Newark Star Ledger: Some Very Different Emotions Flowing from 'The Same Song'
Friday, January 20, 2006 Gong Lee, a survivor of China's forced labor camps, calls it "the
torture song," an anthem he said his captors sang as they brutalized him
and other followers of the Falun Gong religion. For Chinese pop fans, it's "The Same Song," an ode to love and
unity that became a hit in the 1990s and is now the title of a blockbuster
weekly concert series on China's Communist-run TV station, CCTV. Now that a version of the show, produced by CCTV, will appear Monday at Radio
City Music Hall, Falun Gong adherents such as Lee, a Camden County resident,
have been protesting, claiming the show's title and its inclusion of the song is
a painful reminder of their persecution -- and a form of propaganda. They want
the show canceled. "The song to me is a nightmare. It's linked to the worst day of my
life," said Lee, who lives in Winslow Township. "When you sing that
song, it means you're in line with the Communist regime." [...] Falun Gong [practitioners], however, want to keep it out of New York. Every day this week, between 25 and 100 [Falun Gong practitioners] from New
York and New Jersey have been staging news conferences and protests outside
Radio City Music Hall and the Chinese Consulate, in which they re-enact scenes
of torture from the labor camps. "I just hope the Chinese people will know the truth behind the
song," said Li Li, an Edison resident who heads the Human Rights
Organization to Rescue Falun Gong and has been protesting the show outside Radio
City. According to an Amnesty International report, more than 700 followers of [Falun
Gong] had died as part of the government's campaign. Lee, who works for a mortgage company in South Jersey, was sent to a camp for
18 months in 2000, he said. He was shocked with electricity, deprived of sleep
and forced to lie underneath a wooden board while guards jumped on his back, he
said. Fearing for his life, he gave in to guards' demands that he join them in
singing the "The Same Song" used by guards to signify that a prisoner
had renounced their faith, according to Lee. "I just pretend to sing it," said Lee, who was freed months after
singing the song. "In my heart, I hate it."
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