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Article Published in Three Belgian Newspapers: "Thanks to Falun Gong I am a different person! (Photo)
By Wendy Huyghe Published in Het Nieuwsblad', De Gentenaar' and Het Volk' Chinese exercises bring tranquility in daily life "When your boss wrongfully scolds you, it is already quite a skill to remain
calm. It's even stronger if you really are calm inside. And that is
something I can achieve since I started practicing Falun Gong," says Matthias
Slaats, who is a fervent adherent of this Chinese teaching. Falun Gong is mostly
known here as the [practice] that has been outlawed in China for a few years now
and of which the adherents are being persecuted. But what is it exactly that
Falun Gong contains? "It's a way to improve your moral qualities. Thanks to the
exercises the body also becomes healthier and purer." Matthias Slaats (31), from Gent, and a Chinese expatriate Yu He (31)
demonstrate the slow exercises they practice twice a week, accompanied by music.
On their face is a concentrated yet blissful expression. The lotus posture might
look rather painful to a lot of people. "Of course it hurts a little at the
beginning," says Matthias. "But after a while it becomes automatic. And this is
typical for Falun Gong, also called Falun Dafa. We strive to obtain a higher
quality in life and respect a number of moral values." A better person In practice this means that adherents of Falun Gong strive for Truthfulness,
Compassion and Tolerance, three values that, according to the teachings, are the
characteristics of the universe. "Thus we try to think and act less from the
perspective of our personal interest," states Slaats. "This makes us better
people and improves the quality of our lives and our environment." Immediately you can ask yourself if you need Falun Gong to be a little bit
more tolerant: "Thanks to the teachings you get guidance and support to take
care of that," explains Matthias. "This is needed, because in practice it is not
always uncomplicated. In the beginning, if you react calmly to conflicts, you
get the feeling that you are being trifled with. But in the longer term it pays
back and people look at you as a calm, pleasant person and you will
automatically get involved in less conflicts," says Yu He. "Three years ago I came into contact with Falun Gong, since then I have
become a different human being. Before that, going out used to be a way of
release for me, now I don't need that anymore," says Matthias. Then the question still remains what purpose these [exercises] serve. "Falun
Gong doesn't only cultivate the mind, but also the body," tells He Yu. "Thanks
to five easy exercises you can feel the energy in your body being set free. When
you practice the exercises everything frees up automatically. The goal is not to
think about it. You have to clear your mind and then you can do the exercises
automatically." Not a sect "You can compare it a little bit with yoga, but there is a fundamental
difference," says Slaats. "It is not the goal to run away from the real world
for a moment. The idea in Falun Gong is exactly that you apply the calmness that
you achieve during the exercises in daily life. I work as a project manager and
that means I often run into situations of stress. The good thing about Falun
Gong is that you can, during those moments, reach the same state that you can
reach during the exercises." "What the teachings of Falun Gong provide is the basis. The rest you do
yourself. Everyone will bring these three principles into practice in a
different way. Therefore it is all the stranger that the Chinese government
regards us as a sect. We have no structure or organization. Everyone is free to
believe or do what he wants. We pay no membership fees. We have neither temples
nor rituals." "Initially Falun Gong got support from the Chinese government. People became
healthier through practicing Falun Gong and that meant a saving on the
healthcare budgets. But when the number of adherents of Falun Gong estimated to
be 100 million - became bigger then that of the communist party, some people got
scared. Now there exists a Gestapo-like police that exists solely to persecute
practitioners, leading to hundreds of deaths." [...] Also Matthias was arrested two years ago when he supported an appeal against
the persecution on Tiananmen Square. Last summer, Slaats and some other
adherents have filed a complaint against former Chinese state leader Jiang Zemin,
accusing him of genocide, torture and crimes against humanity. At this moment
the complaint is being examined by the European Court for Human Rights in
Strasbourg. |