Falun Gong is practiced in Central Park by (from left) Damon Noto, Eliana Chinn, and Xiuhua Liu. (Newsday Photo/Julia Gaines) |
June 14, 2003
Irina Lehat, a former mechanical engineer in her 60s, considers herself
scientific-minded, but almost every morning she gathers with other Falun Gong
adherents on the boardwalk in Brighton Beach to perform the Chinese meditation
exercises, which resemble tai-chi.
Lehat, who was raised Jewish and immigrated to Brooklyn 20 years ago from
Odessa, Russia, is among the new wave of non-Chinese Falun Gong practitioners in
New York. Falun Gong, or Falun Dafa, is a spiritual movement that combines study
and exercise, and was introduced in China in 1992.
Although banned by the Beijing government in 1999 [...] Falun Gong has gained
some international popularity. Highest estimates are about 100 million
practitioners in 60 countries, according to Gail Rachlin, a spokeswoman for the
Falun Dafa Information Center in Manhattan.
One aspect that attracts non-Chinese adherents is Falun Gong's blending of
doctrine and practice, said Andrew Meyer, a professor of Asian religions at
Brooklyn College. "It is a practice that integrates the physiological, the moral
and the spiritual," he said. "All of these goals have to be pursued
simultaneously in order for any of them to be reached." Physical and emotional
benefits are the initial attraction of Falun Gong, with spirituality a secondary
concern, said Scott Lowe, professor of philosophy and religion at the University
of North Dakota who focuses on Chinese religious history. "But the very fact
that people continue doing Falun Gong with such dedication pretty much proves to
me that they're receiving some sort of spiritual benefit."
The three major principles of Falun Gong -- [...] are truthfulness, compassion
and tolerance. Although those principles are fundamental, they are hard to carry
out, said many practitioners who were interviewed.
"What you are doing is to get back to your original self," said Clearine Hunter,
who is in her 60s and was raised a Baptist. "We have been taught to accumulate,
thinking that the more we accumulate, the happier you are going to be."
Hunter, an organizer of a Falun Gong group that meets every morning in Prospect
Park, also joins a reading group twice a week in Crown Heights, where she lives.
She said the study is more important than the exercise.
"When you hear of an exercise, your mind automatically goes to losing weight,"
Hunter said. "But when I started, I learned that it was cultivating mind, body
and spirit, which is something much higher than anything. It's about teaching
you to be a good person." Initially, Lehat was taken aback by Falun Gong's
teaching to give up materialistic thoughts -- which was against her belief in
capitalism -- but, she said, "when I started to read deeper, I couldn't put it
down."
Lehat learned about Falun Gong four years ago from a Chinese acupuncturist,
Chunyan Teng of Flushing, who had been promoting the practice in her Manhattan
clinic. Chunyan was detained in 2000 during a conference in southern China on
the banned practice of Falun Gong and sentenced to three years in prison. She
was released two months ago and is now back in New York.
Falun Gong adherents here and around the world organize demonstrations and other
activities to pressure China to stop suppressing the practice. One campaign
focuses on freeing Charles Li, a Chinese-American Falun Gong adherent from
California who is serving three years in prison for sabotaging television
broadcasts.
Michele Goncalves, 31, an auditor from Monmouth County, N.J., is a regular at
pro-Falun Gong rallies in Manhattan. She was introduced to Falun Gong by a
Chinese colleague on a business trip three years ago. "I was sitting next to
her, so miserable with my gallon of coffee in the morning, and she was bubbly
and ready to go. So I said, 'Hey, what's the harm of trying a couple of
exercises?'"
She noticed benefits within two weeks, Goncalves said. "All the stress just
seemed to pour out of my body... Now, I get up and I am ready to go."
Equally important, she said she saw spiritual changes. "Whenever I am in a
conflict, or when I am having trouble with someone, before I used to be pretty
closed-minded and always blame the other person," said Goncalves, who was raised
a Christian. Through Falun Gong, Adam Montanaro, 33, a computer programmer who
lives on the Upper West Side, said he found "a grounded feeling about life."
Raised an Episcopalian, Montanaro practices Falun Gong in Central Park. "Every
day, you are looking at your shortcomings and problems and the things that you
need to improve."
The practice made dramatic change possible in his life, said Sterling Campbell,
a professional musician who has played with prominent bands such as the B-52's
and Soul Asylum, as well as touring with David Bowie last year. "I smoked pot
and two packs of cigarettes a day," he said. "I was extremely depressed and
could not function socially without downing a bottle."
During a walk five years ago in Manhattan's Riverside Park, he said he found
Falun Gong. "After 21/2 to three weeks, those addictions just went away," he
said. He said he was drawn to the practice partly because it is free and has no
temple or obligation. "It's about redefining yourself constantly and doing
better," said Campbell, who attended Catholic schools but said he did not
embrace the religion. Through Falun Gong, "I just became a more considerate,
selfless person."
Software developer Scott Chinn, 33, is a self-described "hardcore-science guy"
who thought science could explain everything. "I don't like people just to tell
me things, and I just believe in them," he said. "I read things, and I try to
apply them."
Introduced to Falun Gong by a longtime Chinese friend almost three years ago,
Chinn, who lives on the Upper West Side and practices with the Central Park
group, said, "I think it's more of clarity of mind, knowing what's right and
wrong."
Agnostic until college, when he declared himself an atheist, Chinn said Western
spirituality never clicked with him. "I read the Bible and didn't understand
anything. But after I studied Falun Gong, I could understand Christianity
better. It is fundamental, and it gets to the core issues."
"You change internally. It's hard to explain, but it's little by little," said
Chinn's wife, Eliana, who is in her 30s and was raised a Catholic. "You work out
your own salvation. You change in your daily life, not just on Sunday morning
when you go to Mass."
Larry Tung is a freelance writer. This story was supplemented with Associated Press reports.
http://www.newsday.com/features/religion/ny-faith0614,0,4417346.story
Category: Falun Dafa in the Media