(Clearwisdom.net) On April 1, 2006, Falun Gong practitioners from
Columbus, Ohio heard that the first Saturday evening of each month is the famous
Gallery Hop in the local area, and that tens of thousands of people would gather
together on High Street. Five Falun Gong practitioners made sandwich boards with
photos exposing the Chinese Communist regime's persecution of Falun Gong
practitioners. They went to the High Street with the sandwich boards and
distributed truth-clarification flyers regarding the latest
revelation of the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP's) barbaric atrocities of
harvesting organs from living Falun Gong practitioners and cremating their
murdered bodies to destroy the evidence.
Many Americans have already learned about this incident. Some people heard
about it from media reports, and some human rights organizations have learned
about it from their own channels. Many more people heard about it for the first
time at the Gallery Hop and felt deep shock. They took flyers to read and
expressed that it was too horrible, similar to the reappearance of the Nazis.
Some people felt it was unbelievable. The practitioners described what the three
witnesses had testified, and told them that similar crimes are commonplace in
many prisons, forced labor camps, hospitals and related facilities in different
places in China. The crimes are still continuing covertly in some places right
now. People were very much shocked that such a terrible tragedy could occur
today, even though many people know that the CCP is able to do any evil thing.
Many people asked, "What has the American government done (to stop the
persecution)?" "What has the UN done?" "How can we
help?" The practitioners hoped that they would make phone calls to their
congressmen, the White House and the UN. Many people agreed to do so. Some
people took the initiative to help photocopy the informational materials and
helped distribute them. They thanked the practitioners for telling them this
urgent and important information.
When the Falun Gong practitioners later called their congressmen, they also
conveyed the American people's opinions. The congressmen were deeply moved.