Falun Gong

Falun Gong

This week we briefly examine the religious movement known as

Falun Gong and the likelihood they will be banned in Hong

Kong. The following is from a leaflet the group distributed to

your editor on a recent trip there:

“Falun Gong (also known as Falun Dafa) is a mind-body

exercise introduced by Mr. Li Hongzhi in China in 1991. In less

than 10 years it has attracted over 100 million people in more

than 40 countries. Falun Gong brings people both physical and

spiritual health.

“Unfortunately, the president of China, Jiang Zemin, is terrified

by the popularity of Falun Gong. In July 1999 he banned Falun

Gong and ordered widespread persecution of its practitioners.

Under Jiang”s persecution Falun Gong practitioners in China

suffer a lot.

–Over 50,000 people have been sent to prisons or labor camps,

or detained unlawfully.

–Over 1,000 people have been abused in mental hospitals.

–Numerous have become permanently disabled after being

tortured in police custody.

–More than 170 practitioners have been tortured to death.

“The Chinese police treat Falun Gong practitioners in inhuman

ways. They brutally beat them, give them electrical shocks,

force-feed them with salt and hot pepper water while they are on

hunger strike, inject them with drugs to let them die slowly and

painfully, make them stand almost naked in snowy weather…and

the male police sexually assault the female practitioners. Facing

such extreme mistreatments, the peaceful Falun Gong

practitioners in China have never fought back.

“On January 23 (2001) there came the news that five people tried

to commit suicide at Tiananmen (Square) by setting themselves

on fire; one of them died on the scene. China”s news claimed

that the five (later the number jumped to seven) were Falun Gong

practitioners and blamed Falun Gong and its founder for the

tragedy.

“The principles of Falun Gong clearly state that killing or suicide

is a sin. We are very sorry for the self-immolation incident. But

we cannot believe that the five people trying to take their own

lives are Falun Gong practitioners. According to the Washington

Post (2/4/2001) the woman who died in the immolation often

beat her elderly mother and daughter and no one ever saw her

practice Falun Gong exercises.”

For its part, China claims Falun Gong has killed some 1,600 of

its followers by driving them insane or telling them to reject

medical help, while U.N. human rights chief, Mary Robinson,

has urged China to abolish the labor camps where Falun Gong

members, as well as other religious “dissidents,” are sent.

There is no doubt that most folks in America or elsewhere would

say that Falun Gong is a bit “quirky” in its blend of exercise,

meditation and mystical Eastern leaning philosophy. But while it

has no political goals, China”s government is deathly afraid that

the movement could become a force for change some day.

The New York Times” Elisabeth Rosenthal earlier this year

quoted a political science professor on the subject of the

government vs. Falun Gong.

“I see an image of a giant fighting a ghost – you know it is there

and haunting you, but you don”t exactly know where to attack, or

when it will attack you.”

So now the government in Hong Kong, kowtowing to Beijing”s

wishes, is threatening to impose its own ban on Falun Gong,

which would be an incredible breach of the tolerance Hong Kong

has long been known for. The region”s chief executive (who

reports directly to the mainland) announced last week:

“Religious freedom is guaranteed here. It is not the issue. The

issue is a social issue…It is the issue of a cult which has done

damage on the mainland of China, to the population. They may

do damage here in Hong Kong in the future.”

Hong Kong”s Secretary for Security Regina Ip has labeled Falun

Gong an “evil cult,” and since evil cults are a global threat, she is

“keeping a close watch…because we need to maintain public

order and safety.”

And it should be disconcerting to all freedom loving folks in

Hong Kong that Ip has likened the local media to Napoleon, the

pig representing Stalin in Orwell”s “Animal Farm.” [“All

animals are equal; but some animals are more equal than

others.”]

“On the one hand,” she says, “the media pledge to safeguard

human rights and freedoms. On the other hand, they have also

monopolized the judicial processes of trial and prosecution.

They even hand down their own verdicts.”

The fear, of course, is that by banning Falun Gong you set the

stage for persecution of all religions. Officially sanctioned

Protestant and Catholic churches in China contain about 15-20

million members, but underground movements account for five

times that number. The government doesn”t mind the established

churches as much as they do leadership training. Some church

leaders could probably mobilize one million people in one

place…thus the cause for alarm.

Said one evangelist, “The only real hope is to let Christians

change the country – not by revolution, but by the changing of

hearts and institutions in society. Once we have Christian

lawyers, teachers, postal workers, this will lead to the

Christianization (sic) of Chinese culture, which will lead to

democracy. We have to be as good at infiltration as the

Communists were in the 1930s.”

That would appear to be Falun Gong”s only hope for gaining its

own freedom as well.

Sources:

Elisabeth Rosenthal / New York Times

Dirk Beveridge / AP

Ellen Bork / Weekly Standard

Bay Fang / U.S. News

Brian Trumbore