National Post Article (Canada): Falun Gong Deserves Support (Excerpt)
December 13, 2003 By Robert Fulford National Post The government in Beijing wants the 2008 Olympics to do for China what the
1964 Olympics did for Japan: Display the country's best qualities and prove that
it deserves a place in the family of nations. This means that the Olympics offer
a once-in-a-century opportunity to anyone hoping to nudge China toward freedom.
Assuming that Chinese human rights remain at their present level, international
activists could make the Olympics an occasion to reveal all the grim details. Or
perhaps, by simply making a credible threat to humiliate China in 2008, they
could encourage long-term improvements. Members of Falun Gong are the most famous among the several classes of
officially persecuted Chinese. The government has made their spiritual practice
illegal, on the dubious grounds that they constitute a dangerous,
superstition-spreading cult that jeopardizes social stability. Translated, this
means Chinese leaders can't live with an organization, however innocent, that's
beyond political control. Falun Gong members have been beaten, tortured, sent to
work camps, and imprisoned in mental hospitals. All over the world they stand
silently outside Chinese consulates and embassies, living symbols of opposition
to a regime that smugly believes it can get away forever with arbitrary cruelty.
In their vigils the Falun Gong [appeal], peacefully, for help from the part of
humanity that's free. They deserve support. Why shouldn't the athletes of the world, who will
probably contribute to China's prestige in 2008, adopt the Falun Gong as their
personal cause? They could begin by indicating sympathy through frequent visits
to Falun Gong vigils. They could write letters of support to members imprisoned
in China, request talks on the Falun Gong with every Chinese diplomat in the
world, and raise the subject whenever meeting Chinese officials for any reason. They could announce that if China doesn't change its ways, they'll march into
the Beijing Olympic Stadium on opening day in 2008, congregate on the field, and
perform slow-movement meditation in the style of Falun Gong while several
billion TV viewers look on. (They could start practicing it at athletic meets
right now, as a sign of solidarity.) To do all this they wouldn't need
permission from their governments, just silent assent. [...]
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