The Minnesota Daily: Student Group Practices Despite Controversy
February 15, 2007 (Clearwisdom.net) Some students still practice Falun Gong, a Chinese
spiritual movement, despite opposition by the Chinese government. On the third floor of Coffman Union, eight people move fluidly to the calming
sounds of wind instruments and bells. Though it seems peaceful, the spiritual practice has a history of
controversy, including one University graduate who fears for his mother's safety
abroad. University graduate and Falun Gong student group member Cheng Wan was
introduced to the practice by his mother in 1996. Wan's mother had been battling a chronic illness for many years and had found
that neither Chinese nor Western medicine helped her symptoms, but her health
drastically changed when she began practicing Falun Gong, he said. "She was a new person." The change in his mother sparked Wan's interest in Falun Gong, a spiritual
and physical exercise that teaches the ideals of truthfulness, compassion and
tolerance, which Wan said helped him answer some of life's biggest questions. But soon after Wan left China for the University in 1998 to pursue further
education, the Chinese government began a brutal suppression of the spiritual
movement. Wan's mother, who remained in China, was arrested in 2000 and placed in a
"re-education camp" where she was subjected to hard labor for several
weeks, he said. Still, she insisted on practicing Falun Gong. In 2001, police broke into her home, arrested Wan's mother and put her in
jail for three years for possessing Falun Gong fliers and "ruining social
order," Wan said. During her time in jail, Wan said his family was able to contact her
occasionally, but they were warned their conversations were taped by the
government. Between jailings, Wan said he noticed his mother's hearing had deteriorated
and she refused to talk about her experience in the camp. Wan said she didn't
want to scare him from continuing to practice Falun Gong. After being released from detainment, Wan said his mother couldn't return
home because she was being watched by the police. Even now, Wan doesn't know the exact location of his mother and only receives
occasional e-mails or phone calls from her. [...] Human Rights Watch and other human rights organizations have reported
instances of torture, forced conversion, organ harvesting and murder of Falun
Gong members while in detainment during the past few years. Ming Wei Shu, a member of the Falun Gong student group at the University,
came to the United States in 1996 and began practicing two years later. Shu said she believes the Chinese government feels threatened by the movement
because the number of members grew so quickly. Shu said the government disperses misleading information to crush the group. Regardless of the validity of the movement, some members of the University's
Falun Gong student group see Chinese suppression as a real threat and therefore
will not return to China. Wan said he still received threatening phone calls from Chinese officials
while in the United States. "As long as I stay (in the United States), there should be no
problems," Wan said.
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