The Story Behind Lavish Chinese Dance Shen Yun
Have you heard that Shen Yun, the internationally acclaimed
Chinese dance extravaganza, will perform two shows this weekend at Burlington's
Flynn Center for the Performing Arts? If not, you must be living way off the
grid.
In recent weeks, the New York-based company behind the show has
inundated the Green Mountain State with a full-blown marketing blitz: repeated
commercials on local radio and television, glossy color inserts and newspaper
ads (including eight weeks of the latter in Seven Days), web infomercials,
Facebook ads, six-page direct mailers distributed throughout Chittenden County,
pamphlets handed out on Church Street, even a banner spanning Shelburne Road in
the city's South End.
The promotions for this lavish affair, which is part of a
30-country world tour, feature images of silk-draped dancers in traditional
Chinese garb. Ads include gushing testimonials from international celebrities
and dignitaries, some of whom claim to have seen the
"once-in-a-lifetime" performance multiple times. One print
endorsement calls Shen Yun "absolutely the No. 1 show in the world."
John Killacky, executive director and CEO of the Flynn Center,
which is hosting Shen Yun for the third time in two years, couldn't put a
dollar figure on the advertising campaign, as the Flynn doesn't handle the
show's marketing. But he said he's "amazed" by the "inordinate
amount of money" behind it. Tickets aren't cheap, either: The costliest go
for $123. By comparison, the top ticket for the Broadway touring production of
Annie is $75.
If the over-the-top promotion feels somewhat cultish, there's a
reason for that. Shen Yun — which translates as "the beauty of heavenly
beings dancing" — is promoted locally by the Falun Dafa Association of New
England, which is affiliated with Falun Gong and its controversial founder and
spiritual leader, Li Hongzhi. According to the show's website, Shen Yun was
founded in 2006 by Falun Gong members seeking to preserve traditional Chinese
culture; it's since grown to four different touring troupes. Shen Yun
Performing Arts is headquartered at Dragon Springs, a 427-acre compound in
Deerpark, N.Y., that includes residence halls, classrooms, meditation halls,
gardens and a Tang Dynasty-style temple.
Founded in 1992, Falun Gong claims 80 to 100 million followers
worldwide, including more than 10,000 in North America. Whether it's a
religion, a spiritual movement or a cult depends on whom you ask.
In 1999, China's Communist Party formally branded Falun Gong a
cult and outlawed it. The official website for the Chinese embassy in the
United States describes Li as "an evil figure" whose "fraudulent
behavior" has been "seriously disrupting social order and sabotaging
the hard-earned social stability of China." He currently lives in exile in
the United States.
For their part, Falun Gong members accuse China of persecuting,
jailing and executing thousands of the group's adherents, then harvesting their
organs for transplantation. International human rights activists who've
investigated such claims as recently as June 2016 allege that systematic organ
harvesting from Chinese prisoners, including Falun Gong members, is widespread.
The Chinese government vehemently denies those claims.
Experts on cults in this country differ in their assessments of
Falun Gong/Falun Dafa and its leader. Michael Langone, executive director of
the International Cultic Studies Association in Bonita Springs, Fla., has been
investigating cults and cultlike groups since 1978. He says any assessment of
Falun Gong must take into account its long-standing war with China's Communist
Party, which he suggests only fuels the group's cultlike tendencies.
Langone, who's never investigated Shen Yun itself, suggests
that a large and decentralized organization such as Falun Gong may exhibit
"cultic dynamics" of bullying and intimidation of some followers
without being permeated by those dynamics.
In 2001, Langone's group tried to mediate a dialogue between
Falun Gong and the Chinese government at the ICSA's annual conference in
Seattle. That dialogue broke down, but not before a representative from the
Chinese consulate in San Francisco showed conference attendees an anti-Falun
Gong propaganda film. Langone describes it as "laughable ... like Reefer
Madness," the 1936 film that grossly exaggerates the dangers of marijuana.
"The Falun Gong members we met were passionately
persuasive because of their concern of the persecution of their relatives,"
Langone said. "They're not talking about abstract strangers being thrown
in jail. They're talking about fathers and mothers and brothers and sisters. So
I cut them a little slack, because they're fighting a totalitarian government
that's hurting people they love."
By contrast, cult expert Rick Alan Ross cuts Falun Gong no
slack whatsoever. Ross is founder of the Trenton, N.J.-based Cult Education
Institute and author of the 2014 book Cults Inside Out: How People Get In and
Can Get Out. He devotes two chapters to Falun Gong and his work in
deprogramming its followers in the U.S. and Europe.
In a phone interview and email, Ross branded Falun Gong as
"a destructive cult" whose leader, "Master Li," he likened
to Church of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. According to Ross, Li claims
to possess supernatural powers and runs his group "like a dictator."
Ross, who's never seen the show, characterizes it as the
multimillion-dollar "marketing and recruitment arm" of Li's financial
empire. He says Li owns multiple homes in the United States, including one in
Queens, another on Staten Island, a "country mansion" in New Jersey
and a condominium in Chicago.
"[Li] is a multimillionaire, that's for sure," added
Ross, citing a February 24 story in the Los Angeles Times that valued Falun
Gong's net assets in the U.S. at more than $38 million. "Becoming an
object of worship is a great way to make money."
Ross also highlighted some of the more controversial remarks
that Li has made in his writings and in press interviews. They include
expressions of abhorrence for miscegenation and mixed-race offspring, which Li
said "confuses the gods." Similarly, Li has described homosexuality
as "filthy," "deviant," "repulsive" and
"incestuous," and predicted that gays will be "the gods' first
target for annihilation."
Over the years, Ross said, he has challenged Falun Gong
members, whom he characterizes as "mostly Chinese ex-pats and middle-aged
Chinese women," about such remarks, but none have refuted or qualified
them.
"The bottom line is, you can never get them to say that
Master Li is wrong about anything," Ross added.
How effective is Shen Yun at "marketing and
recruitment"? If the show is a fundraiser for the Falun Dafa Association
of New England, it hasn't filled that chapter's coffers. According to the
nonprofit's 990 filing with the Internal Revenue Service in 2015, the group's
net assets were in the red for more than $221,000.
As for content, the Shen Yun performance purports to cover
5,000 years of Chinese history. By all accounts, it's a lush, breathtaking and
mesmerizing production of storytelling dance.
"You will be taken on a journey to magnificent eras in
Chinese history, as well as to periods from China's recent past," Shen
Yun's website reads. "Ancient stories and legends, ethnic and folk
traditions, villains and heroes will come to life on stage through classical
Chinese dance, live music and stunning digital backdrops. You can expect an
experience like no other, one that not only entertains, but also enriches and
inspires."
Some reporters who've seen the show — this one has not —
describe it as featuring blatant anti-Communist China propaganda that is
occasionally over the top. As the Fresno Bee reported in December, the show
depicts Chinese authorities brutalizing a mother who practices Falun Dafa
meditation and forcibly separating her from her child.
But others suggest that spectators can enjoy Shen Yun without
feeling like they're attending a political rally or tent revival. According to
Killacky, the Flynn has never received a single complaint about the show's
content, nor did Shen Yun sell or distribute religious or political propaganda
at previous shows.
Efforts to seek comment from the Falun Dafa Association of New
England and its Vermont contact went unanswered as of press time.
Source:
http://m.sevendaysvt.com/vermont/the-story-behind-lavish-chinese-dance-shen-yun/Content?oid=4714024
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