Law
will win in battles against cults
As
different countries in the world step up the fight against
dangerous organizations, cults will ultimately lose their
battles with the law.
The
overseas edition of the People's Daily, the leading newspaper
in China, made the comments yesterday in a signed article
headlined "Law Is Sure to Beat Cults."
In
July, China launched a nationwide campaign against Falun
Gong and other cult groups. They asked Interpol, the international
police body, to help arrest Li Hongzhi, head of the Falun
Gong. Chinese authorities have since arrested and sentenced
a number of key members of the cult.
"No
countries have been lenient in dealing with cults," the
article said, noting that cults have been popular in developed
countries since the 1960s.
In
the United States, there are 2,000 to 5,000 cult groups,
involving 10 million to 20 million people. France has 172
such organizations with 160,000 followers. The Japanese
Aum Supreme Truth has lured 14,000 in Japan and 35,000 in
Russia and large numbers in foreign countries. In recent
years, China has also been plagued by various kinds of cults.
It
is not strange to have cults, either in Europe and the United
States or in China, the article said, calling them a product
of history. In modern society, some people cannot handle
the increasing stresses of society and thus have lost their
spiritual way, it said.
All
cult groups share the same characteristics: advocating worship
for the cult leader, practising spiritual control over the
members, fabricating evil theories, collecting funds from
the followers, organizing underground groups and threatening
society, according to the article.
However,
no government has shown mercy towards cult activities. The
US Government has on several occasions used its military
to combat cults, while other Western countries, including
Japan and Italy, have also taken steps to deal with evil
religious organizations.
The
article condemned the Falun Gong organization, which has
2 million members, blaming it for disrupting society in
the guise of a religious group or meditation training centre,
and holding it responsible for profiting from illegal activities,
causing over 1,400 deaths, and plotting 78 unlawful gatherings.
The
article challenged Falun Gong as a form of meditation incorporating
deep-breathing exercises, saying the cult leader, Li Hongzhi,
had learned deep-breathing techniques just two months before
claiming he was a "great master" of the practice.
Li
told his followers that all existing sciences are not scientific
and mankind could not be free from danger until he, the
"great master," opens a "heavenly eye" on the head of the
people, installs a "Wheel of Buddha" in their stomach, or
"releases their souls from purgatory at a higher level."
Li
has stolen the Buddhist term "Wheel of Buddha" and created
an evil cult disguise as a mixture of Buddhism and Taoism,
the article said.
Not
only has Li shamefully borrowed religious terms to describe
the beliefs of the Falun Gong, but he has also accused major
religions of being "low-level" and incapable of true forgiveness
for wayward believers, the article said.
The
government treatment of Falun Gong is an internal affair
of China, the article emphasized. Meanwhile, the government
has always adhered to the principle of governing by law
in dealing with the cult, it added.
The
majority of the 2 million Falun Gong believers are unaware
of the true nature of the cult and have followed it blindly,
the article said. The government has made distinctions between
daily fitness routines and cult practices, between ordinary
and key members of the cult, between normal, legal religious
activities and the activities organized by Falun Gong, and
between those who made mistakes before the ban on the cult
and those who made mistakes after the ban.
Former
Falun Gong practitioners who have left the cult body and
no longer participate in the activities will not be punished.
Most of them are now leading a normal life.
The
article criticized the governments of the United States
and some other Western countries for their groundless criticism
of China's anti-cult campaign.
Over
the past few months, the United States has led the Western
countries in intervening in China's internal battles against
Falun Gong, issuing a government report, in September, a
Congress hearing, in October, and imposing a recent government
sanction, according to the article.
Not
long ago, the US House of Representatives and the Senate
passed a joint bill attacking China's anti-Falun Gong drive
and showing outright support for the Chinese cult. The US
Government has even granted refugee status to some Falun
Gong members.
Ironically,
it said, the US Government has warned Americans of possible
cult activities to endanger society on the eve of the new
millennium.
The
real aim of the US Government's backing of Falun Gong is
to aid hostile forces in China and block social and economic
development in the country, the article said.
Cults
have to be dealt with in two ways: prevention and crackdowns,
the article said, adding that this is the practice of all
countries.
In
the United States, thousands of non-government organizations
have been working to raise public awareness about the dangers
of false religions and the harm done to victims of cult
groups. More than 10,000 Americans have signed a petition
against cults.
The
Aum Supreme Truth in Japan is now closely watched by police
and judicial departments as well as ordinary people. In
the United Kingdom, a special non-government body has been
set up to discuss the issue with young people.
Since
the beginning of this year, the Chinese Government has set
the abolishing of cults as a key task for law-enforcement
departments and adopted the principle of "combining prevention
and crackdowns, with prevention as the primary focus."
The
Ninth National People's Congress Standing Committee passed
a resolution urging governments and judicial departments
at all levels to prevent the emergence and spread of cults.
It
quoted a French anti-cult official who proposed that international
co-operation is necessary for fighting cults as many of
them have formed transnational networks. Some large cult
bodies have been known to set up their headquarters in countries
with a lax legal system.
(Xinhua
12/30/1999)