| [Minghui
04/24/2001] "Validate the Fa with reason, clarify the truth with wisdom, spread the Fa and offer people salvation with benevolence" (Rationality)
Honolulu Star
Bulletin: Falun Gong take protest to the world [04/22/01]
--At its first isle vigil, a practitioner says persecution drives
the group into politics
By Mary Adamski Star-Bulletin
Sunday, April 22, 2001
Despite the misty rain, the small gathering of Falun Gong practitioners kept
candles lit for their vigil on busy Ala Moana.
A few passersby strolled over to look at the display of photos of people who
have been imprisoned or killed in China because they are members of the
meditation group.
About 20 local practitioners of the physical and mental discipline sat in
silence, except to answer an occasional query.
Although they may be seen in city parks doing slow tai chi-like postures, this
was the first time that the local Falun Gong sought a higher profile, stretching
identifying banners along the street.
The Tuesday night demonstration matched vigils in several cities around the
globe. They aimed to spotlight a United States resolution expressing concern
about China's shortcomings in civil and religious rights. Debate on the motion
before the United Nations Human Rights Commission meeting in Geneva was thwarted
Wednesday by China and its supporters.
The demonstration was a rare step into the political arena, said local spokesman
Martin Larsson. "The Falun Gong is nonpolitical. It is (Chinese president)
Jiang Zemin who brought it into politics." Larsson said there have been 192
recorded deaths of Falun Gong members in China, most within the past five months
as the government has escalated its attacks on practitioners. There have been
50,000 people detained or imprisoned just because they practice the discipline,
he said. Larsson and others took turns answering questions about Falun Gong,
which most Americans know about only in terms of news briefs and photo captions
from China. "China had a long tradition of Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism,
but no one taught it lately," said Larsson, a Brigham Young
University-Hawaii student from Sweden.
When Li Hongzhi began teaching Falun Gong, also known as Falun Dafa, in 1992, he
combined elements of the Eastern philosophies, meditation, exercise practices
that are believed to focus energy, and basic principles of righteousness. Li
left China in 1994 and now lives in New York.
Larsson said the government originally accepted the movement until, "by
their own figures, they found there were 70 million. The numbers threatened the
government and they declared it illegal."
Falun Gong was banned after a peaceful demonstration by about 10,000 members in
Beijing in April 1999. It was the largest manifestation of dissent in the
capital since the 1989 pro-democracy demonstration in Tiananmen Square. The
government now attacks the movement as a [Chinese government's slanderous term
omitted]. "Falun Dafa is not a religion, it tells a way of life good for
every people," said Leung Yu "Tony" Ting. "We are here to
wake up people wandering in darkness to let them know this is a way of life that
works. Master Li taught cultivation of body and mind together.
"We just talk about these three principles," he said, pointing to
their T-shirts, which proclaimed "Truthfulness, Compassion,
Forbearance."
Ting, who was a high school teacher in Canton and now is a property manager,
said it offers a new focus in life for people. "We had great teachers in
China who were affected by Buddhism and Taoism ... (but) we were taught by the
government to learn to follow the [party's name omitted].
"Now, the crime rate is high, people are consumed by materialism, the
mentality has gone down, down, down. We cultivate truthfulness, compassion and
forbearance. Only that will bring back the mentality of people," said Ting.
"We don't have a church or a temple or an office. When get together in the
park, we don't know each other's last name," he said.
Larsson said, "You won't hear Falun Gong practitioners say anything about
another religion." He said there is no element of worshipping a divinity
involved. When the local members talk about their beliefs, it is in terms of
"cultivation" of the desired principles in their lives. Li instructs
people in his books and lectures not to profit from the spread of his teaching.
"People in society are sliding downward on moral issues," said
Larsson. "We have got to slow down, make the bad effects stop."
Ting said "I love China," but he will not return for a visit because
he could expect persecution.
He said the long arm of the Chinese government reaches here. A cameraman
videotaped people performing the exercises at the Chinese Cultural Plaza last
year and refused to identify himself.
Ting and Brian Sun, a computer software technician, said they believe the film
is in the Chinese government's hands and would be used to identify Falun Gong
members if they try to enter China.
"I would like to return to visit my mother, but my wife says 'No, you
wouldn't come back,'" said Sun, who was a university professor in China and
has been in the United States for 10 years.
He said he receives e-mail spam and viruses which he believes are sent from
China by opponents of Falun Gong.
Sun met with aides of the four Hawaii Congress members in Washington, D.C., in
January in an effort to educate them about the movement and the human rights
violations in China.
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