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Panama News, Panama: Banned in China, Falun Gong operates freely here
Leonardo Mosley penetrates the cosmic extremes Panama City has no greater concentration of people seeking to live the
healthy life than you will find every morning in Parque Omar. For a few --- the
prizefighters doing their roadwork and the cops and firefighters trying to shed
pounds so as to avoid losing their jobs for being overweight --- it's part of
their living. For most of the joggers, walkers and people hanging out around the
stands where you can get fresh fruit and vegetable juices, it's just a matter of
wanting to feel better and live longer. Along with people getting their exercise in more popular ways, every morning
between 6:30 and 8:30 you will find another group, one that practices Falun Dafa,
a series of four exercises and one meditation. "We are for slow
exercise," explains Leonardo Mosley. "The human body is constantly
changing cells --- slow, harmonious exercise makes cells that last longer." So are we dealing with something like Tai Chi or yoga, an Eastern philosophy
and practice of health that competes with American imports like the Atkins diet
or Jane Fonda's workouts and old favorites like a run in the park? Well, not just that. You see, in the land where Li Hongzhi first promoted
Falun Dafa through his 1992 book Falun Gong, you can get the death penalty for
exercising and meditating in this way. Doing your morning Falun Dafa workout is
prima facie proof of membership in a [group] in the eyes of the authorities in
the Peoples Republic of China. "It's nothing bad," Mosley protests. "We have no religious or
political aim --- only to better a person's being." Not only is Falun Gong
not a religious congregation or political movement, he says, it has no
membership in any formal sense. People come and go as they please, paying
nothing, promising nothing and signing no lists. On the Thursday morning when
The Panama News dropped in on them at Parque Omar there were six people
exercising, but Mosley said that there are about 10 people come around
frequently, but not all of them every day. Panama has a substantial Chinese community, but most of the local group is
not Chinese. On this day most of the little group was composed of Latin
Americans of mixed race, with one Italian participating. Only one of the local
Falun Gong regulars is of Chinese ancestry, Mosley said. This is not for want of trying. Falun Gong has distributed literature in
Chinese and Spanish in Panama City's Chinese neighborhoods, encountering mostly
indifference but sometimes disdain and sometimes fear that any involvement here
would invite persecution of relatives back in China. So why would the comrades in the Politburo be so uptight about Falun Gong?
Maybe it has something to do with the ethical principles summarized by three
words in Chinese and Spanish on the literature that's passed out to the curious:
Truth, Compassion and Tolerance. Anyone who aspires to be the ultimate arbiter
of truth, judge of who's worthy of compassion and decider of who and what will
be tolerated --- in short, anybody in charge of a totalitarian society --- might
feel threatened by these principles. But it didn't start out that way in China. Falun Gong's popularity spread
quickly in the early and middle 90s, even among Communist Party members,
eventually claiming more than 100 million people working out in public parks in
every province of the Middle Kingdom. But in 1996 the Chinese Communist Party's general secretary at the time,
Jiang Zemin, banned Falun Gong literature. The persecution escalated and in the
spring of 1999 the police started to break up Falun Dafa exercises in the public
parks. Then that July there began a wave of mass arrests. Some people were
confined in mental hospitals, others received long prison sentences and more
than 1,000 were executed. "Jiang Zemin was jealous and tried to take control," Mosley opined,
"but Li Hongzhi wouldn't be manipulated." Prohibited in the land of its birth, Falun Gong spread to about 70 other
countries, including Panama, Colombia, Peru, Chile, Argentina, Brazil,
Venezuela, the Dominican Republic and Mexico in Latin America. In Panama and elsewhere in the region, Mosley said, people of at least eight
different nationalities have found "moral and spiritual support" in
the Falun Gong group, in addition to a healthy exercise system that lowers
stress and increases powers of concentration and self-control. So how ancient or modern, traditional or radical, is Falun Gong? "Li was
instructed by other teachers," Mosley said, although what he learned is
"new to the West." In a tradition of exercise and meditation
techniques that goes back to antiquity, he said, "Master Li is the newest
teacher." Apart from the vilification coming from Chinese communist leaders, Mosley
added, people sometimes misidentify Falung Gong as a Buddhist sect. The first of
the four exercises is called "Buddha Showing 1,000 Hands" and Li uses
the word "buddha" in his writings, but the word is used in a different
sense than the meaning ascribed by the followers of the tradition that
Siddhartha Gautama founded under a banyan tree in Varanasi back in the 6th
century BC. "Falun Dafa... is a traditional Chinese self-cultivation practice,"
the brochure that Mosley handed this reporter said. "This old practice,
which was originally taught in private, was introduced to the public for the
first time in 1992 by Mr. Li Hongzhi." And if you care to catch the deeper meaning of Buddha Showing a Thousand
Hands, Falun Standing Stance, Penetrating the Two Cosmic Extremes, The Great
Heavenly Circuit and Strengthening Divine Powers, stop by Parque Omar early in
the morning and join the workout. Usually Falun Gong exercises under the sky
near the parking lot, but in case of rain they move to one of the park's several
shelters. |