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Greeley Tribune (Colorado, USA): Falun Gong spreads (Photo) Group gathers at library to learn Chinese meditation By Millete Birhanemaskel
March 24, 2003
The Chinese government has tried to stop the spread of Falun Gong by burning
books about it, spraying its followers with water cannons and deafening them
with loud sirens. Instead, the Chinese meditation is spreading, and it's got a grip on Colorado.
Now two well-established groups in Denver and one in Fort Collins have joined to
bring the technique to Weld County. About 12 people showed up to the meeting at Farr Library, 20th Street and 59th
Avenue, Sunday afternoon to learn about Falun Gong's three main principles:
[truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance]. [Practitioner] Guiru Zhang, 31, of Fort Collins, said the meditation focuses on
spiritual health, and that's why the Chinese government has failed, so far, to
stop its people from practicing it. "They thought it would be easy to eliminate us," Zhang said. "It's not just a
physical practice that can be taken at will." This month, 53 of the meditation's followers were tortured and killed in China
at the hands of authorities, according to the Falun Data Information Center. The government tried to stop the spread of Falun Gong when it became popular in
1992 because officials perceived it as a threat to communism. Before then, it
was passed down generations for thousands of years by word-of-mouth [Editor's
note: Falun Gong was introduced to the public in 1992. Before then, it was
passed down privately from master to disciple for thousands of years]. But the ancient meditation is alive and well, with more than 70 million
followers in China, and many more around the world. Zhang started the group two years ago in Fort Collins, where about a dozen
people meet weekly in public parks or each other's homes to practice the
meditation. He introduced it in Fort Collins, as he is in Greeley, by holding
informational sessions in public libraries.
Carla Wolf, 38, of Parker, has practiced Falun Gong for a year. She became
interested in the meditation after her friend became nicer after he started
studying it. She's noticed the same changes in herself, saying she has more compassion for
humanity. "The biggest thing is we all have blind spots, things about us that hurt others.
All that stuff begins to surface," Wolf said. "A practice like this helps you
see things like that." http://www.greeleytrib.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?Site=GR&Date=20030324&Category=NEWS&ArtNo=303240008&Ref=AR
Posting date: 3/25/2003 |