Does anyone else find it odd that when something outside of establishment medicine cures you of an illness, your doctor doesn’t ask what it was you did?
Here’s my story of how I cured myself of Guillain Barre syndrome, an autoimmune disorder.
Brian Taef, CEO of US Millennials, Inc., tells NTD about the recent bomb threat against @ShenYun Performing Arts at the @kencen, in Washington, linking it to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) coercive tactics. https://t.co/CXNjXwG5Uw
With Shen Yun’s Lincoln Center performances underway, Principal Dancer Peter Huang took to the stage at a press conference yesterday to share what truly drives Shen Yun artists and to address misconceptions about life in the company.
"Growing up in the West, the persecution always felt a bit distant because nothing actually happened to me personally. But a few years back, during a show in Holland...
It was intermission and a Chinese lady came up to the pit and I don't remember exactly what the acknowledgement was, but she acknowledged our Erhu player at the time. I asked her who the lady was, and she responded, we were in the same labor camp together.
In that moment, the weight of our mission felt very real. We weren't just here to entertain. We have a mission of reviving Chinese culture and sharing the stories of practitioners in China whose voices cannot be heard.
For someone who feels strongly about this mission, I was deeply hurt when I heard about the bomb threats towards our company. As a performing arts group our mission to revive traditional Chinese culture and raise awareness about the persecution of Falun Dafa came from a place of faith and compassion. To see people go as far as endangering the well-being of our community, our families, and even our audience members... It's egregious."
At the Lincoln Center press conference, Principal Violist Rachel Chen speaks about the bomb threats, how Shen Yun gave her pride in her heritage, and why it became her spiritual home.
Opinion: Shen Yun Is a Performing Arts Company Adored by Millions, The New York Times Needs to Tell the Rest of the Story https://t.co/fTr6wxigJ7 via @NTDNews
I never thought we'd ever find an actual survivor of the Chinese regime's horrific practice of forced organ harvesting from prisoners of conscience, which amounts to a billion-dollar industry in China.
But here he is, in front of me, Mr. Cheng Peiming.
⚠️ The first known survivor of China’s forced organ harvesting campaign against religious prisoners said he was now ready to speak out and expose the “evil” of the Chinese Communist Party.
Read more here ⬇️
https://t.co/bsJfiB7iuk