December 8, 2003
Washington - The flicker of candlelight was seen on the main Quad at American
University last Friday as 30 Falun Gong practitioners held a candlelight vigil
to 'rescue' practitioners who are being persecuted in China.
Members from AU's Falun Dafa Club and the AU community showed up to give their
support and bring awareness to the campus about practitioners such as Dr.
Charles Lee, who has been detained in China for over 10 months.
"We're urgently trying to raise awareness of the persecutions in China and
seeking more support from the public and the American community," said
Larry Liu, a first-year professor of statistics at AU and member of the club.
Liu was convinced he would practice Falun Gong seven years ago, after a letter
from his mother in which she wrote that she had benefited from the practice,
which improved her health, physically and mentally. His mother, 63, a retired
engineer in China, had been detained several times since practicing [Falun Gong]
in 1996, according to Liu.
Sophomore Jinwei Wang, 22, president and founder of the club, said there are
more than 30 individuals involved in the club, which has held several different
activities including panels, photo exhibits and a painting exhibit that featured
a practitioner detained in China over the last two years.
Wang began learning about the practice when she was in middle school in China.
Her mother had been asking for ways to improve her health. Wang asked classmates
and her teacher about different Qigong practices to help her mother. Her teacher
began teaching herself, her classmates and her mother about the practice.
Falun Gong is based on the ancient tradition of Qigong, pronounced Chi-gong,
which uses meditation similar to tai chi and principles of
truthfulness-compassion-tolerance to refine the body and mind.
It has been passed down from generations of teachers to students. However, in
1992 Li Hongzhi brought it to the public and since then has been noted as its
founder, according to Levi Browde, a spokesman for the Falun Dafa Information
Center in New York. The center is a volunteer group of individuals that acts as
a watchdog for illegal activities of the Chinese government in its persecution
of practitioners.
There are two components to the practice, according to Browde. One is a set of
five exercises [...] and a meditation session. The second component is comprised
of the principles of truthfulness-compassion-tolerance.
Browde said that because the group focused on Chinese tradition, this upset the
communist government.
He also said the government makes war on a different group every five to 10
years and the Falun Gong group is the latest. The most recent case was the
student protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989.
The government banned the practice in 1999 after 10,000 practitioners gathered
outside the Chinese leadership after hearing reports of beatings in other
cities.
Browde claims the government has been using propaganda on its people and that
former communist president Jiang Zemin feared being overthrown despite his
council's pro-Falun Gong attitude.
"There's a saying in Chinese that instead of shooting at a target, you
shoot at a blank target and draw the target in ... that is what Jiang did,"
Browde said. "Their whole rhetoric against the Falun Gong [that claims
it's] all propaganda is wrong because ... we are peaceful and not a political
group."
The center reported that 100 million people who practiced in 1998 lost the right
to practice, while more than 500 have been sentenced to prison terms of up to 18
years. More than 1,000 were forced into mental hospitals, over 100,000 have been
illegally sent to labor camps and at least 821 deaths by police torture have
been confirmed.
Charles Lee, one of the individuals AU's Falun Gong held the vigil for, was
sentenced for three years for [planning to intercept] the state-owned
broadcasting system by playing a Falun Gong message.
[...]
However, Lee's fiancee Yeong-Ching Foo said the situation in China is urgent
and people must be aware of the torture by the government.
"The government is now brainwashing Lee after torturing him," Foo
said.
Foo has not spoken to Lee but receives information through the U.S. Council
in China about his status. She was attending a psychological conference in New
York over the weekend to learn more about brainwashing on the individual.
"I am very proud he risked his own life to help others," Foo said.
"Thanksgiving and Christmas are coming up and I hope he will be able to
return soon. This is the time families stay together."
[...]
Many hope to return to China one day, like Wang, who decided to pursue a career
in communications so that when she goes back, she could help free the media.
However, she is afraid she will be arrested and beaten if she returns to the
country. She believes she has been blacklisted by the government. The government
has taken pictures and gotten names of practitioners in D.C. during their weekly
peaceful meditations in front of the Embassy of China, Wang said.
"International pressure is important, and the Chinese government realizes
the power of the pressure," Wang said. "They make human rights
dialogue under the table instead of to the public, which cannot resolve the
problem."