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A Chinese Battle on
U.S. Soil
Persecuted Group's Campaign Catches Politicians in the Middle
San Jose Mercury News/December 23, 2001 By Sarah Lubman
The battle between the
Chinese government and Falun Gong, the banned spiritual group, has spilled
onto American soil, catching sympathetic but uninformed bystanders in the
crossfire.
As Falun Gong's overseas
followers have stepped up appeals for public support, often invoking the
movement's principles of tolerance and compassion, hundreds of American
politicians have responded with letters and proclamations, including the
mayor of San Jose and members of California's congressional delegation. It
is a chorus that the Chinese government has tried to mute. But in supporting
Falun Gong as a victim of Chinese communist repression, U.S. politicians
often have unwittingly endorsed a philosophy that is intolerant in many
respects and in conflict with the values of a Western democracy.
One teaching, for
example, explains the existence of mixed-race people -- who number 1.6
million in California -- as instruments of an alien plot to destroy
humanity's link to heaven.
Some critics say Falun
Gong has deliberately obscured its teachings in the West so it can
manipulate domestic and foreign policy.
''They know how to play
politics with American elected officials,'' said Ming Xia, a
political-science professor at the City University of New York onStaten
Island.
He calls Falun Gong
''Janus-faced,'' saying it presents itself in China as a moral-revival
movement, but in the West as a movement for freedom of religion and thought.
Falun Gong adherents in
the United States deny this, saying human rights seem emphasized in the West
only because the persecuted group cannot raise them in China.
"Chinese practitioners
also try to present these issues but have no way to do it," said Sherry
Zhang, a research chemist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and a
Falun Gong activist. ''Here, we have freedom of speech.''
Beijing sees it
differently.
''I think Falun Gong has
been used as a tool by congressmen to extend pressure to the Chinese
government, although some know it's a cult,'' said Wang Yunxiang,
consul-general in San Francisco.
According to one veteran
China-watcher, Orville Schell, the West's blind embrace of Falun Gong fits
into a well-established pattern of viewing communist China in
black-and-white terms, missing the complexities and nuances.
''This has been the
tradition,'' said Schell, dean of the journalism school at the University of
California-Berkeley. ''Anyone the Chinese government opposes gets lionized
as righteous.''
Propaganda war China
tries to stop outreach by 'cult'
Last year, the Chinese
propaganda war came to Saratoga. As in hundreds of other cities, followers
requested a proclamation honoring their practice, formally known as Falun
Dafa -- ''Great Way of the Law Wheel.''
The mayor, Stan Bogosian,
did not know much about Falun Gong beyond that China had persecuted its
adherents since banning the group in 1999. But his proclamation did more
than assert followers' rights to their beliefs. It encouraged Saratogans to
become aware of ''this ancient Chinese practice'' and its ''higher goals of
ultimately bringing people toward wisdom.''
Bogosian was not prepared
for the reaction. The Chinese consul-general in San Francisco, Wang, sent a
letter calling the group a cult and asking Bogosian to retract the
proclamation. He refused.
''My basic understanding
was that the mayors who issue proclamations for Falun Gong know little about
it,'' Wang said. ''I thought it was my responsibility to let him know
more.''
Bogosian says he does not
know much about Falun Gong philosophy and does not need to. ''On the
surface, what I see out there looks reasonable,'' he said. ''The issue for
me is what the Chinese government is doing to its citizens. That's my issue
-- and their attempt to come in and interfere with our process. I'm not
getting into the substance.''
Bogosian's proclamation
joined hundreds on a Falun Gong Web site, most from the United States and
Canada. More than 70 have been issued in California, testimony to the
state's large number of followers.
Local practitioners say
the Bay Area has 200 to 300 followers who try to raise awareness about Falun
Gong's persecution. They say the number of practitioners is higher but
cannot provide a figure.
Mixture of
beliefs--Traditions blended with new concepts
Falun Gong draws on
Taoist, Buddhist and other Eastern concepts, including Chinese folk beliefs
that resonate with its largely Chinese followers. It also reflects elements
of popular Chinese culture, such as an interest in UFOs and aliens.
The movement has three
main principles: ''Truthfulness'' (Zhen), ''Compassion'' (Shan) and a
concept that gets translated as either ''Tolerance'' or, more accurately,
''Forbearance'' (Ren). According to Li Hongzhi, the group's founder, ren is
the ability to tolerate or endure suffering imposed by others. Li has said
his teachings are best understood in Chinese.
Some scholars who study
Falun Gong say Westerners are misled by its third principle. '' 'Tolerance'
suggests respecting other people's viewpoints,'' said David Ownby, a
Chinese-history professor at the University of Montreal. ''That's not what
it means.''
Ownby says Li ''shares no
common background with our Enlightenment heritage and its emphasis on the
individual, on acceptance of difference.''
There is a good reason
most outsiders and even some Western practitioners do not know about Li
Hongzhi's teachings on race or about homosexuality, which he views as
perverse: Many are available primarily in Chinese, and are not featured in
Falun Gong's promotional materials.
Falun Gong's bible, Li's
book ''Zhuan Falun,'' is posted in English on the Internet, the same vehicle
for its well-coordinated human rights appeals. The book can be bought from
Li's publishing firm or downloaded for free. The English version does not
mention race. It briefly criticizes homosexuality, a stance not uncommon in
socially conservative China.
Li gets more extreme when
he expounds on his teachings to followers in his numerous talks, some of
which have not been translated, and in the second volume of his book, which
is no longer available in English.
Some practitioners in the
United States acknowledge that Li's philosophy rejects homosexuality, but
say Falun Gong followers are not trying to prevent it.
''We're not going out on
the street and saying, 'Stop doing that,' '' said Shizhong Chen, a biology
researcher at the Scripps Research Institute in San Diego. ''That would be
intolerant.''
Chen and other followers
say Li's comments on race echo Jesus' teachings and have been misunderstood.
They say Li's teachings about aliens cannot be disproved.
Li, a former grain clerk,
blends philosophy with meditation, moral precepts and slow-motion exercises.
He preaches that in an age of moral decay, practitioners must shed bad karma
through suffering and self-cultivation by doing the exercises and reading
his book over and over.
Li encourages followers,
whom he distinguishes from ''everyday people,'' to study his book in groups.
The goal is to purify one's mind and heart to attain a loftier spiritual
plane, which Li calls ''consummation,'' a kind of paradise. ''If I cannot
save you, nobody else can,'' Li writes, echoing the promise of countless
religious movements throughout the ages.
When Li started teaching
Falun Gong in China in 1992, it was one of many schools of qigong, a form of
exercise meant to channel qi (pronounced ''chee''), a traditional Chinese
concept of energy. With China's communist safety net eroding, state media
initially praised Falun Gong for improving people's health. The group
registered with an official qigong association.
But in the mid-1990s, Li
split from the association, and the media began criticizing Falun Gong for
advocating ''feudal superstitions.'' Li began lecturing abroad, and by 1998,
he had moved to New York.
He left behind an
escalating crisis. Criticism of Falun Gong mounted in China's state-run
press. Without a public forum, followers began protesting outside media
offices. During April 19-23, 1999, several thousand practitioners protested
in Tianjin over an article that criticized Li. More than 50 were arrested.
Two days later on April
25, more than 10,000 followers gathered silently in front of Zhongnanhai,
the Chinese leadership compound off Tiananmen Square. China's government,
which is struggling to maintain social control, was spooked by the fact that
such a large gathering could suddenly materialize, mere weeks before the
10th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown.
Three months later, China
banned Falun Gong and branded it a subversive ''evil cult.'' That drove more
followers to protest, many of whom were arrested as a result. Falun Gong has
since gone underground in China, claiming 100 million members. The
government estimates there are as few as 2 million.
Li's remarks from the
United States became increasingly apocalyptic, posing China's persecution as
a test of faith and urging followers to defy ''evil beings.'' ''Anyone who
tries to make excuses for himself and who's never stepped forward is
wrong,'' Li said in July.
Falun Gong
representatives did not respond to repeated requests to interview Li.
Falun Gong followers say
the non-violent spiritual group, unlike Chinese authorities, does not
violate the rights of those who do not share its views. The group says tens
of thousands of practitioners have been incarcerated in China, and that more
than 300 have died of torture by police.
In January, five people
identified by the government as practitioners set themselves on fire in
Tiananmen Square. A 12-year-old girl and her mother died.
Although state television
showed the protesters seated in the meditative lotus position used in Falun
Gong, representatives of the movement say they were not true practitioners.
Adherents in the United States circulate a video that suggests the
government staged the incident.
During a recent visit to
China, Mary Robinson, the United Nations high commissioner for human rights,
expressed concern that Beijing is using the U.S.-led war against terrorism
as an excuse to step up crackdowns on both its Muslim minority and Falun
Gong.
The Chinese government
says more than 1,600 Falun Gong followers have died, most from refusing
medical treatment or suicide. The government will not cooperate with
attempts to confirm its accounts. When the Mercury News Beijing Bureau asked
to speak with former followers, it was referred to a government
cult-monitoring agency for which there is no public phone number.
Homosexuality--Leader
spreading idea of perversion
Though Li is often vague
about how to
Become a better person, he is specific on a few points. One is that
homosexuality is perverse.
''The disgusting
homosexuality shows the dirty abnormal psychology of the gay who has lost
his ability of reasoning at the present time,'' Li wrote in Volume II of ''Zhuan
Falun,'' or ''Turning the Law Wheel,'' which was translated into English in
1996. It is now posted on Falun Gong's main Web site only in Chinese.
In a 1998 talk in
Switzerland, Li said gay people would be ''eliminated'' by ''the gods.''
Asked in Frankfurt, Germany, that year whether gays could practice Falun
Gong, Li answered, to a round of applause, ''You can cultivate, but you must
give up the bad conduct.''
Those lectures can be
read on www.falundafa.org or ordered from Li's publishing company in
Chinese, but they have not been translated into English. Two organization
officials said they did not know why. The Mercury News read Li's comments in
Chinese.
Li also regards
mixed-race or ''cross-bred'' people as rootless and deviant, a sign of
morally bankrupt times.
In Li's world view,
mixed-race people are a plot by the evil extraterrestrials who populate his
cosmology, which spills over with accounts of lost civilizations, higher
realms and mysteries that science cannot grasp.
''By mixing the races of
humans, the aliens make humans cast off gods,'' he said in a lecture in
Switzerland.
(But Li says
practitioners may marry people of other races -- one of many contradictions
in his philosophy.)
Li told followers that
aliens came in droves during the Industrial Revolution and that they aim to
take over human souls through science, monitoring people by assigning every
computer a number.
''By embedding their
technology and science in human bodies, aliens control their thoughts,'' Li
said.
Some Chinese-speaking
practitioners interviewed in California knew of Li's views and did not
dispute them.
''Actually, a lot of
scientists believe in aliens,'' said Sherry Zhang of the Berkeley lab.
''Just because we can't find them doesn't mean they don't exist.''
Alicia Zhao, a Foster
City marketing consultant who sends out e-mail bulletins about China's
persecution, said: ''It depends on how you define aliens. There may be
intelligent beings we may not be able to see with our naked eyes.''
Like many Chinese
practitioners, Zhao and Zhang had tried other forms of qigong before they
learned of Falun Gong through friends. They say it has improved their health
and relieved stress.
Other practitioners said
Li's remarks about aliens, race and gay people are a small part of his
teachings, or that they require more study to understand.
But some Western
practitioners who discovered Falun Gong in the context of China's
persecution of it were less aware of Li's views.
''My understanding of
Falun Gong's teachings is that everybody has the right to their own sexual
preference, and as a practitioner should be kind and tolerant toward
everyone, regardless of age, race, culture, or sexual preference,'' said
Alejandro Centurion, a neurology resident at StanfordHospital.
He learned of Falun Gong
through press coverage of the 1999 protest and crackdown, and has read ''Zhuan
Falun'' in English 10 to 15 times.
Dean Tsaggaris, an
engineer at Xilinx who runs a Falun Gong Web site, was aware of Li's
critique of homosexuality and was not bothered by it.
''Generally, traditional
cultures have similar concepts and values,'' said Tsaggaris, who began
practicing in 1997.
Besides, he said,
singling out Li's individual teachings is misleading. ''Teacher discourages
us from quoting him out of context. It's too difficult to understand one
sentence without the whole paragraph or the whole book.''
Like scores of civic
leaders, San Jose Mayor Ron Gonzales didn't know any of this when he signed
a letter commending Li.
''Your teachings and
practices have impacted millions of people all over the world, encouraging
truth, compassion and tolerance to improve individual lives and society as a
whole,'' the 1999 letter said.
With those words,
Gonzales became part of Falun Gong's Internet lobbying campaign.
His quote is featured on
a flier, posted on a Web site for practitioners to download and distribute,
as an example of ''proclamations and other forms of recognition for the
contributions Falun Dafa has made to local communities throughout the United
States.''
A press secretary for
Gonzales, David Vossbrink, said such letters are routine: ''I don't think
the mayor is very aware of the details of Falun Gong except what we've seen
in press accounts of what's happening in China. We're familiar with Falun
Gong here as a spiritual discipline with tai chi-like physical movements.''
Accidental
pawn--Professor stunned by 'endorsement'
Gonzales was not the only
person to wind up on the Internet as an accidental pawn in an intramural
Chinese war. A political-science professor in the Midwest was stunned to
find himself drawn into the fray after inviting Falun Gong followers to
speak to his class.
Wesley Milner, who teaches at the University of Evansville in Indiana, was
one of thousands of academics contacted by practitioners seeking to promote
their cause. Milner thought the topic would interest his students.
He did not know that the
practitioners would post an account of their visit on www.minghui.org, the
Chinese-language Web site where Li's latest statements appear. It portrayed
Milner as sympathetic to Falun Gong.
Two days later, Milner
got e-mail from the Chinese Consulate in Chicago, giving the Chinese
government's perspective. Then he was contacted by Deng Zixian, a Chinese
doctoral student and ardent Falun Gong critic in Texas.
Milner was even more
surprised to discover that Evansville had proclaimed Dec. 27, 2000, ''Falun
Dafa Day.''
''These people here in
middle America, they don't know anything about it,'' Milner said. Looking
back, he said he felt used: ''I don't want to be out there trumpeting a
cause I know nothing about.''
Qing Liu, a Columbus,
Ohio, practitioner who contacted Milner, said she should have asked
permission to post his name. She acknowledged that U.S. proclamations do not
reflect a true understanding of Falun Gong, but said they help counter
Chinese government propaganda.
''If someone says that
Falun Gong is banned in China, but it's not illegal in the U.S. and local
governments give us this award, it helps people in China understand.''
Angry rhetoric--Chinese
tactics seen as too tough
Chinese government
officials sometimes manage to block Falun Gong proclamations, although their
angry rhetoric often backfires.
Chinese Embassy and
consular officials won apologies from the governors of Connecticut and
Maryland, and the mayors of Alhambra and Seattle. But attempts to stop two
Falun Gong conferences in Pasadena fell flat.
One consular official in
Los Angeles warned the California Institute of Technology that it would be
''illegal'' to hold a Falun Gong event, but the Pasadena university did not
back down, citing freedom of speech.
Two years ago, San
Francisco Mayor Willie Brown signed a proclamation decreeing July 23, 1999,
''Li Hongzhi Day,'' but a ceremony was canceled abruptly. P.J. Johnston,
Brown's press secretary, would not say why Brown changed course. Both he and
a Chinese consular official said there was no pressure.
Falun Gong has also
garnered high-visibility support for a loftier cause: getting Li nominated
for a Nobel Peace Prize. In January, four Bay Area members of Congress,
Democratic Reps. Tom Lantos, Anna Eshoo, Zoe Lofgren and Pete Stark, joined
41 other lawmakers in signing a letter that praised Li for promoting the
''highest humanitarian values.''
''Mr. Li believes that by
consistently pursuing truth, showing compassion, and practicing tolerance,
an oppressed people will embrace a morally and practically sound method to
purify their own minds and to resolve conflicts in any kind of society,''
said the letter, which was circulated by Rep. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio.
When the Mercury News
asked the Bay Area legislators whether they knew about Li's views on
homosexuals and race before they signed the letter, three said no.
''Obviously I wouldn't
recommend to the Nobel Institute someone who's anti-gay, because that's a
human right,'' Eshoo said.
She subsequently
rescinded her nomination, writing to the Nobel Institute that while
practitioners deserve freedom of speech, belief and assembly, ''Mr. Li has
made statements that are offensive to me and are counter to many of my core
beliefs.''
Stark said he signed
because of Falun Gong's principles and Li's efforts to advance freedom in
China, adding, ''If Mr. Li holds views which promote intolerance of any
kind, I was not aware of it.''
Neither was Lofgren. When
she asked Falun Gong adherents about Li's beliefs on homosexuality and race,
Allen Zeng, a San Jose follower, replied that Falun Gong's philosophy
applies only to practitioners. ''Falun Gong has no intention of promoting
its own principles beyond its own circle of practitioners,'' he wrote.
Lofgren said that while
she no longer considers Li to be Nobel Prize material, any publicity about
Falun Gong may discourage its persecution.
''In addition to Falun
Gong, there are other belief systems and religions we may find in some
measure wrong, but that doesn't mean oppression of the believers is morally
correct,'' she wrote in an e-mail to the Mercury News.
Lantos, one of Congress'
toughest China critics, was unapologetic. He said he nominated Li to call
attention to China's persecution: ''As with many human rights cases in which
I have been involved, I do not agree with Li Hongzhi on all issues, and no
one is a greater advocate for the rights of gays and lesbians at home and
abroad than I.''
The U.S. State Department
gets occasional calls from cities asking whether they should sign pro-Falun
Gong proclamations. It tells them to make their own decisions, a State
Department official said. The U.S. government has said repeatedly that
practitioners' rights should not be violated, but has not taken a position
on their beliefs.
But human rights groups,
particularly those run by Chinese activists, know what Li preaches and do
not endorse it. ''We stay away from what they're doing, the practice,'' said
Ignatius Ding of Silicon Valley for Democracy in China. ''We speak about
human rights, which doesn't mean we believe a certain religion.''
Similarly, Xiao Qiang,
executive director of New York-based Human Rights in China, disagrees with
Li's stance on homosexuality and his insistence that practitioners follow
only his teachings. " Personally, Human Rights in China supports Falun Gong
members' rights, but I don't support Li Hongzhi's message,'' Xiao said.
Teacher in exile--Leader
in control in undisclosed spot
Li, whom followers refer
to by the Chinese honorific ''master,'' formerly lived in Queens, New York.
His current location is not known. He owns Universe Publishing, a private
New Jersey company that sells his books, videos and practice tapes.
Li says he will ''personally install'' falun (a wheel of law) in his
followers' abdomens. He also says practicing Falun Gong unleashes
supernatural powers, reverses the effects of aging and prevents illness --
although not if you strive for such results. Mental patients and the
mentally retarded cannot practice, he says.
Followers do not pay dues
and are linked by the Internet, where new Li statements appear every few
weeks, along with news updates and a running tally of persecuted victims in
China.
Falun Gong's Web sites,
which are hacked frequently, also list practice sessions and contacts around
the globe. Adherents meet to share testimonials at occasional self-funded
conferences, but have little or no direct contact with Li.
Although Falun Gong's
promotional materials often show multiethnic groups of followers, most are
of Chinese origin. Enthusiasts spread the word through the Web and through
free talks and seminars, where they show videotaped talks by Li and teach
the exercises.
Falun Gong's victim
status was a draw for some people who attended a two-hour introductory
seminar in Mountain View earlier this year. ''When I heard the Chinese
government was oppressing it, I knew there must be something to it,'' said
one non-Chinese participant.
As China's crackdown
hardens, Falun Gong followers in the United States push for condemnation of
local Chinese government offices. In April, followers asked the San
Francisco Human Rights Commission to pass a resolution that accused the
Chinese Consulate of ''harassment and defamation'' in an assault on
practitioners in Portsmouth Square Park. The consulate denied involvement.
The human rights
commission was sympathetic to Falun Gong's complaint, especially after
getting a letter from the consul general that blasted the group as a
''cult.''
But commission members
were wary of allegations that the consulate orchestrated the attack. Their
revised resolution mentioned ''incidents of violence'' in San Francisco, but
not the consulate.
Falun Gong followers have
moved on. In September, the San Jose City Council adopted a resolution
supporting the rights of local practitioners. It refers to ''interference in
local Falun Gong activities,'' but the council dropped proposed language
that blamed the Chinese Consulate.
Nan Su, a Santa Clara
County building-inspection engineer and Falun Gong practitioner who drafted
the measure, was not fazed. ''Anybody who hears this resolution will be
pretty clear who the finger is pointed at,'' he said.
Note:
# Falun Gong draws on
Taoist, Buddhist and other Eastern ideas, blending its beliefs with
exercises and meditation. Its leader, Li Hongzhi, founded the group in 1992,
and has drawn criticism over his teachings on homosexuality and race. His
followers say he is misunderstood.
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