Houston Chronicle: Falun Gong speak for those in China who 'are not seen'
Group is touring Texas and hoping to win the support of President Bush Aug. 21, 2005, 12:57AM Hong Kin Wong fled China in 2001, shortly after her husband was sentenced to
10 years in prison for criticizing the Chinese government. She left behind her 2-year-old daughter, In Sin. "It was very painful," said Wong, who left her daughter in her
mother's care while she worked to bring In Sin to the United States. They were
reunited last month. Wong, a practitioner of Falun Gong, a spiritual self-improvement belief
system, is among 25 people touring Texas this weekend to raise awareness about
China's orphaned children whose "tears are not seen and whose cries are not
heard." The group is spending most of this weekend traveling between Austin, Houston,
College Station, Dallas and Waco, and ending up at President Bush's ranch in
Crawford, in hopes he will help rescue children whose parents were persecuted. Chinese President Hu Jintao is scheduled to visit with Bush in mid-September. Far-reaching effects Falun Gong, introduced to the public in 1992, combines spiritual beliefs and
physical exercise, and promotes health and inner peace. Millions practice it
worldwide. The Chinese government banned the movement in July 1999, [slanderous
charge by Chinese Communist Party omitted]. The Chinese government has
jailed and tortured thousands of practitioners and killed perhaps hundreds more,
according to a U.S. State Department report. [Editor's note: as of August 21,
2005, there have been 2,781 confirmed deaths of Falun Gong practitioners due to
persecution.] The children of those practitioners have no one to care for them, and are
often persecuted themselves, those protesting in Houston said Saturday. Some
children live with their grandparents, while others are sent to orphanages.
Countless children--precise numbers are hard to obtain--have been deprived of
their educations, driven to homelessness, placed in adult prison cells and, in
some cases, killed. Local believers in Falun Gong say the weekend protests are the beginning of a
coordinated effort to reunite children with their families or find ways to care
for those who have been orphaned. Yiyang Xia likened the Falun Gong children to the "Pedro Pan"
children of Cuba. Between 1960 and 1962 more than 14,000 Cuban children were sent by their
parents to the United States. The parents wanted to spare their children from
Cuban leader Fidel Castro's communist regime. They were known as the Pedro Pan
children, a tag coined by a Miami news anchor in reference to Peter Pan. "This is a worldwide campaign," Xia said. "We need to tell the
Chinese government, 'You have already killed their parents, you should let them
go.' The kids are innocent."
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