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Mobilizing Amnesty International and Other University Student Organizations to Host Organ Harvesting Forums
By a practitioner from Colorado
(Clearwisdom.net) In Colorado we just finished three organ harvesting
forums hosted by university student organizations, including two Amnesty
International Chapters, Asian-Pacific American Law, "Never Again," the
Student Diversity Council, Asian-Pacific Islander, the Black Student Union, and
the Latino Student Union. The success of the forums made me realize that
ordinary people are ready to help us expose the evil crimes of organ harvesting
and the persecution of Falun Gong in China. Master said in "Teaching the Fa at the Fa Conference at the U.S.
Capital:" "People with predestined relationships and those who can be saved can
be made to--made to by Master's Law Bodies, righteous gods, or the immense
field that Dafa has formed in the world--appear right before you in any of a
range of settings, providing them with a chance to learn the truth. But you
have to carry it out, and it doesn't work if you're not out there doing
things." This is exactly what I experienced while coordinating the organ harvesting
forums. Many people suddenly stepped forward out of nowhere to help expose the
persecution. Last November I was invited to the Amnesty International meeting at the
University of Colorado in Boulder (CU-Boulder) to speak about the persecution of
Falun Gong. I showed the students a seven-minute video on organ harvesting and
answered their questions. In the end I asked whether they would like to host a
forum exposing the organ harvesting from living Falun Gong practitioners. They
were all highly motivated and set a date for the forum right then and there.
They even said they'd pay all the expenses and host it in the best ballroom on
campus. I was a bit surprised because over the years we've always volunteered to
pay for things out of our own pockets. This was the first time that another
group wanted to cover the expenses. While working with the students I came to realize how dedicated and serious
they were about the issue. According to the CU-Boulder Chapter of Amnesty
International, this was one of the biggest events they've hosted in the past
several years. They spent quite some time gathering thousands of signatures in
order to get the funding. They ended up getting enough money to pay for airfare
to Colorado for David Matas, Erping Zhang, Charles Lee, and Wenyi Wang, plus all
the other expenses of the forum, totaling more than $7,000. They advertised the
forum in the local newspaper and printed 3,000 flyers and posters for the 26,000
student population and invited us to help hand out the flyers. We printed
another 7,000 flyers using our own money to reach more students. We utilized this opportunity to inform professors and student organizations
from other campuses, principals, social studies and history teachers from
elementary schools, middle schools and high schools, members of the media,
transplant doctors and associated organizations, national, state, and local
governments, as well as the local communities. Shortly, seven other university
organizations from the University of Denver and the University of Colorado at
Colorado Springs responded to support us and wanted to host the event on their
campuses as well. Many student organizations pulled together to co-sponsor the
forums on each campus. There were other student organizations that also wanted
to co-sponsor but didn't get organized in time. The Speaker of the House and a
U.S. Congressman wrote supportive letters for the events and called for an
independent, direct and unimpeded investigation of the organ harvesting issue in
China. We were hoping to perform an organ harvesting reenactment to further promote
the forum to the students, but we ran into numerous obstacles, including bad
weather and the requirement to meet with eight different people in order to get
a permit. By the time we got the permit it was the afternoon before the forum,
so we ended up using our backup plan. We held a 10-foot banner and played the
song "Set Them Free" while handing out flyers. It drew everyone's
attention and people were quite willing to accept the flyers. The day before the forum four of us were standing in the freezing, snowy
weather holding the banner and distributing flyers. Two students and two
professional looking cameramen came and took pictures of us, perhaps because it
was rare to see people standing outside in that type of weather. We also placed
signs around the campus lawns to promote the forum. Though it was very difficult
to quickly get approval for the use of campus grounds, we were able to
clarify the truth to the eight people we had to speak to, and they
were all very supportive of our forum, especially the campus police. We also got
permits to place posters on bulletin boards in campus dorms and buildings. In
addition we displayed the torture art exhibit at two campuses during the
promotional period. It drew so much attention that Amnesty International at the
University of Denver had to change to a larger room. Many ordinary people showed tremendous support. For instance, one engineering
student saw that we only had three people to hand out flyers to the rushing
crowd of students, so he came over to us. He wanted to help us situate the
banner poles through the icy snow so we wouldn't have to hold them. He also
asked me to email him the forum invitation so he could forward it to his email
lists. At the office supply store we encountered a lot of strange things while
printing the flyers, signs, and posters. When the printer wouldn't print
correctly, the clerk spent hours trying to figure out what was wrong. He came to
work very early the next morning, above and beyond the range of his
responsibility, to finish the lamination so that we'd get the posters on time. During that time I often had to rectify my bad notions. For example, one day
an Amnesty International member asked me how many people I thought would attend
the forum. She didn't want to overestimate the number and end up with too many
empty seats, as it wouldn't look good. I told her, "Maybe 100 or 150, but
we should plan for a few more just in case." She was shocked by my
response. She said that she was expecting at least 600, and that the building
administration said that the event could potentially attract more than one
thousand people. Right away I looked inside and recognized my notion. I was
limited by pessimistic thoughts, just because we haven't had so many ordinary
people attend our events over the years. I needed to rectify these bad notions
and thoughts and have righteous thoughts to help more people be saved. I
realized I shouldn't be attached to the results but simply try my best to inform
people about the forums. For myself, I certainly had many cultivation issues to deal with during the
events. A few days before the forums, the majority of the practitioners dropped
out of the promotion efforts. Some of them thought it was too much work, a few
went on vacation, and others got too busy with work or had other urgent projects
to work on. With only three days left and three practitioners to promote the
forums it was no longer possible to put on the reenactment. At this point I felt
really overwhelmed and disappointed. Then I realized that I was attached to
depending on the practitioners I thought were the most skilled or reliable. They
were the ones who dropped out. The new practitioners and those who weren't as
skilled proved to be the most motivated. They wanted to help from deep in their
hearts. Even though I had to spend hours providing transportation and training
for them, I was extremely touched by their eagerness to help. More of my attachments were brought to the surface at a Fa study
the day after the forum. Of course, when one is least expecting criticism, there
it is. One practitioner told me that I'd offended her during the forums because
I put too much pressure on others and had unrealistic expectations. At that
moment my mind wasn't clear and calm and I didn't take a step back. I felt that
the other practitioners hadn't done their best and then criticized my work
instead. As the conversation went on I remembered that Master told us that we
needed to be able to take criticism, yet my heart was moved and I didn't pass
the test well. Master said in "Teaching the Fa in the City of Los Angeles," "As cultivators, think about it--I've talked about this in Zhuan
Falun and in my earlier teachings on Fa--I have said, 'Don't hit back when
hit, don't talk back when insulted.' When others mistreat you, you should
respond with just a smile and let that be the end of it. And when others are
embroiled in conflict and you are just an onlooker, you should think about it,
'How can I do better? If I were in that position, would I be able to control
my xinxing and face the criticism and disapproval like a cultivator?'
Cultivation is about looking inside yourself. Whether you are right or wrong,
you should examine yourself. Cultivation is about getting rid of human
attachments. If you always reject reproaches and criticism, always point your
fingers at others, and always refute others' disapproval and criticism, is
that cultivating? How is that cultivating? You have grown used to focusing on
other people's shortcomings, and never take examining your own self seriously.
When others' cultivation one day meets with success, what about you? Isn't
Master hoping that you are cultivating well? Why won't you accept
criticism, and why do you keep focusing on other people? Why not cultivate
inward and examine your own self? Why do you get agitated when you are
criticized? How many of you seated here can keep at ease when someone points
at you out of the blue and berates you? How many of you can stay unruffled and
search for the reason on your part when faced with others' criticism and
chiding?" The next couple of days I tried to further look within to see why so many
practitioners weren't working together as one body for the event. One thing I
realized was that prior to the event, due to the extremely bad whether, we
hadn't kept up with group Fa study. We only communicated via email.
Additionally, I was attached to self and reputation. Over the years I've seen
these attachments in other practitioners, but failed to cultivate it out of
myself. I was also attached to my high expectations. I expected others to work
hard and contribute to the project. I never thought that I was pressuring others
because I always asked them if they would like to do a certain task instead of
telling them, but the practitioners could sense the expectation behind my words
and emails. Indeed, many opportunities are arranged for us to cultivate while we
do Dafa work. We met with challenges and interference throughout the planning stages, and
the day of the forum didn't go quite as well as we'd hoped. Several weeks prior
to our events we were hit with one of the worst winter storms in decades. The
day of the forum it snowed a few hours and the temperature dropped to below
freezing, causing terrible traffic jams. This prevented a lot of people from
coming, though we did have about 300 people show up to our main event, a hundred
more to the University of Denver, and a smaller group at UCCS. More than four
major media told Amnesty International that they were coming to report but
didn't show up. However, "Univision Colorado," a major Spanish TV
station, came to interview a Spanish-speaking practitioner that flew in for the
event. The University of Denver campus newspaper The Clarion published a
half-page article on its February 6 front page. Also, after the forum the main
campus library was eager to display our "Truth, Compassion, Tolerance"
Art Exhibit, and even helped us promote it. All in all, I hope that through my sharing I'm able to encourage
practitioners from other areas to start communicating with local student
organizations (especially Amnesty International) to see if they might host
similar forums. If we can mobilize the student population, who are future
professionals, lawyers, and leaders, they'll have a great impact on many people
in the future. More importantly they'll be positioning themselves positively for
the future. These are my current understandings. Please point out any shortcomings. Thank
you. Heshi. |