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In The Media

China's Web of Faith

Link Copied
By Mr. Taylor Boas
Published on May 1, 2001

Source: Carnegie

Reprinted with permission from Foreign Policy, May-June 2001.

Whether seen as a peaceful spiritual group or a dangerous cult, China's Falun Gong is an extensively wired faith. Government crackdowns have made it harder to use the Internet for organization within China, but elsewhere, Web sites help Falun Gong enlist support for its human rights campaign while recruiting and informing members worldwide.

Sect founder Li Hongzhi uses the Internet as his principal means of communicating with followers. Even if they can't access sites through government-controlled servers in China, people may receive Li's missives as e-mail attachments or smuggled documents. FalunDafa.org hosts the full text of all Li's writings and includes links to local chapters worldwide. Download videos to learn the group?s exercises and audio clips to play during practice. Easy access to such information has helped boost membership in Europe and North America.

FalunInfo.net represents the public relations face of Falun Gong. The site frames the movement in terms of human rights and freedom of religion?concepts with greater resonance in the West than Falun Gong's philosophical tenets, drawn largely from Buddhism and Taoism. The site features press releases and an extensive Western news archive.

While critics charge that FalunInfo.net is one-sided, China's efforts are as well: One of several anti-Falun Gong sites (www.mingjing.org.cn/ppflg/) features testimonials from "re-educated" practitioners and gruesome photos of the recent self-immolations in Tiananmen Square. Falun Gong responded by creating pages "Exposing the Crimes of Jiang Zemin" and charging that Chinese authorities orchestrated the burnings to defame the group.

About the Author

Mr. Taylor Boas

Former Project Associate

    Recent Work

  • Paper
    Internet and State Control in Authoritarian Regimes: China, Cuba, and the Counterrevolution

      Ms. Shanthi Kalathil, Mr. Taylor Boas

Mr. Taylor Boas
Former Project Associate
China

Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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