Daily Illini (Campus Paper of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign): Local Falun Gong Practitioners to Rally for Charles Li's Release
Anna Heinemann
The Daily Illini
As he stepped off a plane in the Guangzhou airport in China on Jan. 22,
Charles Li expected to bring his parents news of his recent engagement. Instead,
Li, a University alumnus, was immediately arrested and taken to a prison in
Yangzhou in the Jiangsu Province of China.
Forty-four days after his arrest, Li's friends and fellow Falun Gong
practitioners are gathering today outside the U.S. State Department in
Washington, D.C., to rally for his release.
[...] Many people, however, believe Li was arrested because of his spiritual
practice, Falun Gong or Falun Dafa.
Falun Gong is a spiritual practice best known for its five positions of daily
exercises to improve the body, mind and spirit, said Dongdong Zhang, a doctoral
student at the University who has practiced Falun Gong for eight years. Although
these exercises are backed by teaching the principles of truthfulness,
compassion and forbearance, Zhang said Falun Gong is not a religion.
"These principles are similar to those in Daoism or Buddhism, but it's
something rooted in history and not taken from either or combined," Dongdong
Zhang said.
Falun Gong was outlawed in China in 1999, where there were at least 70
million Falun Gong practitioners, Dongdong Zhang said.
"Practitioners were forced to sign a paper to give up the practice," she
said. "There are about 1,000 people now in prison, some for up to 28 years,
because they won't give it up."
Dongdong Zhang said all books and tapes about Falun Gong were destroyed in
China and practitioners faced "persecution of unprecedented brutality from the
Chinese government."
[...]
Li earned a master's degree from the University in 1995 in physiology and
later worked in the Massachusetts Hospital of Harvard University. Li is now a
U.S. citizen and manages his own business in California.
Champaign resident Diana Lenik said Li rented a room in her house when he was
earning his doctorate at the University. She said she would be shocked if the
claims against Li were true.
"He is a wonderful guy. I feel so bad about this," Lenik said. "He was
respectable, quiet and intelligent."
Dongdong Zhang and two other practitioners collected signatures at the Union
this week to urge the government to demand Li's immediate release. A group from
Chicago will present signatures collected at the University to State Department
officials today.
Dr. Lilly Zhang organized the Chicago trip to Washington, D.C., to attend the
rally and said she expects a variety of supporters to attend, not only Falun
Gong practitioners.
"We're all volunteering to work for rescuing him because every American is
responsible for rescuing fellow Americans who are in danger," Lilly Zhang said.
[...]
The Illinois House of Representatives passed a resolution last year in
regards to Falun Gong that said "tens of thousands of people (Falun Gong
practitioners) have been tortured and sent to labor camps, and property owned by
those who follow this discipline has been destroyed or confiscated." The
resolution urged the U.S. Secretary of State to "increase efforts to urge the
People's Republic of China to recognize and protect the human rights of its
citizens and halt the persecution against practitioners of Falun Gong."
State Rep. Art Turner (D-Chicago) sponsored the bill and represents 50
percent of Chicago's Chinatown. He said he felt this resolution was necessary
after hearing his constituents complain about the persecution of Falun Gong
practitioners.
"The practice of persecuting people is a dangerous practice," Turner said. "I
would not say anyone has been hurt by the practice of Falun Gong."
The Chicago City Council, State Senate and the U.S. Congress also passed
similar resolutions last year. Urbana even declared a Falun Dafa Day, a synonym
for Falun Gong, last May.
Yu Zhou, a Falun Gong practitioner from Chicago, said he and at least 14
others will drive to Washington, D.C. to join the rally for Li. Zhou said he
believes the Chinese government fabricated its claims about Li's crime.
"When a person is inside China, the government can do anything," Zhou said.
"It can make black look white, it can make life into death."
http://www.dailyillini.com/mar03/mar07/news/stories/news_story01.shtml
Yearly Archive
Printer Version
feedback@clearwisdom.net