MIDDLETOWN, NY—In May 2008, Judy Chen, a United States citizen and mother of two U.S. Marines, was accosted and assaulted by a Chinese agent with links to the Chinese Consulate General in New York in Flushing, Queens.
The local New York City councilor wouldn’t even hear her case, and his aides rudely turned her away. But she eventually found a sympathetic ear in California Republican Dana Rohrabacher.
Chen was attacked by Chinese agents because she was then manning a booth that helped Chinese citizens quit the Chinese Communist Party and raised awareness about the severe persecution in China of the spiritual practice of Falun Gong.
One of the agents dealt her a heavy blow to the temple. “But I curbed my temper because I’m a Falun Gong practitioner; we cultivate compassion, after all,” she said.
Falun Gong is a traditional Chinese meditation practice that involves slow-motion exercises and teachings of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance. The practice was suppressed in China on orders of former Chinese Communist Party leader Jiang Zemin on July 20, 1999.
Almost immediately, 70 to 100 million practitioners were disenfranchised in China, and those who were targeted for arrest were brutally abused, some to the point of death. Researchers say that hundreds of thousands of practitioners have been killed by the Chinese state for their organs. Overseas practitioners likewise faced harassment directed by Chinese consulates and embassies.
After being assaulted in Flushing, Chen decided to seek help from John Liu, the disgraced New York City Comptroller who was then a local councilor. But she was denied an audience, and told to “just get out” by Liu’s office aides.
