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[Minghui 8/2/2000]
At present, for every
disciple both inside and outside of China, clarifying the truth of Falun
Gong to people around the world is the most important task in
"assisting the teacher in the human world".
Washington Post
(EDITORIAL): China's Falun Gong Obsession (8/1/00)
EDITORIAL
Tuesday, August 1, 2000; Page A22
IT HAS NOW been just over a year since the government of China began its
effort to stamp out the nonviolent spiritual movement known as Falun Gong.
Thousands of Chinese followers of the group have been subjected to
surveillance, harassment, arrest, torture and, in some two dozen cases,
death. The two most recent Falun Gong members to perish in police custody
were 44-year-old Li Zaiji and 68-year-old Wang Peisheng, according to the
Hong Kong-based Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy. They
both died in the first two weeks of July.
Falun Gong adherents nevertheless marked the anniversary of the government
crackdown by raising banners and otherwise protesting peacefully in
Beijing's Tiananmen Square. Few visitors to the vast square even noticed,
because police immediately seized the protesters and hauled them to jail.
Hundreds are said to have been detained.
The Communist government portrays its battle against Falun Gong as an
effort to protect China from an evil cult bent on destabilizing society.
In fact, the authorities are reacting out of instinctive hostility to the
growth of an independent organization that appears capable of offering
Chinese a spiritual alternative--however obscure--to official ideology.
Yet for all its determination to deny Falun Gong practitioners their right
to the free exercise of their beliefs, Beijing has been unable in a year
to restore the monochromatic ideological climate its rulers require. The
effort to destroy Falun Gong will be a "long-lasting, complicated and
acute struggle," a July 20 editorial in the official People's Daily
conceded. This backhanded compliment to the undeniable courage and
tenacity of Falun Gong's adherents was also, alas, probably a threat of
even greater official violence to come.
© 2000 The Washington Post Company
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