|
Ancient Wisdom for Modern Predicaments
Vol. 3, No. 1, 2004
Ancient Wisdom for Modern Predicaments: The Truth, Deceit, and Issues Surrounding Falun Gong
Frank Tian Xie, Ph.D., Department of Marketing, Drexel University
Tracey Zhu, M.D., New Haven, CT
Editor's Note: This paper is a revised version of a presentation
given at AFF's conference in Enfield, Connecticut, October 17-18, 2003.
It includes an appendix, a statement by Mr. Gang Chen, also presented at
the conference. It is part of an ongoing print dialogue concerning
Falun Gong and the Chinese government. Other articles on this subject
include: Rosedale (2002), Langone (2003), Luo (2003), Rahn (2003),
Robbins (2003), and Rosedale (2003). On April 23, 2004 AFF's directors
approved a statement clarifying the organization's position on Falun
Gong and the Chinese government.
Abstract
This paper presents the point of views
of two practitioners in Falun Gong. The authors intend to give their
personal accounts of the issues, explain what Falun Gong really is and
is not, discuss the deceit of the Chinese government, explain the
motivations behind the persecution of Falun Gong in China, and respond
to the issues and questions raised at previous American Family
Foundation (AFF) conferences and publications. In addition, the authors
offer a caveat to scholars in the field about the limitation of
conducting research on qigong and cultivation under the auspices of
empiricism and positivism.
I. What Exactly Is Falun Dafa (Falun Gong)?
1. Falun Gong is a Cultivation Practice
Falun Dafa, also known as Falun Gong, was introduced to the public by Mr. Li Hongzhi in 1992 as a form of qigong.
The term “qigong” appeared during the Great Cultural Revolution and
became popular in China since the 1960’s. Modern in its name only, it
actually representsmany forms of cultivation practices, including those
in the Taoist and Buddhist schools, throughout ancient history.
Cultivation is the oriental method of attaining the Buddhahood and/or
the Dao (or Tao), and is highly regarded and well respected in Eastern
cultures. In Chinese history, many high-ranking court officials and even
emperors were Taoist cultivation practitioners or Buddhist monks in
their early life. Two examples were Prime Minister Zhang Liang of the
Han Dynasty (206 B.C.-A.D. 220) and Minister Liu Bowen of the Ming
Dynasty (A.D. 1368-1644). Cultivation to achieve the "Dao" ("Tao") was
considered the ultimate achievement of personal self-realization. The
Dao is an indigenous Chinese name for deity. The concept of Buddha was
introduced into China from India. Derived from the ancient Indian
language of Sanskrit, a Buddha is an enlightened being or someone who
has achieved the highest level of human fulfillment in his/her system of
cultivation.
Buddhism should not be considered the only method of cultivation in
the Buddha School since Buddha Sakyamuni indicated that there were
eighty-four thousand cultivation ways in cultivating Buddhahood or
reaching enlightenment. Other than Buddhism and Daoism, many more
methods of cultivation were secretly taught from master to disciple in
seclusion in history.
In Mr. Li Hongzhi’s 9-day lectures, which were later compiled into
the book Zhuan Falun, he began his introduction by pointing out that
Falun Gong is a way of cultivation practice in the Buddha School. Falun
Gong’s core principles are Truthfulness, Benevolence (compassion), and
Forbearance (tolerance), and it aims atbringing practitioners to a
higher level of morality through cultivation of these principles and
doing the exercises. Although healing and curing diseases are not the
goal of Falun Gong practice, the healing and health efficacy of Falun
Gong made it extremely appealing to many who suffered various chronic,
serious, and even life-threatening diseases.
Because of its healing power and the fact that it is free to
everyone, Falun Gong spread quickly by word of mouth from its
introduction to the public in 1992 until today. Many started to practice
Falun Gong because of its healing capability but then became dedicated
practitioners after realizing its unique ability in upgrading people’s
moral standards. Others first came to learn Falun Gong’s principles and
then started to cultivate even before they realized Falun Gong’s health
benefits.
2. Is Falun Gong a Religion?
Falun Gong is not a religion. The founder of Falun Gong, Mr. Li
Hongzhi, never intended to make it a religion but foresaw that “future
generations will regard it as one” (Li 1996). Precisely, Falun Gong is a
cultivation practice that is deeply rooted in Chinese history and
tradition, and such a practice does not have a word “directly
corresponding to the Western term ‘religion’” (Madsen 2000). Like many
religions and cultivation methods, Falun Gong does have spiritual
content and beliefs.
Practitioners’ personal experiences have proved that by cultivation
in line with the guidelines of Falun Gong’s principles, one is able to
become a better person who is able to contribute positively to the
society. So in this regard, Falun Gong’s goals are similar to that of
other cultivation practices and orthodox religions. However, Falun Gong
does not have all of the other aspects of religion, including worship of
a god or a deity; religious ceremonies and rituals; places of worship
such as churches, temples, and synagogues; and organizational forms of
membership or hierarchy. Falun Gong is most appropriately called an
ancient form of self-cultivation practice, or a form of qigong.
3. What Falun Gong is not
Falun Gong is within the spectrum of indigenous Chinese spiritual
practices, and cannot be considered to be a cult (Madsen 2000). Neither
is Falun Gong a “xie jiao” (“devious religion," or more loosely, an
“evil cult”), as the Chinese government under Jiang Zemin’s regime
denigrated it. If “cult” is defined according to Margaret Singer and
other scholars, Falun Gong is not a cult (Wong and Liu 1999). It is
further argued that “the style of governance (in Falun Gong) is neither
totalitarian nor suggestive of exclusivity and isolation” and “there is
no clear evidence of any public idol worship of Li Hongzhi” (Wong and
Liu 1999). As we will discuss in later sections, in Falun Gong there is
no amassing of wealth for the founder, no worship ofidols, and no harm
towards practitioners for the benefit of its “leader”. So Falun Gong, or
Falun Dafa, as a cultivation practice, is not a cult or a religion, let
alone an “evil cult” or “devious religion.”
4. The Growth of Falun Gong between 1992 and 1999
Mr. Li Hongzhi started teaching about Falun Gong on May 13, 1992 in
the city of Changchun, Jilin Province, with about 180 people attending.
Between 1992 and 1995, 54 classes were held, with nearly 100,000 people
attending those classes. In 1995, Mr. Li discontinued his teaching
inside of China. From 1995 until the start of the persecution in 1999,
Falun Gong had been promulgated in China mostly via word-of-mouth among
friends and families. An investigation by the Public Security Ministry
of China in 1997, using undercover agents, found no culpability of
practitioners nationwide, and estimated the total number of
practitioners at around 70 million, or about 5% of China's population.
(citation?)
Beginning in Paris on March 13, 1995, Mr. Li started giving lectures
overseas, traveling to countries in Europe, Asia-Pacific, and North
America. Now Falun Dafa is practiced by millions of people in over 60
countries with the book, Zhuan Falun, now translated into over 30
languages, with nine more translations currently in progress.II. What
Has Happened Since the Persecution?
Persecution of Falun Gong started in 1999. Hundreds of thousands of
practitioners were expelled from the parks where they used to do their
morning exercises, and thousands were detained, nationwide, in the
morning of July 22, 1999. An intense, all-encompassing campaign of
propaganda immediately ensued. In the first 30 days of the persecution,
between July and August of 1999, as many as 347 articles appeared in The
People’s Daily alone, criticizing and ridiculing Falun Gong, with more
than 10 articles per day. It was a Cultural Revolution style of a
concerted state scheme almost akin to organized crime and
state-sponsored terrorism against a group of unarmed civilians. The
persecution is cruel and vicious, and the slogan used by the regime is
that they will crush and devastate Falun Gong and its practitioners
“financially, spiritually, and physically.”
The “self-immolation” in Tiananmen Square has confused and deluded
many people in China and abroad. As Zhuan Falun (Li 1999a, p.266)
clearly states, killing of even small animals is strictly prohibited
among Falun Gong practitioners, let alone killing oneself. The original
China Central Television (CCTV) footage, when played in slow motion,
indicates that the act was most likely staged by the Chinese government
(Clearwisdom 2001). The movie, "False Fire: China's Tragic New Standard
in StateDeception," which analyzes the 2001 Tiananmen Square
"self-immolation" incident, won a Certificate of Honorable Mention in
Religion at the 51st Columbus International Film & Video Festival.
New Tang Dynasty TV, a non-profit privately owned Chinese TV station,
produced the movie. The award ceremony was held in the Kansas
Center,Columbus Arts College, Columbus, Ohio:
http://www.chrisawards.org/pages/downloads/chriswinners.pdf. Another
recent example of the CCP regime’s lies is the censorship of the Chinese
version of Hillary Clinton’s new book, Living History (Kahn 2003),
while Clinton and the whole world are watching.
As of February 5, 2004, there have been 879 confirmed deaths of Falun
Gong practitioners in China, with hundreds of thousands of them
detained in forced-labor camps, brainwashing centers (the “Re-education
Center”), and prisons. Even under such harsh conditions, there has not
been any violent resistance or rebellion ever reported, not even in the
government’s own propaganda.
The China Anti-cult Association was founded on November 13, 2000.
(WOIPFG 2003) Organized by some high-ranking CCP and governmental
officials who have religious or scientific background, the
“non-governmental” organization serves to provide the rationale and
theoretical justification of the persecution of Falun Gong. The
Association provides ideas to use in criticizing Falun Gong,
participates in the brainwashing of Falun Gong practitioners, and makes
other suggestions relevant to the persecution of Falun Gong. This
association rapidly established branches in many cities, provinces, and
even work units and schools. This organization is also sponsoring
various anti-Falun Gong activities overseas such as exhibits during the
human rights summits in Geneva every year. Notably, members of this
organization have had close communications with AFF and attended AFF
conferences.
Since the persecution, Falun Gong practitioners throughout the world
have stepped forward to expose the persecution, to clarify the lies made
by the Chinese government about Falun Gong, and to appeal to the world
to stop the persecution (see, for example, Global Coalition to Bring
Jiang to Justice: . http://www.grandtrial.org/English/). In China,
despite enormous pressure from the government, including, but not
limited to heavy fines, brainwashing, torture, and even death, Falun
Gong practitioners still uphold their beliefs (see Supplement – Personal
Account of Chen Gang). Their actions manifest Falun Gong’s principle of
Truthfulness, Compassion, and Forbearance. Overseas, Falun Gong
practitioners started to explain the facts to all levels of governments
and the media because the Chinese officials have been sending fabricated
stories and slanderous materials to them since the onset of the
persecution. Many foreign governments and individuals gave proclamations
and other forms of support to Falun Gong, which helped to ease the
persecution in China.
The following sources document abuses perpetrated against Falun Gong
practitioners in China: Amnesty International Reports: China (2003);
Human Rights in China (2004, March 23); Human Rights Watch (2002); The
Falun Gong Human Rights Working Group (2003, October); United States
Commission on International Religious Freedom (2000).
III. Why is Falun Gong Being Persecuted in China?
The reason why Jiang Zemin’s regime banned this popular cultivation
practice is still something that is being questioned, speculated, and
studied by many, both inside and outside of China (for a thoughtful
analysis, see Ping, 2003). The true reason and internal decision-making
processes may never be known to the public, due tothe secretive nature
of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) resulting in a complete lack of
transparency in government operations. The following are just a few
explanations that have been offered.
1. Due to Falun Gong’s Popularity
The first reason cited is the popularity of Falun Gong. In the height
of Falun Gong before the persecution, the Public Security Ministry of
China estimated that there were 70 million Falun Gong practitioners in
China, which outnumbered the CCP membership of approximately 60 million.
Practitioners come from all walks of life and include CCP members and
top government officials. As the worldwide communist movement diminishes
and communist governments in the former Soviet Union and Eastern block
countries fall, the legitimacy of communist rule in China has become an
ever-increasing concern for both the ruler and the ruled. As a result,
the communist party has tightened its grip on power even as more freedom
is granted in Chinese economic lives (Nathan,
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/023107/0231072856.htm).In
the West, Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO’s) and various civic,
religious, and professional organizations exist completely outside of
direct government control. A government having ultimate say in the daily
operations of a Homeowner’s Association or American Marketing
Association is simply unimaginable. This is not the case in China, a
strict totalitarian society under communist rule. As a part of the
communist tradition, all organizations, from the equivalent of the Boy
Scouts of America in China to the Chinese Paleontologists’ Association,
are all tightly controlled and closely monitored by party cadres and
their designees. Intensive and extensive infiltration of the Party into
people's daily life is simply beyond the wildest imagination of anyone
living in the West. Even monks are assigned a government cadre rank and
are paid a salary commensurate with these ranks. For example, monk Zhao
Puchu, former Chairman of the Chinese Buddhist Society, was said to have
held a deputy minister level rank and was compensated accordingly for
his "Buddhist" work until he died in the No. 301 Army Hospital in
Beijing, a hospital reserved for high-ranking leaders.In the seven years
before the persecution in July of 1999, a typical day of a Falun Gong
practitioner consisted of the following. He/she would go to a city park
in the early morning and spend 1 to 2 hours doing exercises. Then he/she
would merge into the morning traffic to work. At night he/she would
read Falun Gong books at home or in a group after finishing his/her
house chores. But when more and more Falun Gong practitioners emerged in
parks and city blocks for their morning exercises, their sheer number
and presence were enough to cause concern among some communist leaders.
For reasons given above, an entrenched and defensive regime would
speculate on any group’s political motives, let alone the motives of
millions of people across the country. The objective of cultivation is
personal consummation (enlightenment) and fulfillment, which transcends
all earthly matters, including the pursuit of power, money, and
political goals. Mr. Li Hongzhi states “A cultivator does not need to
mind the affairs of the human world, let alone get involved in political
struggle. We should not get involved in politics” (Li 1996). By its
very nature, Falun Gong, and all other genuine qigong practices, are
apolitical and are not affiliated with any political entity. Yet the
apolitical nature of Falun Gongby itself may be a "punishable" enough
reason in the eyes of the communist leaders. They would not tolerate a
group of people that they cannot control with their communist ideology
and political power.
It has to be noted that the spiritual content of Falun Gong (the Fo
Fa, or the Buddha Law) and that of many orthodox religions is
inconsistent with, and is in fact opposed to, the official atheist view
of the CCP. Initially, the Chinese government supported Falun Gong,
among other qigongs, as a way to encourage people to maintain health and
fitness. That objective is in line with the government’s efforts to
curb medical expenses under the nearly defunct medical system. When the
spiritual beliefs became popular, the CCP's opposition to all faiths and
fear of losing control over the hearts and minds of the Chinese people
were intensified; the regime did an about-face and began to denounce
Falun Gong. A regime that faces huge discontent of its citizenry
resulting from income inequalities, unemployment, and rural migrants
must urgently want to root out any independent group that has gained
popularity with a belief other than their atheist doctrine (Madsen
2000). Essentially, the persecution is a result of a combination of the
government's lack of legitimacy, its intolerant nature, and its fear of
losing power and control because of its legitimacy crisis following the
June 4, 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre of the students.
2. Due to Jiang’s Personal Jealousy
The second speculated reason for the persecution is Jiang Zemin’s
personal jealousy and insularity. It is believed that the persecution is
largely a personal decision and the personal campaign of Jiang Zemin,
the then “core” or the highest leader of the state, the CCP, and the
People’s Liberation Army of China. Jiang took power after the June 4th
massacre in Tiananmen Square in 1989. He was hand-picked and appointed
to the party secretary position by the former communist strongman, Deng
Xiaoping, without going through any national election. Because of a lack
of support from the military as well as civilians, he was believed to
be particularly attentive to any threat to his power, real or perceived,
from the populace or from his fellow partyleaders. The event of April
25, 1999 might have ignited his jealousy and intensified his deepest
fears. Jiang’s role is evident in a documentary book (in Chinese) called
June 4: The True Story (Zhang 2001).
On April 25, 1999, about 10,000 Falun Gong practitioners peacefully
gathered outside the Public Appeal’s Office of the State Department of
China, appealing to the government to release some 45 Falun Gong
practitioners detained on April 23 and 24, 1999, in the city of Tianjin,
a city 120 kilometers (75 miles) from Beijing. Duringthe incident,
several Falun Gong practitioners were asked to come in to Zhongnanhai,
the Chinese leadership compound, to speak directly with then Chinese
Premier, Zhu Rongji. After the talk, Zhu agreed to release the
detainees, and then all 10,000 practitioners quietly dispersed, picking
up all the trash and debris on their way home, an act unusual in
contemporary Chinese society. Zhu handled the situation very well and,
for the first time in Chinese history, peacefully resolved a
disagreement between the central government and the people. Overseas
media proclaimed that "April 25" set a great precedence in "the Chinese
Government's open dialogue with the general public" and demonstrated an
"elevated level of civilityamong Chinese people".That same night, Jiang
Zemin wrote a personal letter to all members of the Politburo Standing
Committee, the group of Party elders who have the bulk of power, and
demanded an emergency meeting about Falun Gong. His personal letter
later became an internal party document and was distributed to party
members nationwide. In the emergency meeting, Jiang was reported to have
yelled to Zhu in front of other Politburo members and called Zhu
“muddleheaded.” It seems to be that Zhu's rising popularity caused great
jealousy in Jiang and he was determined to reverse Zhu's decision and
to act single-handedly to suppress Falun Gong, for he thought that Falun
Gong practitioners were mostly senior citizens, weak, and by following
the principle of "forbearance," unlikely to resist. Jiang is said to
have written "it would be a joke if the Communist Party can't overwhelm
Falun Gong." Three months later, the persecution started. A good
analysis of Jiang’s motives in the persecution of Falun Gong can be
found in Wang et al. (2003).
One thing about the CCP is that once a decree is issued by the
party’s top leader, the whole Politburo and CCP Standing Committee would
have no choice but to follow that decree, in an effort to maintain
“unity and solidarity” within the party. This is largely due to the
authoritarian nature of the government, an absence of checks and
balances of any kind within the government, the lack of legitimacy of
the CCP in ruling China, and its declining reputation and decaying moral
grounding due to widespread corruption. A reversal or an apology from
the government for its wrongdoing is simply unheard of.The persecution
seems to be primarily a personal campaign by Jiang, and this is evident
in his interview with the CBS 60 Minutes program in September 2000 when
Jiang said, “Their (Falun Gong’s) leader, Li Hongzhi, claims himself a
reincarnation of Bodhisattva, and a reincarnation of Jesus Christ. He
said that the end of the world is coming, and the Earth is going to
explode," and “after careful considerations, we decided that Falun Gong
is an evil cult.” This statement of Jiang is actually something very
significant, for he revealed that his decision to label Falun Gong an
“evil cult” was based upon the ideas of “reincarnation” and “doomsday,”
yet these two points were both made-up by Jiang Zemin (Dai 2003).
As to the “reincarnation,” Mr. Li has never said he was the
reincarnation of anyone, and has told his students clearly that “I am Li
Hongzhi. And I am not Sakyamuni” (Li 1994a). As to the “doomsday”
claim, Mr. Li stated, long before 1999, that “I can tell everyone
explicitly, that the so called doomsday disaster is no longer in
existence. In the past, people talked about the explosion of the earth,
collision of earth with another celestial body, etc., this kind of
disaster no longer exists” (Li 1994b), and “the so-called 1999 disaster
on earth or the end of the universe no longer exists” (Li 1998).The fact
that the leader of a nation of one billion people lied in front of
world media cannot be explained by a temporary lack of rationality.
During the Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meeting in New
Zealand in September 1999, Jiang made a very unusual move: he hand
delivered to each national leader, including then U.S. President Bill
Clinton, an anti-Falun Gong brochure. Before Jiang’s state visit to
France on October 25, 1999, he accepted a written interview by French
newspaper Le Figaro during which Jiang attacked Falun Gong and called
Falun Gong an “evil cult (xie jiao)” before any documents and Chinese
state-controlled media first used that word to refer to Falun Gong. That
again showed that it was quite likely Jiang who personally made the
decision to persecute Falun Gong and kept pushing it forward (Wang et
al. 2003).
According to the Hong Kong-based Information Centre for Human Rights
and Democracy (ICHRD), Jiang Zemin felt that denouncing Falun Gong as an
illegal organization was still not enough for them to use legal means
to persecute Falun Gong (ICHRD 2002 – this is not in reference list).
Therefore, the authorities declared Falun Gong a cult and ordered the
National People's Congress to draft a "law against cults" in order to
further persecute Falun Gong. This law was passed in October 1999. It
should be noted that Falun Gong was denounced to be an “evil cult” by
the Chinese government, not because of its teachings or intellectual
content,but because of its being perceived as containing seeds of
rebellion (Madsen 2000).
So, is Jiang’s fear of Falun Gong’s “threat” to his grip of power
real and solid, orillusory and fictitious? A careful examination of the
original book by Mr. Li Hongzhi (Li 1999) and all the teachings of Falun
Gong, which can be downloaded free from the Internet
(www.falundafa.org), would easily substantiate the later. As Madsen
(2000) indicated, the so-called social harm, if any, caused by Falun
Gong’s belief in the efficacy of cultivation practice over medicine
seems no greater than that alleged of Christian Science, a religion in
the United States that publishes the international daily newspaper
Christian Science Monitor. In fact, while allowing “religious freedom”
for some state sanctioned temples and churches, the regime has also been
persecuting “Underground Christians” and Tibetan Buddhists, and has
considered any organization a threat regardless of its ideological
content.
It is therefore no surprise that there have been many lawsuits filed
in the U.S., France, Finland, Armenia, Belgium, and Spain against Jiang
and the “610 Office,” a Gestapo-style secret operative agency that Jiang
created and that is directly responsible for the execution of the
persecution of Falun Gong. In October 2003, amidst worldwide
condemnation, the government claimed the 610 Office closed but actually
only changed its name.
IV. Issues Raised and Questions Asked at AFF Conferences
In this section we address the issues raised and questions asked
by several authors whose writings appeared in AFF publications.
1. The Rosedale and Robbins articles (Rosedale 2001, Robbins 2003, Rosedale 2003)
Even though the late Herbert L. Rosedale held the belief that a group
should be examined based upon their behavior, not their beliefs
(Rosedale, 2001), his words apparently met the deaf ears of government
officials in Beijing during the height of the persecution. All they
cared about and echoed was Rosedale's parallelism of Falun Gong to evil
cult, harmful cult, and even terrorist groups. It needs to be noted that
all the alleged “law-breaking activities” of Falun Gong practitioners
in China happened either after the persecution started or resulted from
attempts to break the information blockade under communist rule, which
deprived practitioners of their right of expression to defend their
belief. Elsewhere in the world, Falun Gong practitioners are all
law-abiding citizens, including in countries/regions such as Hong Kong,
Taiwan, and Singapore where the majority of practitioners are also
Chinese. Regardless of Rosedale's best intention, this speech (Rosedale
2001) was indeed viewed as an endorsement of the persecution (Robbins
2003), and added fuel to the Chinese government’s persecution of Falun
Gong by giving them the "international" support they badly needed.
Robbins’ (2003) fear of the “distressing possibility that elements of
Anti-Cult Movement (ACM) may support the Chinese government’s severe
measure against Falun Gong” has in fact become an unfortunate reality.
Take for example, the web page of Hefei University of Technology in
China, where a reference was made to imply just what Robbins was worried
about (HFUT 2002). The Chinese public is led to believe that academic
and professional institutions such as AFF in the West also consider
Falun Gong an "evil cult" and should be banned and abolished. As Robbins
argued, the context of Chinese authoritarian state control and the
rejection of ideological pluralism are ignored by Rosedale’s article,
and the problem of Falun Gong cannot be intelligently discussed outside
of the context of totalitarian control and suppression of dissidents
(Robbins 2003).
While Rosedale’s observation of destructive cult groups from the
perspectives of leader-member relations, member-nonmember relations, and
group-society relationsis an interesting one (2001), his analysis is
not limited to only harmful cults or organizations though. In order to
include Falun Gong in his categorization, Rosedale would have to include
Jesus Christ and Christianity, Sakyamuni and Buddhism, and the Virgin
Mary and Catholicism in his generalization as well.
Rosedale’s (2001) assertion that Falun Gong practitioners sever their
“connections with outside non-members” is simply untrue. Mr. Li Hongzhi
stated in Zhuan Falun "The majority of people in our school will
practice cultivation in ordinary human society, so you should not
distance yourself from ordinary human society and you must practice
cultivation with a clear mind" (Li, 1999, p. 337). Practitioners of
Falun Gong are no different from other people in the society, having
families, jobs, hobbies, sorrows, and happiness. They are artists,
scientists, businessmen and women, educators, students, people of all
ages and races, and people with all nationalities and religious
backgrounds.
The so-called increasing distance between leader and the membership
with respect to power and control (Rosedale 2001) is also not applicable
to Falun Gong. It is the lure of power that usually guides the
leadership to increase the gulf between them and their members. Power
derives from dependence and is a property of the social relations, not
the attribute of the actor (Emerson 1962). In Falun Gong cultivation
practice, everything a practitioner needs to have to cultivate is
contained in the original book Zhuan Falun and the five sets of
exercises. The book is freely available on the internet, as are the
exercise videos. One can learn the exercises from any of the many
exercise sites in cities, universities, parks, and community centers
across the world, where volunteers are glad to teach anyone interested
in learning the exercises, free of charge. The practice of Falun Gong is
completely open, free, and voluntary. Mr. Li has always hoped that
“Dafa disciples can take the Fa as their teacher” (Li 1994a) and has
been emphasizing it on many occasions. “The master leads you through the
door, but cultivation is up to you”(Li 1999a). There is no physical or
financial dependence on the master whatsoever, because all of Falun
Gong’s teachings are in the freely available book, Zhuan Falun. In fact,
after 1994, when Mr. Li Hongzhi discontinued his lectures in China,
Falun Gong practitioners grew from fewer than 10,000 (those who attended
Mr. Li’s lectures in person) to about 70 million by 1999, with the vast
majority of them (more than 98%) learning the practice by themselves.
Without dependence of any kind, from where could the power be derived?
Without the existence of power, how could the power ever be asserted? As
to control, societal control is normally asserted through the
possession of resources (Emerson 1962). Similar to the power and
dependence relationship mentioned above, there are no unique resources
that are needed for cultivation that are not readily available to anyone
on earth, free of charge. For volunteers who helpteach the exercises,
"the first one (requirement) is that you cannot collect a fee"(Li
1999aa, p.141).
Next, is there a gradual distancing of the gap between member and
leader once a new member is recruited, as Rosedale (2001) was concerned
about? First of all, Mr. Li Hongzhi is never a “leader” of Falun Gong.
He is merely a “Teacher” or “Master” who passes on the teachings of the
practice to students. There is no “leader,” per se, in Falun Gong, much
akin to the situation in a university where a professor is not a
“leader” of the students, but merely an instructor or teacher to his
students in their pursuit of educational objectives. From the very
beginning, the relationship between Mr. Li and Falun Gong practitioners
is one of a teacher-student, or master-disciple relationship. (See also
answer to Langone’s question No. 5 below)
Rosedale’s assertion that Falun Gong uses an exercise vehicle
promoting health as an initial recruiting method that results in
eventual “ultimate requested suicidal conformity” (Rosedale 2001) is,
factually untrue and grossly mistaken. The very first sentence in Zhuan
Falun, in the first section of Lecture One, says clearly that Falun Gong
is a practice that is “Genuinely Guiding People toward High Levels” (Li
1999a, p1). Mr. Li clearly indicates at the very beginning that “Qigong
is about cultivation” and "I do not talk about healing illness here,
and neither will we heal illness" (Li 1999a, p.3). In many instances the
first thing that any Falun Gong volunteer at any practice site tells a
newcomer to do upon learning the exercises is that he/she needs to read
Zhuan Falun in order to find out what Falun Gong truly is. A common
Falun Gong flyer lists the main website (http://www.falundafa.org/)
which has all of Mr. Li’s published teachings from Zhuan Falun to the
newest articles, all of which are free to download.As to "leaders losing
their restraint in their zeal to exert unlimited power," that actually
is a vivid and accurate depiction of Jiang Zemin, the communist dictator
of the world’s most populous country. What Rosedale (2001) called
“committing the most despicable acts to further the leader’s power and
achieve their ends” portrays not Mr. Li Hongzhi but exactly Jiang Zemin,
as he consolidates his power and remains Chairman of the Central
Military Committee even after retiring from the party boss’s position
(Wang 2003).
It is consequential that Rosedale (2001) mentioned Nuremberg trials
and trials of Japanese war criminals after World War II, because,
similar to the crimes committed by Adolph Hitler, the genocide
perpetrated by Jiang Zemin against Falun Gong practitioners has been the
focus of numerous international lawsuits currently underway in the
U.S., Belgium, France, Spain, Finland, and Armenia.
While Rosedale cited the historical groups of the Yellow Turbans,
the Tai Ping, and the Boxers in Chinese history to illustrate his points
(see also the comparison table in the section of Rahn), we wonder if
Rosedale was aware of the fact that these groups have been the mottoes,
models, and de facto ancestors of Chinese Communist Party (CCP), and
their worship of and their kinship with these gangsters were the
mainstay in textbooks in China. As to the tyranny of a Stalinist leader,
in his trip to Beijing, Rosedale probably ignored the huge portrait of
Stalin that is still on display in Tiananmen Square where Falun Gong
members peacefully appealed daily.
Although Rosedale (2001) had the good intention of promoting a
“society [that] must support people’s rights to leave groups as well as
join them,” this is sadly not the case in China. (This, ironically, is
also true with respect to communist party members, for anyone who dares
to leave the Party is also severely punished.) Falun Gong practitioners
are simply deprived of their rights to remain in the group, and
aretortured and detained again after they decided to resume practice
following forced repentance. While talking about the luxury of the
“right of re-entry” with the Chinese officials, Rosedale probably did
not realize that this “right of re-entry” was denied to Falun Gong
practitioners once their practice was outlawed, and there is only a
one-way, forced exit and complete denunciation of their beliefs.
While Falun Gong practitioners in China simply appeal peacefully to
all levels of government, to clarify the facts about the persecution,
and to “inculcate," in Rosedale’s words, the belief of Truthfulness,
Benevolence, and Compassion, it is Jiang’s propaganda and deceit that
have inculcated and distilled, forcibly through the state-controlled
media, the hatred towards Falun Gong, its founder, and its
practitioners. Lately, the hatred has even been exported to the West, as
illustrated by the recent beating of a Falun Gong practitioner doing
nothing on the streets ofNew York (Clearwisdom 2003), and by slanderous
articles on Qiao Bao (The China Press), a Chinese government-controlled
newspaper in the U.S. and Canada.Aside from the “psychiatric terror” in
China against Falun Gong practitioners, Rosedale chose to accept at face
value the defensive denials and lies of an extremelytotalitarian
regime, damage is thus already done to the defenseless victims of Falun
Gong in China’s labor camps, mental hospitals, re-educational schools,
and prisons. Just like what happened in the former Soviet Union where
Soviet psychiatrists admitted their abuses only after the fall of the
communist iron curtain, we certainly hope that Rosedale would have
agreed with us that abuses in China must be stoppedwhile they are still
happening today.
Rosedale’s use of “suicide conformity” is unwarranted (Robbins 2003)
and irresponsible, for there is no indication whatsoever in Falun Gong
that committing suicide is ever encouraged. In fact, committing suicide
is strictly prohibited, just as with other forms of killing (Li 1997).
Robbins (2003) correctly asked whether or not,absent of severe Chinese
persecution, there would have been Falun Gong suicides. The answer is
no. One only needs to take note of the fact that there was no reported
suicide in China before the persecution started in 1999, and there are
no reported cases of suicides anywhere in the world outside of China in
all the eleven years of Falun Gong’s history.
Rosedale was right in saying that a government in a society “owes its
obligations towards all citizens of the polity, not only those who are
members of any single group, no matter how numerous or dominant” that
group is. But Rosedale failed to recognize that it is partly because of
the sheer number of Falun Gong practitioners exceeding the membership of
Communist party members that Jiang initiated his persecution of Falun
Gong. Rosedale (2001) applied, unfortunately, Lord Acton’s famous quote
of “power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely” to the wrong
party, for it is Jiang’s absolute power that made him determined to
crush Falun Gong, even with no support from the other members of the
Politburo. A nativeChinese speaker in that forum would have been
arrested for all the vivid depiction of the CCP and Jiang’s regime in
quoting Lord Acton in that conference in China. It is probably just that
the regime wanted so badly the “endorsement” of their persecution of
Falun Gong from an American anti-cult expert that they temporarily
tolerated Mr. Rosedale’s comments against absolute power and
dictatorship. Even worse, Rosedale (2001) seemed disappointed in not
seeing United Nations Human Rights reports citing "violations" of Falun
Gong members, "destructive practices," and the "harms suffered" by Falun
Gong members. This is hardly surprising, because there aren't any. No
third party is ever allowed to investigate these claims made by Jiang’s
regime that has all the motivation, willingness to lie, and state power
to persecute, deceive, and to fabricate the likes of the
“self-immolation,” to denounce, slander, incite hatred, and spread lies
about Falun Gong.
Rosedale also wondered why there is no public inquiry about why the
Chinese government is concerned with Falun Gong, and that in the “few
instances in which Chinese government conduct is discussed, political
repression were – check accuracy of quote the primary focus.” The fact
is that no public inquiry about Falun Gong is ever allowed in China.
Anyone who appeals to the Public Appeal Office, the official and legal
channel for the general public to voice their concerns, will be sent to
forced-labor camps directly, without any due process. There is good
reason for people to focus on political repression, because political
repression is indeed the main reason, if not the only reason, that Jiang
started his personal campaign of persecution. Because of this
politically motivated and personal prejudiced-driven persecution, at
least 879 Falun Gong practitioners have been killed as of February 5,
2004. Stopping the persecution should be an imperative matter rather
than a “knee-jerk” reaction.
Even as the severe persecution enters its fifth year, there has never
been any reported act of violence, not even violent resistance to
torture, among Falun Gong practitioners in China. A so-called
“apocalyptic frenzy” is unwarranted and not substantiated, exactly
because of the teachings in Falun Gong that proclaim peace,
non-violence, the highest regard for the value of life, compassion, and
tolerance.
As Robbins (2003) pointed out, there seems to be a prevailing belief
among “anti-cultists” that the cults, or beliefs of any kind for that
matter, are a “con game” or a criminal type of organization. This could
be due to a lack of understanding of cultivation and self-improvement
and oriental religion, history, and culture, an issue we shall address
further in later sections. That lack of understanding may have
contributed to what Robbins (2003) called ACM activists’ “heresy hunter”
style of persecuting beliefs. Despite his intention not to do so,
Rosedale may well have been on the verge of becoming one of those
“heresy hunters” persecuting beliefs, at least toward Falun Gong.
When mentioning religious and political representatives, Rosedale
seemed to forget that China is not a “representative” society or a
democracy. The so-called representatives were appointed by the regime to
speak in a tone completely in line with what the Chinese government
wanted. Under the pretext of “not lecturing representatives of another
culture on how they should conform to American values,” Rosedale
overlooked the fact that those are not just American values, but values
cherished, valued, and needed by Chinese citizens as well. They are
universal values, which is why they are codified in the United Nations
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a covenant that China has signed,
but not yet ratified.
Rosedale (2003) accused Robbins of relying on “inaccessible
material,” while at the same time putting his trust in so-called
“representatives” appointed by the Chinese government and in controlled
dialogue, as his “first-hand” material. His opinion might have been
different had he had the opportunity to visit a forced-labor camp in
China without prior notice.
It is likely that Mr. Rosedale was not aware that after the bloody
crackdown of June 4, 1989, everyone in China (ask any Chinese student
studying in the US who came after 1989), including university
professors, had to go through a process of denouncing the “June 4th
incident” as an “anti-revolutionary riot” and that the persecution was
justified. The persecution of Falun Gong also reminds us of the Great
Cultural Revolution when everyone except Chairman Mao was deprived of
the freedom of expression and belief. Even the former state leader Liu
Shaoqi was framed as a traitor and a spy. Freedom of expression and
belief is essential for a genuine dialogue on belief. Lacking it, a
“dialogue” with an entrenched regime, notorious for its propaganda, is
not a real dialogue.
Finally, it is shocking to hear Rosedale’s assertion that “civil
disobedience should not be unqualifiedly justified as a legitimate
response to persecution” (Rosedale 2003). Without revealing the details
of the qualification process and criteria of justifying legitimacy, one
has no way to know what else citizens could use other than disobedience
when facing a persecution by state power. Is Mr. Rosedale suggesting
that while there is no evidence linking Falun Gong with any destructive
behavior, blatant violations of the rights of Falun Gong practitioners
could actually be “justified”?
2. The Rahn articles (Rahn 2000 & 2002)
Rahn's (2002) paradigm approach in her article is a plausible one,
but there seems to be a "shift in paradigm" that went too far to
becoming a "paradigm gone astray," Rahn’s comparison between historical
groups cited indicates a gross misunderstanding of Chinese history. From
the Table 1 below, a comparison of the Yellow Turban, the White Lotus,
the Taiping, and the Boxers shows that they do possess many
similarities. However those similarities closely resemble another,
modern, entity in China: the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), rather than a
non-entity but a spiritual practice of Falun Gong. As it is seen in the
table, from the form of organization, use of force, the existence of a
charismatic leader, the guiding doctrine, and the ultimate objectives of
the entities, the Yellow Turban, the White Lotus, the Taiping, the
Boxers, and the CCP share astounding similarities to each other. In
fact, in Chinese textbooks from elementary schools through colleges,
thesevillainous groups have been glorified, worshiped, and valued as
predecessors of the CCP. In contrast to these groups, Falun Gong does
not have a formal organization, is always open to the public, denounces
the use of force and killing, has no “leader” of any kind, charismatic
or not; is not interested in politics or political power, and has only
the individual objective of self actualization. The fact that CCP called
itself the “scoundrel proletariat” when it first started and followed
these villainous groups in their brutal pursuit of power in China, and
continues to worship these villainous groups may be of interest to Rahn.
Table 1 Comparison of Rahn’s villainous groups and CCP
EntitiesForm of OrganizationUse of ForceCharismatic
LeaderDoctrineObjectiveYellow Turbans(黄巾军)From secret association to
open hostilityYellow Turbans ArmyZhang Jiao brothersFolk
mysticism(太平道)Overthrow Han DynastyWhite Lotus (白莲教)Secret
associationSecret forcesMao Ziyuan etc.(茅子元等)Mixed ReligionsVary among
branchesTaiping(太平天国)From secret association to open hostilityArmyHong
XiuquanChristian SectOverthrow Qing DynastyBoxers(义和拳)From secret
association to open hostilityQuasi-army(Martial arts)Zhao Shanduo,
etc(赵三多等)Branch of White Lotus(Anti-West)Against Christian missionaries
and overthrow Qing DynastyChinese Communist Party (CCP)(中国共产党)From
secret association to open hostilityGuerrilla warfare to PLA
(army)MaoCommunism Marxism-LeninismOverthrow Nationalist government
Rahn (2002) portrays Jiang’s regime as a legitimate governmental body
that acts toplace "primary importance on the good of the collective
over the right of the individual." Nothing else could be further from
the truth because this exists only in theory, and has never been the
case in reality. Since taking power under the communist doctrine of
“proletarian’s liberation” in 1949, the CCP has always existed for the
good of the privileged few, over the collective rights of the Chinese
people. They used the promise of “Beating down the landlords and giving
you their land” to attract poor peasants to join them, and then they
took the land back to the government after they consolidated their
power. A recent example is the June 4, 1989 massacre in Tiananmen
Square, when they used tanks to crush student demonstrations, just to
protect their own power and interests. After the tumbling collapse of
the Soviet Union and Eastern European countries, their "millennial
sense" intensified, as they kept losing confidence and support from the
grassroots. Jiang actually rose to power on the blood of the June 4th
student massacre.
Rahn's analogy of a cultural paradigm from Chinese history is
imprecise, because emperors in ancient Chinese history had legitimacy in
protecting the state (his state) from the perils of challengers, while
the Communist regime might have had some grounds to support their
legitimacy when the communism doctrine was used and liberation of the
proletariats were their goals. They certainly do not enjoy that
legitimacy today, when the communism doctrine is abandoned by all in
China and they have become like the very party that they threw out 50
years ago. This is especially the case for Jiang, as we have discussed
earlier.
Religious syncretism may be true for some religious and church groups
in America and in China. But it is not true for Falun Gong, for Falun
Gong’s basic tenets are based on ancient cultivation practices. In
China, cultivation has a history that is much longer than that of
Buddhism, Daoism, and Confuciousnism. For example, the word
“cultivation” is “cultivo” in Spanish, “coltura” in Italian, and
“cultura” in Latin. A person could reasonably conclude that probably
Spanish, English, and Italian have all inherited something from Latin,
but it would be incorrect to argue that Latin is a result of
"syncretism" of English, Spanish, and Italian. The ancient wisdom of
cultivation, including those ideas expressed in Falun Gong, far precedes
all the religions we observe today, based on unearthed archaeological
relics.
When Rahn argues that the Chinese government's (in fact, Jiang's)
campaign methods and justification in use against Falun Gong are
indigenous Chinese and part of her historical paradigm, a horrifying and
potentially harmful tendency emerges. This could be of value and be
used by the Chinese government (in fact, they have been using AFF in
justifying their persecution, as we discussed in the Rosedale section)
to justify their repression of Falun Gong, Buddhists, and Christians.
This also sets an unfortunate precedence in suggesting that Chinese
citizens today are not worthy of enjoying the same universal freedom of
speech and belief that is enjoyed by not only Westerners, but also
China's Asian neighbors.
Rahn's suggestion of Falun Gong as a contender to the Chinese state
is purely speculative. Nowhere in Zhuan Falun was a pursuit of political
power ever mentioned or inferred. In fact, Mr. Li wrote several
articles teaching practitioners not to be involved in politics, such as
“Cultivation Practice is Not Political” (Li 1996) and “No Politics” (Li
2002). So this proposition serves nothing but to support the brutal
persecution carried out by Jiang’s regime, giving it a “legitimate
reason” for using police power to crush a peaceful cultivation practice.
Falun Gong is now practiced in over 60 countries in the world including
the United States and Canada. None of the practitioners overseas, under
the same teachings, has ever become "contenders" of the state he/she
lives in. Why haven’t practitioners in Taiwan, Singapore, or Hong Kong
been a challenge to their respective governments, where most of the
people share the same cultural heritage as that of mainland Chinese and
therefore would more accurately fit Rahn’s paradigm? In Taiwan, the
number of practitioners increased from 3,000 in 1999 to over 300,000
today. That would be a force to be reckoned with if Falun Gong is indeed
a contender to their government. It is not so. In fact, Taiwan's vice
president went to a Falun Gong conference to give a congratulatory
speech to acknowledge the positive contributions Falun Gong has brought
to the well-being of the people of Taiwan
(http:///gb/2/12/31/n261383.htm).
Rahn gave a long list of actions, such as "recruiting from within
the ranks of CCP, organizing across provinces and countries, membership
that proselytizes, making criticism of CCP, claims by the leader to be a
god or emperor, spreading superstition and heterodoxy, and receiving
support from ‘forces overseas’" without a clear indication of to whom
these apply and a necessary substantiation. Therefore Rahn's stance on
these issues is not clearly known. Rahn’s notion of “recruits” of Falun
Gong suggests she might have assumed that Falun Gong is an organization
with concealed motives. Falun Gong does not have any objective other
than passing on to people the cultivation practice, and Falun Gong does
not have or need an organization. Doesn’t everyone, including
high-ranking CCP officials, have the right to choose a righteous way of
cultivation practice? In fact, no one would even think about asking your
personal information when you come to a Falun Gong practice site in a
park. Cultivation is a personal, individual matter, and it is based on
cultivating one’s heart. People cannot be forced into doing something
they don’t want to do. Also, Falun Gong practitioners never criticized
the CCP before the persecution startedin July 1999 and even today they
are still not against it. All they asked is that the persecution be
stopped. On July 23, 1999, three days after the ban of Falun Gong, Mr.
Li stated to the media, “We are not against the Chinese government.
Other people can be unfair to us. We should never treat others with the
same approach.” (Clearwisdom 1999)All of the teachings of Falun Gong are
contained in Zhuan Falun, a book compiled and based on nine lectures
Mr. Li gave between 1992 and 1995, when it was first published. All Rahn
has to do is to listen to all the audio and video recordings of Mr.
Li's lecturing in China and elsewhere to find that all the books in
Falun Gong are the original works of Mr. Li solely. When Mr. Li gave
lectures in China during the nine-day-lecture series, there was not a
notepad, or printed, typed, or written pages for him to read from. There
was only one piece of paper with his handwritten notes during the
approximately 2 hour lecture every day, for nine days. The so-called
"challenger" to Mr. Li’s role as the Master in Falun Gong is simply
baseless. When the Chinese government claimed, falsely, that the book
Zhuan Falun was not the work of Mr. Li, wouldn’t they be saying that
they are after the wrong person?
Citing the words of Barend ter Haar, Rahn seems to suggest that Falun
Gong's "exorcising demons" justified using violence by the Chinese
government. “Exorcising” is to seek to expel an evil spirit by religious
or solemn ceremonies, not an act of violence in the physical world. Was
Jesus Christ “committing violence” in Biblical times when he “drove out
the demons?” (Matthew 7:22, New International Version) Falun Gong
practitioner “send forth righteous thought” to “exorcise demons” to
clean out their mind and body. This cleansing is done in another
dimension, and, for all practical purposes, it can be considered
metaphorical. Through the mind’s power, rather than physical violence,
we eliminate bad things including karma, dirty thoughts, and wrong
mentalities in our body and in the dimensions connected to ours. When
genocide against Falun Gong practitioners is carried out by Jiang, and
Jiang lied and slandered to justify his persecution, when the weaker
party, the innocent victims, pleads for help to eliminate evil forces
behind Jiang’s atrocity, everyone on earth, including Ms. Rahn, has to
choose with one’s conscience. And when the persecution extends to the
soil of the United States,as evidenced by the recent beating of a Falun
Gong practitioner simply standing on a New York City street doing
nothing, it certainly is no longer a “war of words”. (Clearwisdom 2003)
In addition, American citizens are also being persecuted for their
practice of Falun Gong. One such person is Dr. Charles Li, who has been
imprisoned since January 2003 for attempting to tell the Chinese people
that their government is brutally persecuting its own citizens.
Rahn and Rosedale both cited the self-immolation in Tiananmen Square
in January of2001, but apparently they did not realize that it was
staged by the Chinese Government as we discussed earlier (Clear Wisdom
2001). Additional statements by Rahn such as “ (Practitioners) getting
information only from Falun Gong websites," “everything placed on the
website is pre-approved," and “additional teaching literature written by
Falun Gong practitioners," signified her speculation and a lack of
common sense, as if a website of Minghui.net can censor the web browsers
of hundreds of thousands of practitioners outside of China.
Practitioners outside of China have free access to any websites,
including those published by the Chinese government, as our belief in
practicing Falun Gong is a clear-minded decision based on rational and
careful analysis, not by blindly taking on something in haste. We do
browse websites expressing different or opposite views of Falun Gong and
always try to exchange opinions with them. That is why we are attending
AFF conferences and writing this paper. We as practitioners are doing
this with truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance. Rahn seems to forget
the fact that the Chinese Government is the most notorious regime in the
world that blocks, filters, and hacks the internet using its state
power. It is equally disturbing when Rahn talks about “China's
incremental openness and freer reporting.” When it is even illegal to
possess the book Zhuan Falun, to sit in a public park with one’s legs
crossed, or to stretch one’s two arms upward above one’s head in
Tiananmen Square, one really wonders where the sumptuousness of
“openness” and “freedom” exists in China.
A lack of serious scholarship is evident in Rahn’s works where
factual mistakes and crude errors abound. One such case is Rahn’s
reference of “The ‘Ending Period of Catastrophe’ is here…only those who
are Falun Gong practitioners will be saved, Notes 11, Rahn (2002).” In
the original text (Li 1995), nowhere can the words “catastrophe is here”
or “only practitioners will be saved” be found. Also, Rahn failedto
distinguish between “gongfu” (a martial art) and "qigong" (a cultivation
system); lacked knowledge of the term “qigong” itself, citing its being
“marvelous tales and paranormal found in Chinese stories”; and used
incorrect quote in the article (Rahn 2002, quote 34 ). All of which, of
cause, could not simply be blamed on a mis-translation into English.
Rahn’s incorrect quoting of Mr. Li’s works is also evidenced in another
of her writings (Rahn 2000), where she misquoted Mr. Li as saying that
“He warns that if you have contact with a non-practitioner you run the
risk of …”(Rahn 2000, p. 172). While in fact, Mr. Li was talking about
practitioners in other schools of qigong, not ordinary people or
non-practitioners (Li 1999a, p.250). And because of that, her accusation
of Falun Gong’s possibility “of isolating practitioners from family and
friends as well as non-practitioners in general” (Rahn 2000, p. 172)
is, simply, false.More blatantly and without giving any references, Rahn
basically fabricated the following: “Li also says that the Chinese
government is unfit to handle China’s problems and that only by the
Chinese people becoming Falun Gong practitioners can China resolve its
problems” (Rahn 2000, p. 178). This is not found in any of Mr. Li’s
published books, speeches, and audio and video recordings.
Overall, it is a noteworthy effort to try to apply a paradigm to the
current Chinese affair. But Rahn's fixation on a flawed paradigm fails
to provide any insight into the ongoing persecution by a notorious
regime led by a jealous leader. Her oversimplification and use of an
inappropriate paradigm may only mislead innocent readers and be used as a
weapon by the transgressors in this unfair battle.
3. The Langone article (Langone 2003)
In an effort to eliminate the prejudices and preconceived opinions
for a fair and unbiased discussion, Dr. Langone did a praiseworthy job
in clarifying and eliminating a lot of presumptions and preconceived
notions (Langone 2003). But the process is, unfortunately, still
incomplete. We’ll elaborate on this further.
Langone (2003) would not hold that China is so bad or so akin to a
“Gulag” to warrant a presumption of deception. Sadly enough and to our
dismay, it is indeed that bad. An entrenched communist regime
essentially holds all Chinese people as their hostages. Even the
“economic strides” quoted by Langone is in question. Thomas Rawski, a
Pittsburg professor and an expert on the Chinese economy, found that
between 1996 and 1999, accumulated GDP growth reported by the Chinese
government totaled 25.6%, while reported energy consumption during the
same period had declined by 12.2%. This is not possible, because rapid
increases in national output are always accompanied by even larger
increases in energy consumption (Rawski 2003). When Chinese premier Zhu
announced that China would achieve an annual growth rate of 7%, all but
one of the 30 provinces and direct administrative municipalities
reported growth rates of over 7%. Even the central planners in China do
not believe in their own numbers, but rely on those from the World Bank
or CIA. Books by Chang (2001) and He (1998) analyze the serious problems
with China's economy.
Langone used Hong Kong’s example to illustrate China’s relaxation of
control to the former British colony. However, the recent protest by
500,000 Hong Kong citizens was precisely sparked by China’s extending
its control and restriction of freedom to Hong Kong through Article 23
legislation. Human rights watchers have seen increases in China’s human
rights violations, towards not only Falun Gong practitioners, but also
other dissident groups, such as underground Christians, Tibetan
Buddhists, and democracy advocates (HRIC 2003).
Langone (2003) called for “examining the evidence critically and
laboriously.” That is a part of the effort of what Falun Gong
practitioners are doing in China. This includes their efforts in
breaking the information blockade by the government and broadcasting
video clips about the truth of the persecution, as well as sending those
files to the outside world.
Contrary to what Langone speculated, Falun Gong, from its very
beginning, was never intended to be a system for “improving and
maintaining good health” (Langone 2003), but a practice that is
“genuinely guiding people toward high levels” (Li 1999a, p.1), despite
the fact that practicing Falun Gong does have a beneficial effect on a
person’s health. It has never been the case that Falun Gong suddenly
changed its direction midway. It was the government, or more precisely,
the Jiang Zemin’s regime, that changed its stance from supporting Falun
Gong, to neither supporting nor being against it, to being totally
against this cultivation practice. The reasons for this about-face were
previously addressed.
Langone (2003) inferred properly that for a group as large as Falun
Gong, there are bound to be some incidences of mishaps that might be
“associated” with Falun Gong,but not necessarily “caused” by Falun Gong.
Because of that, the Chinesegovernment “would not have to lie” in order
to compile evidence of harm associated with practicing Falun Gong. But
the Chinese government nonetheless did lie to strengthen their
propaganda, such as in the case of Ms. Du Weiping (Clearwisdom 2002),
among the 1400 cases of death. This reveals from another perspective how
desperate the government was in incriminating Falun Gong and justifying
their persecution.
Next we would like to answer the five questions Langone asked Falun
Gong practitioners. Obviously we address them from our own perspectives,
and don’t speak for any other practitioners or for Falun Gong as a
whole. All practitioners havedifferent understandings regarding the
teachings in Falun Gong.
On healing, taking medicine, and seeing doctors, etc. (Langone
Questions 1&2)First of all, there is no teaching on healing, per se,
in the works of Falun Gong, for healing and keeping fit is not an
objective of Falun Gong cultivation practice. Mr. Li Hongzhi has
expounded on diseases, taking medicine, and cultivation. Never has he
ever said that a practitioner should not take medicine. In fact, he has
said the direct opposite. “Some people want to damage [Falun] Dafa, and
say things about not taking medicine like, ‘We aren’t allowed to take
medicine once we start practicing this.’ Actually, it’s not that I don’t
allow you to take medicine... Nor have I said that the person
absolutely can’t cultivate once he takes medicine” (Li 1997b). “We have
not said that you should not take medicine when you are not feeling
well. We have not” (Li 1997a). When being asked what to do in the
situation of food poisoning, Mr.Li said, “If you really have food
poisoning, you really have to go to a hospital”(Li 1994a).Just like one
who does not practice Falun Gong, a practitioner has his or her own
judgment about when to go see a doctor. As far as we know, all the
female practitioners have their babies delivered in the hospital and
some of them choose to receive anesthesia for natural birth and some of
them choose to have C-section delivery.
Since July 22, 1999, the state-controlled media in China first
claimed that 700 people died as a result of practicing Falun Gong, and
in the next week the number mysteriously became 1,400 and then this
number was increased to 1,700. For casesthat Falun Gong practitioners
were able to verify, none of them were caused by practicing Falun Gong.
Besides the fact that these cases have never been investigated by an
independent third party and that the Chinese government is notorious for
its handling of statistics (as shown during the recent SARS epidemic),
there are serious doubts about the Chinese government’s way of
interpreting the data. Let us use for now the number of two million
Falun Gong practitioners which was underreported by the state media in
China since the start of the persecution (the actual estimate by Public
Security Bureau was 70 million). Among two million practitioners, 1,700
of them supposedly died since July 22, 1999, which constitutes adeath
rate of less than 0.03%. Yet this is much lower than the nation’s
natural death rate of 0.65%. If, according to the Chinese government,
“Falun Gong does not allow people to take medicine or go to the
hospital,” these data suggest, to the government’s dismay, that Falun
Gong is quite effective at healing disease and keeping fit, for it
resulted in a death rate 20 times below the national average. If one
keeps in mind the fact that a large portion of the practitioners were
seniors and those with illnesses that could not be cured by hospitals,
this healing effect is actually even more significant.
It is true that most Falun Gong practitioners do not take medicine,
both of us included. This is because after practicing, we became healthy
and therefore do not need to take medicine. In fact, before the
persecution, the Chinese government lauded Falun Gong practitioners for
saving the country’s medical expenses. In December 1993, at the Beijing
Oriental Health Expo, Mr. Li received the highest honor of “The
Cutting-Edge Science Award," a “Special Expo Golden Award," and a title
of “The Most Popular Qi-gong Master” for the incredible healing power of
the practice during the Expo.In December 2002, Professor Hu Yu-Whuei of
National Taiwan University published a research report that showed that
72% of Falun Gong practitioners in Taiwan used their health insurance
card only once a year after practicing Falun Gong, a reduction in usage
of almost 50% (Hu 2002). The report pointed out that Falun Gong had a
remarkable effect on getting rid of many unhealthy habits, such as
smoking (-81%), alcohol abuse (-77%), gambling (-85%), and chewing betel
nuts (an addictive and unhealthy habit common in Asia, -85%). The data
suggested that practicing Falun Gong indeed has positive and remarkable
effects on improving the social environment (Hu 2002).
While Falun Gong is indifferent as to whether a practitioner takes
medicine or not, it does encourage and discourage many other
activities. For example, in cultivation one is encouraged to cultivate
diligently, cultivate in only one way at a time, and to be truthful,
benevolent, and tolerant all of the times. A practitioner is also
discouraged from killing, smoking, drinking alcohol, doing drugs, being
jealous, committing adultery, and showing off.
On “internal dissent within the Falun Gong organization” (Langone
Question3)Does Falun Gong have any organization or membership?
When Langone (2003) welcomed the reform movement within ISKCON and
believed that “dissent is an essential aspect of any organization that
permits members to think for themselves," and then extended the same
logic to Falun Gong, he had indeed made an assumption that Falun Gong
had an organization and/or a membership.
In reality, Falun Gong does not have an organization. Local
practitioners voluntarily gather to study, practice the exercises, and
share experience in cultivation together. Mr. Li Hongzhi is the only
teacher who passes down the teaching, and all practitioners are equal.
“At the same time, you cannot call a practitioner (a disciple) who
passes on Falun Dafa ‘Teacher’ or ‘Master,’ for there is only one master
in Dafa. All practitioners are disciples, no matter when they began the
practice” (Li 1999a, p.142). To “organize” such a large group of people
would require substantial financial resources, human capital, and
physical facilities, all of which Falun Gong simply does not have nor
intends to have. Whatever organizational structures Langone (2003) had
in mind, be it hierarchical, horizontal, vertical, or grass root, they
really don’t apply to Falun Gong practitioners.
Falun Gong is a cultivation practice. And, “cultivation depends on
one’s own efforts” (Li 1999a, P34), everyone must do it through
upgrading his/her own “xinxing," the mind or heart nature including
morality and tolerance, in order to succeed in cultivation. Having an
organization does not help with this self-cultivation in any manner.
This is rather similar to college students whose ultimate goal is to
obtain their degrees, a goal that is utterly up to them to achieve
individually, and not collectively. Neither does Falun Gong have any
membership. Whoever happens to download the book and instruction video
from the internet, free of charge, and starts practicing becomes a
practitioner, and no one else may even know about his practicing.
After the persecution started in July 1999, Falun Gong practitioners
worldwide have become “organized," or more accurately, coordinated, in a
way only to do one thing and one thing only—call for an end to the
persecution in China. Yet they are not organized to practice
cultivation, for it remains an individual matter. Facing Jiang’s
regime‘s organized crime using unlimited state power against Falun Gong,
a coordinated effort is needed to expose and end the persecution. The
Jiang regime’s persecution has utilized deceit, torture, brainwashing,
forced-feeding, and even murder, while Falun Gong practitioners have
responded with only truth clarification, great compassion, tremendous
tolerance, and have never resorted to violence of any kind. These ad-hoc
“organizations” are for purely practical reasons. For example, if the
Chinese consulate has distributed slanderous material to all of the
government officials, as they have done in the past, it is inconsiderate
for practitioners to call senators and representatives over and over to
ask them the same questions. On theother hand, had the persecution
never happened, we would not have to have “organized” or coordinated
ourselves. If the persecution stops tomorrow, we would not need to have
these make-shift “organizations” anymore. Then, Falun Gong practitioners
worldwide would be practicing their cultivation, just as Chinese
practitioners did before 1999, in parks or in living rooms, quietly and
peacefully.
Is there any “dissent” among Falun Gong practitioners?
In Mr. Li’s first lecture, he says: “The most fundamental
characteristic of this universe, Zhen-Shan-Ren, is the highest
manifestation of the Buddha Fa. It is the fundamental Buddha Fa” (Li
1999a, p15). Zhen-Shan-Ren, when translated into English, means
Truth-Compassion-Forbearance. These are the highest teachings of Falun
Gong and are always followed by true practitioners. There is no
“dissent” among Falun Gong practitioners regarding this teaching, since a
practitioner would not practice Falun Gong if he/she did not believe
that the goal of cultivation is to assimilate oneself to
Truth-Compassion-Forbearance.
Mr. Li also points out, “different levels have different Fa” (Li
1999a, p8). Therefore Falun Gong practitioners all have different
understandings regarding Mr. Li’s specific teachings. In the process of
cultivation, we always have lots of questions or even doubts. In fact,
Mr. Li has always encouraged practitioners to think independently and to
find our own answers through reading the books and from daily practice.
When asked specific questions, Mr. Li frequently refuses to answer the
specific issuesand instead speaks broadly. “If I explain all the
questions in your life, what will be left for you to cultivate? You must
practice cultivation and become enlightened on your own” (Li 1999a,
p383).
Having questions and/or doubts is an essential element in
self-cultivation and an important checkpoint that ensures practitioners
in the same school of cultivation follow the right path. A practitioner
will not be able to advance him/herself if he/she does not have any
questions. Practitioners are encouraged to share their different
understandings at conferences or at our many forums of exchange and
sharing, such as the Minghui.net (or ClearWisdom.net) as well as through
means of personal communications. Practitioners are also encouraged to
bring “outside” opinions into discussion. Langone had the concern that
Falun Gong practitioners may be “only likely to hear that all is well
within Falun Gong and all ‘bad’ events are due to negative ‘outside’
forces.” This is unnecessary, for the opposite is true. We completely
understand that as practitioners, we make mistakes and stumble on the
road of cultivation. That is how we make progress and advance. We pick
up from where we fell and learn from our mistakes. We actively look for
problems within ourselves and in practitioners around us, everyday. Our
non-practitioner friends and families are often the best source to get
direct and honest criticism of our attitude and behavior, and we take
note of that and correct ourselves. Furthermore, as we are all doing
this independently, the actions of one individual does not translate
necessarily to the entire group.
Mr. Li has repeatedly told us that we should never attribute our
problems to “outside forces," but rather that we need to seek inside
ourselves. As far as self-cultivation isconcerned, Mr. Li told us, “You
must cultivate your inner self and not pursue things externally” (Li
1999a, p28). “You should always look within whenever you run into
problems - it's guaranteed that many of the problems are your problems”
(Li 2001). Practitioners are encouraged to compassionately point out
others’ mistakes. “Since every one of you is cultivating Zhen-Shan-Ren,
you should be a good person in any circumstance. If you see his
shortcomings and see when he can't move upward, why can't you point them
out to him with a kind heart?” (Li 1999b)
On “what goes on inside practitioners’ mind during the exercises” (Langone Question 4)
Simply put it, there is “nothing” going on in practitioners’ mind
when doing the five sets of exercises. “If you can’t think of good
things, at least you should not think of bad things. It’s best if you
don't think about anything” (Li 1999a, p194). “Our practice is unlike
ordinary practice that makes one absent-minded, in trance, or
infatuated. Our practice requires you to cultivate yourselves with full
awareness…. We have said that your Main Consciousness must be conscious,
because this practice cultivates your own self. You should make
progress with a conscious mind…. How dowe practice meditation? We
require of everyone that no matter how deeply you meditate, you must
know that you are practicing here. You are absolutely forbidden to be in
a state of trance wherein you know nothing” (Li 1999a, p339).
For that reason, there is no explicit or implied affinity with
so-called “mind-emptying forms of meditation” Langone (2003) keenly
worried about. Because we are fully in control of our mind, we are not
letting anyone else attempt to control our thinking. Neither do we seek
any alternate levels of consciousness or mental states but we try and
become more “awake” and more sober-minded. Apparently Ching (2001) was
not aware of the true meaning of qigong exercises. Qigong does not seek
to “cease” human thinking; rather, it seeks to pause human’s thinking of
bad things, such as greed, lust, ideas harmful to others, and thoughts
that aim at personal gains at the expense of others. In doing so, the
mind (main consciousness) is freed from these bad, tiring ideas and is
fully rested during meditation. That is why people who practice
meditation feel rejuvenated afterward. Numerous scientific studies have
found that relaxation techniques associated with meditation have been
shown to be healthy (e.g., Davidson 2003).
In fact, not only will Falun Gong not cause any “adverse
psychological effects” (Langone 2003), but it can correct abnormal
physical and psychological states. Mr. Li has discussed in great length
some phenomena, mentalities, and behaviors in qigong practices that may
cause harm, such as “cultivation insanity” (Li 1999a, p214). He pointed
out how the perceptions were developed, the reasons and underlying
causes for these phenomena, and most importantly, how to avoid these
problems. In fact, some practitioners who were depressed, had social
problems, or thought about leaving ordinary society and their families
have fully recovered and have been living a very normal and healthy life
(Dolnyckyj 2001).
On “Mr. Li Hongzhi and his relationship with his students” (Langone
Questions 5)First of all, nowhere in Mr. Li Hongzhi's books, lectures,
speeches, or any published audio and video files has he ever claimed to
be a god, a Buddha, or a deity.Instead, he has instructed practitioners
to treat him like a man. “So you should just regard me as a human being
like you. What I’ve discussed isn’t alarmist talk—I’m only teaching the
Fa and telling you the principles of the cosmos. Whether to believe it
and whether you can cultivate are fully up to you, yourselves” (Li
1998a). He also discourages any kind of religious ritual. “We do not
practice the ritual of kowtowing or bowing. That kind of formality
serves little use, and it performs like a religion. We do not practice
it” (Li 1999a, p93).
Practitioners at different levels will have different understandings
and perceptions as they advance through their course of cultivation. Our
personal relationships with Mr. Li are as follows:
[Frank] Initially, when I first studied the book Zhuan Falun, I was,
of course, a reader of the book and Mr. Li was the author. Later, I
found this book to be an excellent book that explained many of the
questions that had puzzled me for a long time, such as: Where are we
from? Where are we in the universe? Why are we here? Is there a god or
gods? Are there beings beyond what we can see? What is the meaning of
life? Are Buddhism, Christianity, and Daoism real? One by one, the book
Zhuan Falun provided answers to my questions. I then decided to practice
the exercises, and therefore became a student of this cultivation
practice, and Mr. Li became my teacher. As I continued my study and
exercises and went through rote learning, comprehension, and “critical”
thinking, there had been much improvement in my physical body, mental
health, as well as my temperament, compassion, and level of tolerance.
With all these incredible improvements spiritually and physically,
consciously and clear-mindedly, I became a disciple in Falun Dafa
cultivation, and Mr. Li became naturally my master in guiding my
cultivation.
[Tracey] I started my practice of Falun Gong in 1997 after reading
Zhuan Falun. I never thought about my relationship with Mr. Li until the
persecution started in July 1999 when various personal attacks on Mr.
Li poured in from Jiang’s regime. Some of them, I knew by my heart that
they were not true from my then two year experience of practicing Falun
Gong. Some of them I was not sure about. I had to re-think why I chose
to practice Falun Gong and how I should regard Mr. Li. I remembered that
when I first started to practice, I did have many doubts in my mind
regarding specific teachings in the book although I very much agreed
with the principle of Truth-Compassion-Forbearance. Nevertheless I
decided to try cultivating myself according to the teachings. In the
process of cultivation, I found many of my questions answered while many
new questions emerged. However, it always turned out that it was me who
failed to realize the meaning of the teaching rather than that the
teaching having any problem. The improvement in my health and refinement
of my mind has constantly been happening as Mr. Li promised in the
book. I practice Falun Gong to my own benefit and not to that of Mr. Li.
I consider him a sage or an enlightened person. I feel very fortunate
and grateful to be his student. However, I never considered worshiping
him.
[Frank] In Zhuan Falun, Mr. Li systematically and thoroughly
explained all the requirements of cultivation in Falun Dafa, the steps
involved, the purification of the body, the extraordinary phenomena in
the community of cultivators, etc. Personally,I have experienced the
cleaning up of my body to an illness-free state, the celestial eye, and
precognition & retro-cognition, all happened under my clear,
conscious, andsentient state. I was fully aware of what was happening
and clearly knew where I was, what I was doing, what I was thinking, and
what I was experiencing. All of these happened according to the
specifications described in Zhuan Falun. I have to rationally conclude
that one would have to have gone through that whole process oneself in
order to possibly describe, explain, and elucidate all these phenomena
to the fullest extent. In other words, the person who has explained and
explicated all these must have completed the process of cultivation
successfully oneself. The ultimate goal of cultivation practices, when
achieved, is enlightenment. This person who has completed the
cultivation process is, then, an enlightened person in cultivation. An
enlightened person through cultivation is, in the ancient Indian
language of Sanskrit, a Buddha.So in my eyes, Mr. Li Hongzhi is a man;
he is the author of a great book that has awakened the sleeping souls of
millions of people; he is a teacher of some 100 million students
studying Falun Dafa worldwide; he is a master for millions of true
practitioners; and he is an enlightened person through Buddha Fa
cultivation.
[Tracey] When I heard that Falun Gong practitioners in China were
beaten and tortured with electric batons and cruel slavery tools, female
practitioners were stripped naked and thrown into male cells, babies
were tortured as a way to subdue the parents, healthy practitioners were
forcefully injected with neurotoxic drugs in mental hospitals, spouses
were forced to divorce practitioners, families were so financially
broken that they had to beg for food, and that the number of deaths as
result of the persecution increased everyday, I had to think even harder
what I would have done had I been in China. I could not understand why
Jiang’s regime would utilize the whole nation’s resources to persecute a
practice that is so beneficialto its citizens. What is wrong with
following the principles of Truth-Compassion-Forbearance to become a
better person? Then I realized that all the measures that it used were
only for one thing – to force the practitioners to give up their belief.
It is an ideological battle.
Calling it “Spring wind transforming into rain," the Jiang’s regime
has been using various brainwashing methods to “re-educate” and
“transform” Falun Gong practitioners. A very vicious brainwashing method
they are using is to take Mr. Li’s words out of context and distort his
true meanings. Other methods include continuous propaganda attacks,
sleep deprivation, and physical torture. If a practitioner has any
uncertainties about his/her cultivation or blind trust for Mr. Li,
he/she would not be able to endure even a fraction of this kind of
persecution.
Willing to accept it or not, the persecution has become a part of
our cultivation. Mr. Li has actually foreseen problems like this and
taught us, “Your mind must be right” (Li 1999a, p245). I realized that
as a practitioner of Truth-Compassion-Forbearance,I must truthfully and
compassionately explain what I know about Falun Gong to people who have
been deceived by the lies and help to end the persecution in China. In
this process I must tolerate any prejudice or misunderstandings people
may have and not use violence. Because of Mr. Li’s teaching, I have been
able to achieve this. I felt that his wisdom, or his Fashen (Li 1999a,
p200), has always beenwith me. I believe that his wisdom, or Fashen, is
also with practitioners in China all the time, otherwise they would not
be able to uphold their belief in this extremely difficult time. We have
to attribute this extraordinary strength to the teaching of an
enlightened being. But again, regardless of how we might personally
think of him, Mr. Li has said, on numerous occasions, to just treat him
like a man.
On other issues raised by Langone (2003)
As to the leader/leadership argument, there is no leadership versus
membership relationship among cultivation practices, including Falun
Gong. The mentality seems to derive from the cultic group presumption
that a group must exist for the benefit ofits leader. But what if there
is no “leader” but only a “teacher” in the group? What if the teacher
does not seek anything in return for his teaching? All
Langone’sassumption and subsequent analyses would fall apart under such
conditions. For Falun Gong, that is exactly the case, as we have
indicated earlier. The teaching is there, free, including the guiding
principles and the practice exercises. When one practices by relying on
the “Fa as the teacher," one really does not need anyone to “lead”
him/her.The leadership-membership disagreement argument doesn’t apply
since there is no leader-member relationship. In cultivation practices,
there does not need to be disagreements. Instead, goal congruency is
omnipresent because the teacher aims at bringing students to higher
levels, and students aim at achieving higher levels andimproving
themselves with the help of the teacher. One does not have to disagree,
because one simply does not need to disagree. If one disagrees, one can
simply stop practicing, join another way of cultivation, or give up
cultivation altogether. If one has to argue for a resolution of a
“disagreement," then there are indeed three ways to resolve it: stop
(practicing in this method), seek (an alternative cultivation method),
and stop (cultivations altogether). In the light of this, the crisis
resolution methods of coercion, emotional manipulation, and ostracism
all become irrelevant and meaningless. Besides, coercion, emotional
manipulation, and ostracism are all directly against “benevolence and
tolerance”—two of the three principles in Falun Gong, and are therefore
never going to be considered by practitioners.
We can certainly understand how conventional thinking of ACM
(anti-cult movement) personnel leads to their eagerness to link Falun
Gong to a cult, or a group that is un-scientific, or something outright
“paranormal.” There seems to be at least two reasons for that. One might
be that it is easy to classify something inconceivable to something
familiar, under the categorization theory. The second is that there
might be some who do not believe in the existence of beings beyond our
physical dimension. They would not believe it when it is derived from
their own cultural heritage, let alone believe it when it is from afar,
for the term cultivation and the process from cultivator to deity is
totally foreign to them. We’ll address these issues further in section
V.
V. Positivist Research on Qigong? A Caveat
Modern empiricist and positivist science stipulates that laws are in
the form of a generalized conditional, having empirical content,
possessing nomological universality, and being systematically integrated
(Hunt 1991). That is, all laws are in the “if-then” form of
relationship, empirically testable, the phenomena do not occur by
“chance," and form an integrated whole with existing theories. One
important aspect of the modern empiricism and positivism-guided research
tradition is the requirement of “inter-subjective verifiability.”
It is meaningful that Langone (2003) also mentioned “empirical
evidence” in his attempt to study Falun Gong. Those people who felt that
what is in Zhuan Falun is inconceivable are probably not aware of the
profoundness of qigong in general, and Falun Gong in particular. In this
section, we explain some of the scientific experiments carried out by
top scientists in China during the 1980s.
[Frank] A caveat on research on qigong and cultivation practices
needs to be given. In studying cultivation or qigong, because of the
supernormal nature of the subject area, traditional empirical or
positivist approaches may not always work. In answering Dr. Langone’s
question in section IV, I described some extraordinary phenomenon that I
have experienced, such as the third eye (Celestial eye). The ability of
seeing things that do not exist in our physical world is not a unique
phenomenon among Falun Gong practitioners. It is a relatively common
phenomenon among other qigong practitioners or even everyday people.
There have been many discussions in science about “the third eye” or the
pineal body located at the base of the brain. In 1999, Lucas et al.
published an article in Science where they found that the pineal body
can actually perceive light (Lucas 1999). It has the same photosensitive
proteins and a whole optic transduction system. This research shed
light on the mystery of the Celestial eye.With regard to my experience
with the third eye, how could I possibly prove this observation
“empirically” to someone and anyone? How could this be
inter-subjectively verified? Inter-subjective verifiability is something
essential to positivist research and prevailed in virtually all subject
areas of study in modern sciences, natural and social. In studying
something supernatural like qigong, one would encounter numerous
obstacles in using this approach. One is either led to not believe it
happened, or one would have to admit that there are facts beyond what
can be empirically tested in this dimension. As first a physical
scientist and then a social scientist by training, I would be untruthful
to deny what I actually experienced. Let me give another example
regarding the profoundness of qigong.
I was a graduate student in science in China in the mid-1980s, during
a time when the enthusiasm about qigong was at its peak. My advisor in
my alma mater (Peking University) for my graduate studies was also very
much involved in qigong research. Together with my advisor, I was in
contact with some researchers on supernormal human capabilities
associated with qigong exercises. One day in 1986, we went to see a
documentary in a conference room of a government office building in
Beijing. This internal documentary recorded, using high-speed
cinematography, an experiment involving a then famous qigong master in
Beijing, Baosheng Zhang. Under tight scrutiny, Zhang held a glass
medicine bottle with both of his hands. The bottle's cap was sealed with
wax and the seal had the signature of a researcher to ensure that the
seal was not broken. He shook the bottle slightly, and the numberedpills
inside the bottle fell to the tabletop in front of him. After all the
pills were out, the seal, the cap, and the bottle were all examined and
determined to be intact. Thewhole experiment was designed and executed
by researchers from the Chinese Academy of Science, Peking University,
Chinese Navy Headquarters, and the Defense Science and Technology
Commission of China, which oversees all military related research and
development and is responsible for the recent launch of China’s manned
space mission. Any and all possibilities of falsification and cheating
were carefully eliminated by methods such as double-blind experiments.
In one still picture from the high-speed cinematography, a medicine pill
was, astonishingly, photographed stuck in the middle of the wall of the
glass bottle, with half of the pill inside the bottle, and half
outside.Basically, this qigong master had some supernatural capabilities
that he was not fullyaware of as to where they were from, what they
were for, and why he had them while most other people did not.
Scientists involved in this study were deeply puzzled because they could
not explain what was going on, except that they knew something very
extraordinary happened, and it was documented. Some ten years after I
watched this experiment, in the book Zhuan Falun, I was able to get an
answer. Indeed, qigong is profound and supernatural, just as Mr. Li
indicated, “qigong was not invented by this human kind of ours…it was
inherited through a quite remote age and it was also a type of
prehistoric culture” (Li 1999a, p22).
Even though healing and curing diseases are not a goal in Falun
Gong cultivation, Falun Gong has, nonetheless, surprising healing
capabilities. I have been very healthy most of my life. The only ailment
I had in the past thirty some years was a hernia that started in my
high school years and worsened during my college years.
This problem, which recurred every couple of months and continued on
and off for decades, suddenly disappeared soon after I started
practicing Falun Gong. This phenomenon, which can’t be explained by
modern medicine, is actually nothing compared to the healing stories of
other practitioners, where there have been reports of healing of
chronic, serious, and even life-threatening illnesses.
Some of the modern empiricist research has actually touched upon the
profound nature of qigong and meditation. Using brain topography,
Wisconsin neuro-psychologist Richard Davidson published a study in
Psychosomatic Medicine which showed that meditation makes one’s attitude
better. In addition, researchers at University of California San
Francisco studied the heartbeats and blood pressure of the participants,
and found that sitting in meditation improved psychological states of
the participants (Davidson 2003).
[Tracey] My last visit to Beijing, my home city, was from September
to October in 1998. When I was there, a health survey was conducted
among Falun Gong practitioners in Beijing. Hundreds of practitioners at
the site, where I did my morning exercises, were given survey forms with
detailed questions about their health information. I did not
participate since I was just visiting. As it turned out, a total of
12,731 valid forms were collected. The data showed that 93.4% of those
12,731 practitioners suffered from chronic illness, with 48.9% having
had at least three diseases before they started their practice. Through
cultivation and exercises in Falun Gong, the overwhelming majority of
them (99.1%) reported improved health.. For those who suffered from
diseases of any kind, a healing rate of 58.5% was reported. The category
of people belonging to "extremely energetic and healthy" changed from
3.5% in the sample population before cultivation to 55.3% after
cultivation. A total of 96.5% of the practitioners experienced enhanced
energy and health level (Clearwisdom 1998). Another survey conducted in
Taiwan in 2002 gave similar results (Hu 2002).
I once saw the MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) reports of a patient
who had liver cancer with metastasis to his omentum. After three month
of practicing Falun Gong, the repeated MRI showed disappearance of the
omentum mass and shrinking of his two original liver tumors. Many senior
women who practiced Falun Gong experienced regaining of their menses –
the same effect as hormone replacement therapy and a sign of
rejuvenation. Many people who had thyroids removed came off of their
thyroxin and were tested as having normal thyroid functions. All these
can be researched and verified by independent medical examiners. The
human body has the most complicated system. If Falun Gong can make
things out of “nothing," as in the case of thyroidectomy patients, and
turn gene-alternated cancer cells into normal ones, would it be such a
surprise that it could do other things as well?
We believe that body, mind, and sprit are one entity. If even plants
have the ability to adapt to human wishes and to communicate with man,
respond to music, and possess curative powers (Tompkins and Bird 1996),
would one still be laughing at various extraordinary capabilities in
humans, the most intelligent beings on earth? Ifeven water has memories
(Benveniste 1988) and can distinguish between good and bad (Emoto 1999),
shouldn’t we humans, the most capable beings on earth, be moreconscious
about our choices?
Before the microscope was discovered, people thought that the first
person who suggested that diseases were caused by microbes was crazy.
Now everyone agrees that bacteria and viruses are associated with the
majority of diseases. Ancient Chinese doctors with extraordinary
capabilities have seen the operations of meridians or energy channels in
the other dimension of human body and developed Chinese Traditional
Medicine and acupuncture. Qigong practice works at transforming
materials in a more microscopic level than where bacteria and viruses
are in other dimensions. Although no one knows how it works at the
present time, it does not mean that science will not advance to be able
to measure it one day and we may actually see it making miracles. In
order to hasten this day, we need to firstadmit that these phenomena are
not just some crazy people’s illusions and that these facts are not
just fabricated stories. Only then, can we adopt a humble attitude and
truly devote some effort to investigate the underlying causes. This is
actually how true science should advance itself.
“What today’s scientific and technological community has discovered
is sufficient to change our present textbooks. Once human kind’s
conventional mentalities form a systematic way of working and thinking,
new ideas are very difficult to accept” (Li 1999a, p20). We encourage
psychologists, psychiatrists, and other mental health professionals to
put down their preconceived notions about Falun Gong, qigong, and
cultivation, and examine, carefully and completely, the potential
benefits of Falun Gong to your patients, customers, friends and
families, and even yourselves.
VI. Closing Remarks
Contrary to the slander of Jiang Zemin’s regime, Falun Gong is an
ancient cultivation practice based on the principles of
Truth-Compassion-Forbearance, and is characterized by its open,
non-discriminatory, peaceful, and non-violent nature. Practitioners from
over 60 countries worldwide have benefited from its ability to upgrade
one’s physical health and morality. We explored the “reasons” behind the
persecution, which is centered on Jiang’s prejudice, jealousy, and
narrow-mindedness. No matter what the reasons for the persecution, this
prolonged, brutal persecution, initiated and led by Jiang, is illegal,
immoral, against freedom of belief, and against universal human rights
It must be stopped immediately.
There seems to be some unfriendliness, antagonism, and even hostility
among cult critics towards qigong, meditation, and cultivation, as
evidenced in their adoption of terms such as “irrational and strange
ideas” (Rahn 2000), “paranormal” (Rahn 2002), “cease human thinking”
(Ching 2001), “mind-emptying forms of meditation” (Langone 2003), and
“the risk of adverse psychological effects” (Langone 2003). In Rahn's
(2002) vocabulary on her writing about Falun Gong, internet blockage and
censoring by the Chinese government had become "internet restrictions.”
There really need not be such hostility, if one is able to look at
meditation and cultivation from a new, objective perspective, as truth
and scientific discoveries are often derived from inconceivable,
“strange” ideas. Cultivation is profound, extraordinary, and oftentimes
regarded as “inconceivable.” But “if human beings are able to take a
fresh look at themselves as well as the universe and change their rigid
mentalities, humankind will make a leap forward” (Li 1999a, Lunyu).
It also appears to be the case that some cult critics might have
pre-judged Falun Gong as a cult. Subsequent study then becomes a
self-fulfilling prophecy where all succeeding “evidences” that support
this notion are accepted, while those refuting it are rejected. As we
have mentioned above, the teachings in Falun Gong contradict the core
definition of a cult. Moreover, in the eleven years since Falun Gong has
been practiced worldwide, in over 60 countries, there has never been a
single, credible case of Falun Gong causing any practitioner any harm
whatsoever. The onlyso-called examples of these concerns have come from
Chinese state-controlled media and a handful of anecdotal cases that
were one-sided and not peer-evaluated (e.g., Luo 2003). In actuality,
our own investigation of Luo’s two subjects revealed starkly different
responses. Some cult researchers claimed to have surveyed familymembers
of Falun Gong practitioners, but they had not directly surveyed the
Falun Gong practitioners themselves, or heard the practitioners' side of
the story.
A fair and unbiased evaluation of Falun Gong by non-practitioners
is not often seen in Western media and academics, with the notable
exception of Schechter (2000). The major obstacle in scholarly research
and evaluation of Falun Gong and its practitioners seems to be that the
beliefs of researchers and people who are concerned about this
cultivation practice are in opposition to the beliefs held by Falun Gong
practitioners. Therefore, based on their own beliefs, notions, and
previous experience with cults, and fearing that Falun Gong
practitioners might indeed do harm to themselves or others in the
society as the Chinese government has described, they would come to the
conclusion that Falun Gong is probably a “harmful cult," or has the
“tendency” to become one, regardless of a lack of concrete evidence. If
unfamiliar, “strange," and “inconceivable” ideas were all that were
needed to label something a cult, wouldn’t the story of God commanding
Abraham tokill his son and feeding thousands with five loaves of bread
and two fish make Christianity and Judaism cults as well?
Some cult critics believe that what is happening in China is a
standoff between a government that might have done something wrong or
too harsh and a group that has also done something wrong, and therefore a
“reconciliation," or “backing off” by both sides is needed (Rosedale,
personal communications, 2003). This is not the case. The so-called
“misconduct” of Falun Gong took place after the persecution started and
are a result of the persecution, not a cause. On one side of this
standoff is the police power of an authoritarian regime with unlimited
use of state resources, on the other side are defenseless civilians,
many of them women and retirees. On one side is a government that
controls all the propaganda machines of TV, newspapers, radios, and the
Internet; on the other side are civilians who could not openly defend
their views with a single word in newspapers or a single voice on
radioor TV, and who are lucky if their truth clarification video clips
could be inserted in TV signals for a few minutes. On one side is a
regime that is notoriously known for lying and has all the motivation to
lie in this case; On the other side is a group of people who hold
“truthfulness” as one of their basic principles. To “back off” from this
standoff they were forced into, Falun Gong practitioners would have no
choice but to give up their beliefs and practices, for they are already
against the wall. They have been deprived of their right to defend
themselves, in public or in court. They have been forced to work in
labor camps. They have been brainwashed in “re-education” centers using
sleep deprivation and torture. They cannot sit quietly in lotus position
anywhere in the 960,000 square kilometers of Chinese soil, when all
they need is an area no larger than a page of a newspaper. And, they
cannot even open a blue-covered book to read in the privacy of their
homes.For Falun Gong practitioners, to “back off” from this standoff
would mean to give up a cultivation practice that is peaceful, benign,
and beneficial to the practitioners and to the society. Asking
practitioners to “back off” is tantamount to asking them to give up
their beliefs, which is precisely what the goal of the repressing regime
in this persecution against Falun Gong is. It is a persecution against a
belief, simply and straightforwardly.
Looking back at history, we all know and understand the persecution
against Christianity and the hardships Christians endured hundreds of
years ago. It wasn't until hundreds of years after Jesus Christ was
crucified and his followers persecuted that people started to see the
value of what they believed. Now, a persecution against a righteous
belief is happening again, and on a much larger scale—the entire world.
How long does it have to take the people of today's world to see through
themisinformation, regardless of the intended malice, and know that
Falun Gong is goodand its practitioners should not be persecuted? As
history turns the pages, we believe that people in the future will
realize that Falun Gong practitioners have been following the principles
of Truth-Compassion-Forbearance. Now at this very moment of persecution
when history is being written, what is one’s conscientious choice and
where does one stand? That is a question all of us on earth will have to
answer.
References
1. Amnesty International Reports: China. (2003).
http://web.amnesty.org/report2003/chn-summary-eng
2. Benveniste, Jacques
(1988) et al, "Human Basophil Degranulation Triggered by Very Dilute
Antiserum Against IgE" Nature, Vol. 333, No. 6176, pp. 816-818, 30th
June, 1988 C Macmillan Magazines Ltd., 1989,
http://www.digibio.com/cgi-bin/node.pl?lg=us&nd=n4_1
3. Chang, Gordon
G. (2001). The coming collapse of China. New York: Random House.
4.
Ching, Julia (2001), “The Falun Gong: Religious and political
implications,” American Asian Review, Winter, 2001.
5. Clearwisdom (1998)
“Brief Summary of Health Survey 1”
http://clearwisdom.net/emh/download/infopack/healthsurvey1.html
6.
Clearwisdom (1999) Falun Gong – The Real Story, on-line video
http://clearwisdom.net/emh/download/download_media.html
7. Clearwisdom
(2001), Video "Deconstruction": “What's the Real Story about Tiananmen
Self-Immolations”
http://www.clearwisdom.net/emh/special_column/self-immolation.html
8.
Clearwisdom (2002), “How CCTV Used the Death of a Mentally Ill Woman to
Slander Falun Dafa - The Truth About Du Weiping's Death”
http://www.clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2002/9/17/26610.html
9.
Clearwisdom (2003), “U.S. Congress Holds Hearing on the Group Attack
Case in New York”
http://www.clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2003/7/27/38584.html
10. Dai, An
(2003), “An analysis of Jiang’s conspiracy plot in his interview with
CBS’ 60 Minutes program," Minghui Net, October 11, 2003.
11. Davidson,
Richard (2003),
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/302/5642/44
12. Dolnyckyj,
Zenon (2001) “Why I go to Tiananmen Square”
http://www.clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2001/11/20/15964.html “Three and
a half years ago I was defeated by society, and chose to give up on all
of you and my family, get rid of all my ID and head into the mountains
to learn martial arts. That's when I found Falun Dafa. It taught me
transcend my vices, shortcomings and remain in society, which would
naturally benefit society. I got ride of many habits including alcohol,
smoking, and doing drugs. My heart was filled with
Truth-Compassion-Forbearance. My mother started to practice Falun Gong
after she witnessed this huge change in me. Her arthritis was cured and
she lost weight from obesity.”
13. Du, Weiping case
http://www.minghui.org/mh/articles/2001/5/29/11585.html
14. Emerson,
Richard M. (1962), "Power-Dependence Relations," American Sociological
Review, 27, 31-41.
15. Emoto, Masaru (1999) Messages from Water in
Japanese and English
16. He, Qinglian. (1998). China's Pitfall. (This
book is a Chinese best seller. However, there are many English reviews
about the book on the Internet. – urls?)
17. HFUT 2002 (Heifei University
of Technology)
http://www.hfut.edu.cn/studentlife/www/c&i/new%20site/html/fxjjs.htm
18.
Hong Kong ICHRD (2002), or The Hong Kong Information Center for Human
Rights and Democracy is one of the most recognized organizations that
provide China's human rights information to international media, the UN
and governments. Noticeably is their in-depth report “China Is
Intensifying Its Persecution on Religions and Spiritual Movements Using
the ‘Law against Cults’ ” published in March 2000. Website:
http://www.89-64.com/
19. HRIC (2003), Human Rights in China Report,
(http://iso.hrichina.org/iso/index.adp)
20. Hu, Yu-Whuei (2002)
http://www.clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2003/1/1/30401.html
21. Human
Rights in China. (2004, March 23). Internet Dissident Sentenced to
2Years in Prison. http://iso.hrichina.org/iso/
22. Human Rights Watch.
(2002). Dangerous Meditation: China's Campaign Against Falungong.
http://www.hrw.org/reports/2002/china/
23. Hunt, Shelby D. (1991), Modern
Marketing Theory: Critical Issues in the Philosophy of Marketing
Science, South-Western Publishing Co., Cincinnati, OH.
24. Kahn, Joseph
(2003), “Clinton ‘History’ Doesn’t Repeat Itself in China,” New York
Times, September 24, 2003.
25. Langone, Michael D. (2003), “Reflections
on Falun Gong and the Chinese Government,” Cultic Studies Review, 2(2),
2003.
26. Li, Hongzhi (1994a), “Fa Explanations of Zhuan Falun” (Not
translated into English. p317 in Chinese version)
27. Li, Hongzhi
(1994b), “Explaining the Content of Falun Dafa,"
http://www.falundafa.org/eng/books.htm
28. Li, Hongzhi (1995) “Zhuan
Falun II," http://www.falundafa.org/eng/books.htm
29. Li, Hongzhi (1996),
“Dafa Will Forever be Pure Like Diamond," “Cultivation Practice is Not
Political”Essentials for Further Advancement
30. Li, Hongzhi (1997a),
“Lecture in Sydney," “Question: The third question is theissue of
killing as mentioned in the book. Killing a life is a very big sin. If a
person commits suicide, does it count as a sin or not? Master: It
counts as a sin.”
31. Li, Hongzhi (1997b), “Lecture in the United
States”
32. Li, Hongzhi (1998a), “Lecture at the First Conference in
North America," p. 42, March, 1998.
33. Li, Hongzhi (1998b), Falun Fofa
(A lecture in Switzerland Fa Conference),September 4-5, 1998.
34. Li,
Hongzhi (1999a), Zhuan Falun, Third translation edition (updated in
March, 2000, USA), The Universe Publishing Company, New York, NY.On
killing: “For practitioners, we have set the strict requirement that
they cannot kill lives. Whether it is of the Buddha School, the Tao
School, or the Qimen School, regardless of which school or practice it
is, as long as it is an upright cultivation practice, it will consider
this issue very absolute and prohibit killing—this is for sure.”
35. Li,
Hongzhi (1999b), Lecture at the Fa-Conference in Canada (Toronto, May
23, 1999) On religion: “As to religions, I have talked about this
subject many times. I don’t object to your practicing any religion. Yet
we are not a religion, so don’t treat us like a religion.” “I would also
like to take this opportunity to tell everyone that I don’t oppose any
religion, especially those orthodox religions, such as Catholicism,
Christianity and Judaism, etc. I have never opposed those religions,
including Buddhism.”
36. Li, Hongzhi (2001), “Fa-Lecture at the
Conference in Florida, U.S.A.”
37. Li, Hongzhi (2002), Essentials for
Further Advancement II
38. Lucas, R.J., et. al. (1999), Science,
284:505,1999
39. Luo, Samuel (2003), “What Falun Gong Really Teaches,"
Cultic Studies Review, 2(2), 2003.
40. Madsen, Richard (2000),
“Understanding Falun Gong," Current History, 99 (638), 243-247,
September 2000.
41. Morehead, John W. (2002), “Terror in the Name of
God," Cultic Studies Review, 1(3), 2002.
42. Nathan, Andrew.
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/023107/0231072856.htm.
43.
Ping, Hu. (2003, No. 4). The Falun Gong Phenomenon. China Rights Forum.
http://iso.hrichina.org/download_repository/2/a1_Falungong4.2003.pdf
44.
Rahn, Patsy (2000), “The Falun Gong: Beyond the Headlines,” Cultic
Studies Journal, Vol. 17, 2000, 168-186.
45. Rahn, Patsy (2002), “The
Chemistry of a Conflict: The Chinese Government and the Falun Gong,”
Terrorism and Political Violence, 14 (4), Winter 2002.
46. Rand report
(2002) http://www.rand.org/hot/press.02/dissent.html
47. Rawski, Thomas
(2003) http://www.pitt.edu/~tgrawski/
48. Robbins, Thomas (2003), “Cults,
State Control, and Falun Gong: A Comment on Herbert Rosedale’s
“Perspectives on Cults as Affected by the September 11th Tragedy”,"
Cultic Studies Review, 2(2), 2003.
49. Rosedale, Herbert L. (2001),
“Perspective on Cults as Affected by the September 11th Tragedy," A
paper presented in Beijing at the meeting of the China Anti-Cult
Association in December, 2001.
50. Rosedale, Herbert L. (2003),
“Ideology, Demonization, and Scholarship: The Need for Objectivity – A
Response to Robbins’ Comments on Rosedale, the Chinese Government, and
Falun Gong," Cultic Studies Review, 2(2), 2003.
51. Schechter, Danny
(2000), Falun Gong’s Challenge to China: Spiritual Practice or “Evil
Cult”? Akashic Books, New York, NY.
52. The Falun Gong Human Rights
Working Group. (2003, October). United Nations Reports on China's
Persecution of Falun Gong.
http://www.flghrwg.net/reports/UN2000-2003/UNReport2000-2003.pdf
53.
Tompkins, Peter and Christopher Bird (1996), The Secret Life of Plants,
Earthpulse Press, copy right 1996-1999.
54. United States Commission on
International Religious Freedom. (2000). 2000 Annual Report on
International Religious Freedom: China.
http://uscirf.gov/dos00Pages/irf_china.php3?scale=1024
55. Wang, Tao,
Levi Browde, Jason Loftus, Shiyu Zhou, and Stephen Gregory (2003),
http://www.faluninfo.net/specialreports/jiangspersonalcrusade/
56. WOIPFG
(2003) - The World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun
Gong:
57. Wong, John and William T. Liu (1999), “The Mystery of China's
Falun Gong: Its Rise and Its Sociological Implications," Singapore:
World Scientific Publishing Co. and Singapore University Press.
58.
Zhengjian (2003), “A Review of July 20: Persecution of Falun Gong
Resulted from Jiang Zeming’s Narrow-mindedness and Jealousy 4 Years
Ago,” http://zhengjian.org/zj/articles/2003/7/17/22573p.html
59. Zhang,
Liang (2001). June 4th: The True Story.
60. Zimbardo, Philip G. (2002),
“Mind Control: Psychological Reality or Mindless Rhetoric?” Cultic
Studies Review, 1(3), 2002.
Appendix:
A Personal Statement from Mr. Gang
Chen(Presented at AFF conference on October 18, 2003 in Hartford,
Connecticut)
Ladies and gentlemen:
My name is Gang Chen and I am from
Marlton NJ. I came to U.S. three months ago from Beijing. I used to be
the logistics manager at the Beijing branch company of Carlsberg int’l
Corp. I would like to share my personal experience as a Falun Gong
practitioner in China. In June 2000, I was sent to Beijing Tuanhe Forced
Labor Camp for 1-year detention without trial, simply because I
practice Falun Gong.In the labor camp, the police guards used a whole
set of brainwash methods to force me giving up Falun Gong. The methods
they used included threats, lying, propaganda, physical and mental
tortures.
On one day of September, 2000 I saw police beating and
shocking another Falun Gong practitioner named Tiantong Sun with about
10 electric batons simultaneously, because he refused to attend the
convention condemning Falun Gong. During my detention I was always
forced to read or watch the “brainwashing” materials. Some of them were
filled with personal attacks of Mr. Li, some of them were distortions of
Mr. Li’s teachings by taking his words out of context or by making up
lies, and some of them were fabricated accusations of Falun Gong
practitioners including many bloody scenes. For example, I had to watch
the photographs over and over, in which a mad man cut himself open and
exposed his bloody abdominal content.
One thing that I would like to
bring your attention to is that in the labor camp I have seen Chinese
state media articles claiming that a certain American anti-cult
organization supported the persecution of Falun Gong.When I was in labor
camp, I was only allowed to sleep for less than four hours a day.In
September 2000, they did not allow me to sleep for fifteen consecutive
days whiledoing intense labor work, or enduring physical torture during
the day. On one day of October, 2000, a policeman whose last name is Shi
shocked me continuously with anelectric baton to such a degree that
large areas of my arms, neck, head and back skin were burned.
On one day
in February 2001, because I refused to slander Falun Gong, the police
mobilized a dozen inmates who had given up their Falun Gong practice
under pressure to beat me up ruthlessly. Some of them were fellow
practitioners whom I knew before. They beat me until my body was full of
wounds and my face became deformed. They then taped my mouth and tied
me up with my arms behind, forced my body bend forward and tied my head
and my legs together. At that moment I was almost suffocated and I felt
the excruciating pain in my low back. I almost fainted and felt on the
edge of death. This painful torture exceeded my limit of endurance. I
collapsed and gave in against my will. I was unable to walk during the
next two weeks. Another practitioner named Lu Changjun who suffered the
same torture became paralyzed and was never able to stand up again. I
would never forget the horrible scene: I lay on my bed, in tears, like a
dead fish because of the injuries, hearing the horrible screams from
practitioners being tortured! I felt like being in hell! But the most
painful wound was in my heart!Since the persecution, I lost my job and
was taken away from my happy family. All I received was humiliation and
torture.
In addition to physical tortures, these police guards destroyed
my confidence and dignity. They forced me to become a person that I
despise, tarnished my soul and destroyed my hope. I fell into deep
depression.I felt as if a crowd of malicious monsters were making fun of
me while torturing me, saying: “you deserve living in Hell! You deserve
being humiliated and there will never be an end to it!”I once promised
to follow the principle of “truth, compassion and tolerance," but I
betrayed my consciousness under extreme pressure! I could not imagine
how to facemy family, friends, and people I know. I did not want them to
know that I was a coward. I was suddenly overwhelmed by anxiety,
depression and helplessness. I even thought about committing suicide.
I
have eye-witnessed many former Falun Gong practitioners, after having
given up Falun Gong under pressure, beating and cursing others in order
to show that they were truly “transformed”. Their behavior manifested
the true nature of this persecution - turning good and kind people into
violent and cruel perpetrators! I said to myself, “I cannot become one
of them. I want to be a good person! Regardless of what happened, I will
still follow the principles of “truth, compassion and tolerance”! This
thought to some extent smoothed my painful heart and carried me through
the darkest period of my life.In contrast, some people who were
brainwashed by these malicious lies have lost their identities totally
and became mentally ill due to tremendous pressure. I witnessed six such
cases including my friend Zhu Zhiliang, an engineer with a
Masterdegree. He became delirious and could not recognize his parents
and wife, and talked nonsense after he came out of the brainwashing
labor camp in Feb 2003.
After I was released in December, 2001, the
nightmare of my labor camp experience constantly haunted me. I felt
dizzy, exhausted, depressed, scared, guilty and helpless. I developed
palpitations and insomnia.Because I became so guilty that I gave into
the brainwashing, I was frustrated in my cultivation. I felt shame
whenever I thought about Falun Gong. I tried many other ways, such as
traveling, sports, reading, etc. to get away from the bad feelings, but I
failed. I had even developed hostility against the society. The reason
was that I had lost respect and hope for myself. Finally, it was Falun
Gong that helped me to regain my confidence and self worth. I take
comfort in realizing that I have comeback to a peaceful and righteous
way of life.After my release from the labor camp, I was very fortunate
to have received an offer for a position with a U.S. company, because of
my specialty in import-export related business. That is how I got an
H-1 visa and came to the U.S., where I can now talk freely about my
experiences. Other practitioners in China are not so fortunate.I
understand that AFF’s job is to help victims of brainwashing. It is
indeed a meaningful thing. I believe that all of you treasure lives and
protect human rights and justice. I hope that you could help those
people who are being mind-controlled by CCP.Please help us stop this
persecution.
Sincerely yours,
Chen, GangMarlton, NJ
Oct 15th
2003
_________________________________________________________^csr2003.02X/CSR
Vol. 02, No. 03, 2003AFFCSR article Electronic Request from AFF
(Ancient Wisdom for Modern Predicaments 全文完)
|
|