| Former
Falun Gong practitioner shares conversion diary (02/11/2001)
A former Falun Gong practitioner has voluntarily shared the struggles
of his conversion which he recorded in a diary while serving a jail
sentence in China's southernmost province of Hainan.
Wang Heqing, a 32-year-old life insurance salesman, was sent to
a re-education-through-labor camp for advocating Falun Gong and
downloading from the Internet materials published by the banned
cult, then printing and distributing the materials in bulk.
"We thought of the 'master', Li Hongzhi, as a saint, but he
ignores us as human beings. The flesh and bone bodies of his followers
were burned to a crisp by fire, but he refused to acknowledge them
as his practitioners," Wang wrote in his diary on January 30,
after viewing TV footage of devout Falun Gong followers attempting
suicide by setting themselves on fire at Tiananmen Square.
Wang said he now clearly understands how the cult manipulates its
followers: Falun Gong practitioners are brainwashed into believing
that if they submit unconditionally to the commands of the leader,
they will reach true spiritual peace.
In 1996, Wang, a college graduate, moved from Hunan Province in
central China to Hainan to seek his fortune, and was introduced
to the cult's doctrine while on the lush island resort.
"Ever since I was a middle school student, I had admired wizard
descriptions of supernatural phenomena and some peculiar functions
of the human body in books and publications," Wang wrote in
his dairy.
"I finished reading the book 'Zhuandafalun' (or 'Turning the
Wheel of Law', considered to be the Falun Gong's principal text)
within one day. The supernormal mental state the book promised to
its practitioners enchanted me so much that I thought I had been
led into a magic world created by Li Hongzhi," Wang confessed.
In his dairy, Wang said that since he worked full-time, he used
to read the cult's texts on the bus on his way to work. He became
so devoted to the cult that he decided to participate in appeals
to government authorities to protect the Falun Gong doctrines and
help spread the cult's creed -- even to remote villages.
He saw many poor people willing to risk going bankrupt from buying
expensive Falun Gong publications, video tapes and photographs of
Li Hongzhi.
"My eyes were blurred by the disguise of Falun Gong's apparent
good teachings of keeping the body fit and sound. Hypnotized by
the premise, I abandoned all sense and reason to it," said
Wang.
During his days in the penitentiary, the former devoted Falun Gong
follower had time to think about many questions that he would have
been too preoccupied to consider had he continued selling illegal
leaflets of the cult which were outlawed by the Chinese government
in July 1999.
In the diary, he exposed his initial skepticism of the cult's bluff
that Li Hongzhi shared the same date of birth with Sakyamuni, the
founder of Buddhism. He noted the destructive effects of Falun Gong
practitioners' gatherings in Beijing.
The sacrificial burning of the practitioners in late January further
awakened him. Wang wrote that he sincerely hopes diehard Falun Gong
followers will learn from his disturbing and unforgettable conversion
experience.
(Xinhua)
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