| Falun
Gong, not religion but a cult (02/03/2001)
Falun Gong looks like a cult, smells like a cult and, by any reasonable
definition, is a cult, said a recent article in Japan Times.
The article, a book review by Philip Cunningham, a researcher with
Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, offered an insightful look at
the Falun Gong issue by closely examining "Falun Gong's Challenge
to China,"a reader assembled by New York media critic Danny
Schechter.
In his book, Schechter attempts to answer some questions about
Falun Gong by offering a diverse range of viewpoints, allowing the
reader to draw his or her own conclusions, the article said.
The "blind men"Schecther quotes in describing this elephant
of a "meditation group"include Chinese Government commentators,
human-rights advocates, Western scholars, PR experts and the self-proclaimed
"Master"himself -- Li Hongzhi.
Oddly enough, the article said, the least informative account in
the book comes from Li. He is cryptic at best, oblique and obscure
at worst, the article claims. He sounds outright naive, if not disingenuous,
when he says that the Falun Gong movement "doesn't have an
organizational structure at all."
According to Cunningham, in talking of the demons that haunt mankind
and legitimize his quest, Li sounds simply nutty: "The aliens
come from other planets. Some are from dimensions that human beings
have not yet discovered."He also says he can fly and control
people from a distance and scientists would agree with him if scientists
were not too politicized to see the real truth, the article said.
Having lived in Japan during the time of Aum Shinrikyo -- a doomsday
cult that terrorized the country in 1998 -- Cunningham said simply
hearing talk of levitation and special powers by a guru with messianic
aspirations makes him cringe. Seeing ordinary people put themselves
at risk and get hurt in the name of some fat cat guru in luxurious
exile is painful, he seethes.
It predisposes me very much against the grandiose pretensions of
Li Hongzhi,"Cunningham wrote.
He said the Chinese have a point when they argue that Falun Gong
must be smashed to protect human rights and free speech: Cults lack
transparency and hide the truth.
During Aum's short and inglorious history, it targeted publications
and television stations that dared to challenge its right to be
"left alone?to pursue its bloody agenda.
Cults are notoriously thin-skinned when it comes to media criticism,
and Falun Gong is no exception, the article said.
The first few big rallies in Tianjin and Beijing were directed at
unfriendly media coverage, long before the group was deemed an evil
cult and banned.
The article quoted Schechter's book: "In 1996, for reasons
that haven't been fully explained, Li, who speaks only Chinese,
came to the US with permanent visa status for him and his family."
Cunningham wishes that Schechter had followed up on this and other
interesting hunches, such as his initial sense that Falun Gong was
a CIA plot to destabilize China. The deeply illiberal, anti-homosexual
rhetoric of the movement is duly noted but not grappled with, he
said.
According to Cunningham, Schechter's own observations on the cult
have an unapologetic liberal bias: He sees religion where others
might see a cult.
Schechter, who calls himself a 'media dissector,'is too smart to
make a claim to the last word on such an opaque topic. He gives
adequate space to conflicting, even contrary viewpoints,"the
article said.
The second half of Schechter's book consists of annotated readings,
including practitioner accounts, letters from China, state media
accounts, official and unofficial biographical data, US State Department
press releases, the text of China's anti-cult legislation, an introduction
to the teachings of Li Hongzhi and an Internet resource guide.
Cunningham wrote that Schechter is among a handful of media commentators
who have actually met Li Hongzhi, though his account of the meeting
and transcript tend to reinforce the image of Li as both banal in
his ordinariness and yet somehow inscrutable.
Schechter comes from a radio and TV background, which helps explain
his ear for good quotes, the article added.
When queried on the whereabouts of Master Li, Falun Gong follower
and official translator Erping Zhang is quoted as saying, "I
have no idea. I do not even have the desire to know."
The article noted that Schechter included in his book the delightful
anti-Falun Gong ditty recorded by Peter Carlson of The Washington
Post: "I think my Falun Gong is fine,/ It can help collect
money to dine,/ And drink a lot good wine . . ./ I have lots of
followers here and there,/ And now I'm a billionaire,/ What about
anything else [do] I need to care?"
(China Daily)
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