it up and introduced
it to Pan and his wife. "At that time, I was putting a lot of time into my
studying and research, so I kind of hesitated," Pan says. "But later my wife
developed very severe allergies and she could not sleep, but the practice helped
her to completely recover."
"It's very simple," he adds. "It's very gentle, very slow, and very relaxing.
It's very easy to learn. You don't have to spend hours at it. It's really
flexible. You might just do five minutes. It has a therapeutic effect, but it's
about going to a higher level. It's not just about treating diseases. When I
started practicing, I was very busy and feeling the pressure from my studies.
But after practicing, you feel more relaxed, and it's easier to deal with
pressures and conflicts. And you feel very energized. You can really feel your
life changing for the better."
San Antonio resident Annabelle Tiemann taught fifth grade at Kelly Elementary
School, and recently retired after 27 years in the public-school system. She
swears by the power of Falun Gong.
"My acupuncturist introduced me to it, but I actually learned the exercises
from Hongyi and his wife," Tiemann says. "I was a practitioner the last three
years I was teaching, and it just made an incredible difference - helping you to
have more energy, to sleep better. More importantly than all that is just your
mental outlook and the degree of acceptance and calmness with which you can deal
with everything."
[...]
But literally the most explosive charge against Falun Gong is that its
devotees practice self-immolation. The only basis for this argument comes from a
controversial piece of video footage taken on January 23, 2001. The government
alleged that two Falun Gong members burned themselves to death in Tiananmen
Square, and repeatedly broadcast it on national television.
Washington Post reporter Phillip Pan went to the hometown of one of the
victims, Liu Chunling, and found that no one ever saw her practice Falun Gong.
Seven months after the incident, the International Education Development Bureau
concluded that the entire event had been staged by the government.
"It's the government trying to propagandize," Fong says about such attacks.
"With all the media controlled by the government in China, the use of propaganda
to spread these kinds of confusions is common."
Dong says local police departments in China face pressure from the federal
level to decrease the number of Falun Gong practitioners to less than 5 percent
of the population. As a result, practitioners are allegedly subjected to brutal
beatings, tortured with electric needles and cattle prods, or forced to walk
barefoot in the snow for hours, until they renounce Falun Gong.
He says police officers forced his mother to sign a pledge that she'd quit.
"Her phone is monitored, so anytime I call home, I have to be careful about what
I say," Dong claims. "They ended up sending her to a brainwashing class, what
they would call a re-education class. You're forced to watch TV footage, with
everything negative about Falun Gong that you can imagine."
Tiemann emphasizes the international growth of Falun Gong can only strengthen
the resolve of Chinese followers. "I think the thing that surprises the Chinese
most now is when they get any word from the rest of the world, how in Australia,
Taiwan, United States, we can all practice it freely. Everybody all over
practices, and there's no thought of persecuting us, so they're amazed when they
find out." ? http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=6865607&BRD=2318&PAG=461&dept_id=484045&rfi=6
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