By Helena Zhu, Epoch Times
Jul 25, 2009
Jing Cai (L) and Jing Tian prepare for a Falun Dafa parade in Thailand. (Courtesy of Jing Tian) |
The story of sisters Jing Cai and Jing Tian, currently living in Vancouver, Canada, tells how a harmonious family was fractured after the Chinese regime launched its widespread campaign of persecution against Falun Gong in 1999.
The sisters discovered Falun Gong—a traditional spiritual discipline also known as Falun Dafa—in October 1995, at a time when it was spreading rapidly across China just three years after being made public by founder Li Hongzhi.
Jing Cai, then 23, says she felt “enlightened” after first reading Zhuan Falun, the main teachings of Falun Dafa, which was sold in the bookstore she worked at in Shenyang, northeast China.
The next day, despite her “extremely introverted personality,” she decided to join others at the outdoor Falun Gong exercise site near her apartment.
A week later, Jing’s older sister, Jing Tian, began practicing, and before long her heart disease disappeared. Their mother, Chen Jun, a factory worker, had a similar experience. Just over a year after starting the practice, her illnesses, which included diabetes and cholecystitis, seemingly vanished.
The sisters and their mother were the only ones living in the family home at that time.
Those were the halcyon years for Falun Gong, said Jing Cai.
“We had four years of a very peaceful and good practicing environment. Our neighborhood practice site expanded from 30 practitioners to more than 100. ... During that period, we took the initiative to participate in every possible Falun Dafa activity.”
April 25 appeal—a prelude to persecution
However, as Falun Gong's influence grew, senior members of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) started to intervene. Police began harassing practitioners in some regions, and magazines published articles attacking the practice, and qigong in general. In one incident in Tianjin, the brother-in-law of a Politburo member published an article attacking Falun Gong, and practitioners went to the magazine’s office to ask for a retraction. Police beat and arrested over 40 practitioners and directed all appeals to Beijing.
On April 25, practitioners from across China, including Jing Cai, Jing Tian, and Chen Jun, made their way to Beijing to appeal.Soon, news emerged of the first practitioner—Zhao Jinhua of Shandong Province—to be tortured to death and of the regime’s attempt to label Falun Gong as a “cult” through the state-run media.
Chen Jun practices Falun Gong's sitting meditation at their home in Shenyang, Liaoning. (Courtesy of Jing Tian) |
“After hearing the news, my mom said, ‘Zhao Jinhua did not even leave her home. She was just doing farm work and the next moment, she was beaten to death. So then am I safe sitting at home? If I don’t appeal to the government, does that mean that the government won’t come find me?’” said Jing Cai.
So the family, along with over 20 other practitioners from Shenyang and neighboring cities, decided to go appeal at the State Appeals Office in Beijing in October 1999. After being censured by officials, most were sent back to their hometown.
However, Jing Cai and Chen were held at a police station in Shenyang, and on October 21 they were sent to a detention center.
It was after this that the sign outside the State Appeals Office in Beijing was removed. The office would no longer accept any form of appeal.
“That’s why later on [practitioners] started to hold up banners at Tiananmen Square. It’s because there was no door for us to enter to appeal. Then how could our inner thoughts be expressed? That’s how practitioners began the form of holding banners,” said Jing Cai.
Chen and Jing Cai were sent to a brainwashing center for six months, where they were “re-educated” and tortured.
During this time, Jing Tian and a few others made their way to Tiananmen Square where they unfurled a banner stating, “Falun Dafa practitioners’ peaceful appeal.”
“The police at first didn’t know what to do. They didn’t really dare to come up to us. At last, we were seized by some local thugs hired by them and sent to a branch of the public security bureau,” said Jing Tian.
This became the first anti-persecution banner to be raised at Tiananmen Square. Many more would follow.
Jailed for speaking out
Soon after raising the banner, Jing Tian was sent to a detention center for two months. She was separated from the other imprisoned practitioners due to her “overly determined” will to continue the practice and the fact that she was one of the first to appeal at Tiananmen Square.
Jing Tian was punished particularly severely because she and another practitioner decided to take full responsibility for the “Tiananmen banner incident” in order for the others to be released.
Later, she was transferred to Tangshan Labor Camp in Hebei Province for 14 months.
“We protested very strongly once we found out that practitioners were persecuted to death. Over there was like hell on earth. It was horrifying. I have never seen such tortures even in movies,” said Jing Tian.
Many practitioners decided to protest by going on hunger strikes. This in itself became a form of torture, as the hunger strikers would be force-fed via a thick tube with all manner of vile substances, including vinegar, hard liquor, hot pepper oil, mustard oil, boiling water, urine, and feces.
Jing Tian went on her first hunger strike after the police confiscated her Falun Gong reading materials. She also took part in a large-scale hunger strike that was initiated when a practitioner was beaten to death in the labor camp. That time, she lasted 56 days without food or drink, while being force-fed periodically.
Jing Tian was finally released, and the family was reunited on Christmas Eve, 2000.
Home again—but not for long
However, the family home was often the target of threats and harassment by the police. Spies had also infiltrated the local group.
The family became involved in making truth clarification flyers and using other means to expose the truth about the persecution and counteract the regime’s propaganda slandering Falun Gong.
In May 2001, a brainwashing center was set up in Shenyang. Soon, police seized Jing Tian and her mother from their home. Jing Cai was out at the time, and was warned by her brother not to come home because the police were looking for her.
Like numerous Falun Gong practitioners in China, Jing Cai became homeless to evade arrest.
Chen and Jing Tian received three years and 10 years respectively in a re-education through labor camp. However, Jing Tian was initially placed temporarily at the Shenyang Detention Center.
The city of Shenyang is where the harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners’ organs has been the most prevalent in China, according to a 2006 report based on an independent investigation by Canadians David Matas, an international human rights lawyer, and David Kilgour, a former Member of Parliament and former Secretary of State for Asia-Pacific.
While she was in the Tangshan Labor Camp and in Shenyang Detention Center, Jing Tian’s blood was drawn. She didn’t understand why until later, when she realized that blood tests were a common preliminary step in organ harvesting.
While in Shenyang Detention Center, Jing Tian heard about an international hunger strike that was initiated in October 2001 by over 100 practitioners in Masanjia, one of the most notorious re-education through labor camps in China. After her miserable experience in her last hunger strike, Jing Tian was reluctant to participate. But she decided to commit to the cause when she discovered that her mother had been sent to labor camp at such an old age.
Freedom in sight
It was around this time that, despite the perils involved, Jing Yu, the brother of the two girls, also began to practice Falun Gong. The police had been monitoring the family’s house, and eventually Jing Yu was arrested.
He was beaten relentlessly for two days straight in order to force him to reveal the whereabouts of Jing Cai and other practitioners. Although he didn’t talk, the beating resulted in broken ribs which in turn caused lung problems. He was then released.
Jing Yu in China, prior to the start of the persecution of Falun Gong in July 1999. (Courtesy of Jing Tian) |