Chinese Authorities Detain 2 Educators for ‘Speaking the Truth’ About Their Faith, Source Says

Two men who promoted traditional learning for children were detained for no apparent reason other than that they practice Falun Gong, a former colleague says.
Chinese Authorities Detain 2 Educators for ‘Speaking the Truth’ About Their Faith, Source Says
Chinese paramilitary police guard an alley in a street next to Tiananmen Square in Beijing on Sept. 7, 2019. Greg Baker/AFP via Getty Images
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Two Chinese citizens who run a private learning program focused on traditional culture have been detained by the authorities in a case of religious persecution spanning multiple provinces, according to a former colleague.

In April, Wang Yunxiao of Wuhan and Ran Xinglong of Shanghai were abruptly arrested by officers from a county police bureau in Huangshan, in the eastern province of Anhui.

Wang and Ran are the cofounders of Green Academy, an education company for children offering online courses and in-person summer and winter camps.

For a winter camp in January, together with parents and teaching assistants, the two instructors took groups of students to the Wudang mountains and Huangshan, both places of significance for China’s ancient spiritual and cultural heritage.

According to a good friend and former colleague of one of the men, Hu Yongning, who recently spoke about their case with the Chinese-language edition of The Epoch Times, as well as overseas Chinese legal scholars, the only reason for Wang’s and Ran’s detention seems to be their adherence to the teachings of Falun Gong, a spiritual group that has been persecuted by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) since 1999.

Falun Gong, also known as Falun Dafa, is a spiritual discipline based on the principles of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance. It was freely practiced by tens of millions of people in China during the 1990s, when both the public and the Chinese regime welcomed its teachings and meditative exercises for bringing widespread improvements in physical health and morality. However, in 1999, the regime began to persecute the faith, believing its popularity to be a threat to communist rule.

Detained for ‘Speaking the Truth’

Millions of Falun Gong practitioners continue to live in China, according to the Washington-based nonprofit Freedom House. Despite the severity of the persecution and heavy censorship by the communist regime, many of them persevere in telling their fellow Chinese about their spiritual practice to expose injustices under the CCP’s rule.

On May 23, Hu and other Falun Gong practitioners in Manhattan demonstrated before the Chinese Consulate to raise awareness about Wang’s and Ran’s arrests, and to call for an end to the persecution of Falun Gong.

“Both of their homes were ransacked. Their computers, phones, and those belonging to their family members were confiscated. Even the phone of one of their students’ parents was taken,” said Hu, who emigrated to the United States in April 2024.

Plainclothes policemen watch as a female Falun Gong practitioner resists arrest while being forced by police toward a police van, in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, on May 11, 2000. (Stephen Shaver/AFP via Getty Images)
Plainclothes policemen watch as a female Falun Gong practitioner resists arrest while being forced by police toward a police van, in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, on May 11, 2000. Stephen Shaver/AFP via Getty Images

Hu suspected that Wang and Ran were reported to the authorities for “speaking the truth” about Falun Gong during their classes, but noted that the arrests came in April, several months after Green Academy’s winter camp ended in January.

According to Hu and reports by Minghui.org, a website founded by Falun Gong practitioners that publishes information documenting the persecution in China, Wang and Ran were detained by officers from the public security bureau in She county of Huangshan.

The two men were slapped with vague charges of subverting state power, a common charge police and courts use against Falun Gong practitioners and other religious prisoners in China.

Following Wang’s and Ran’s detention, the police broadened their investigation, Hu said, bringing in multiple parents for questioning. Several elementary school children who attended the winter camp were also taken to the police station to be interrogated.

“One parent who helped Ran Xinglong during the winter camp as a teaching assistant was interrogated from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day, without anything to eat, for an entire week,” Hu said.

He added that another parent said she was asked about the content of Ran’s teachings.

“They’ve interviewed several parents, but never explained what the two actually did to justify being arrested. The [female] parent was baffled. Why were the police harassing her like this?” Hu said.

Li Yuqing, a Chinese legal scholar residing in the United States, told NTD, a sister outlet of The Epoch Times, that there were no lawful grounds for the arrests of Wang and Ran.

“There really is no reason, because they don’t need one. [The regime] arrests Falun Gong practitioners without any justification,” Li said.

Promoting Traditional Culture

While Green Academy itself was established in 2023, Wang, Ran, and Hu began their educational work over a decade earlier.

“As Falun Gong practitioners, we emphasize reviving traditional culture. Society today is very materialistic, but we teach students that life isn’t just about pleasure-seeking or getting into a good university,“ Hu told The Epoch Times. ”What matters most is returning to one’s original, true self.

“Our educational goal is to help children understand from an early age that life has spiritual meaning, that the divine is real, contrary to what is claimed by [the CCP’s] atheism.”

The trio was guided and inspired by Wang’s late father, Wang Xueming, a researcher of Chinese language and literature.

A secondary school teacher from Chengdu, in southwestern China’s Sichuan Province, the elder Wang was not yet 30 when the persecution of Falun Gong began in July 1999.

Like tens of thousands of other Falun Gong practitioners, Wang Xueming traveled to Beijing to protest in Tiananmen Square, calling upon the Chinese regime to end its persecution.

As a result of his demonstration, he was beaten and tortured by Sichuan police stationed in the Chinese capital. He also lost his teaching job upon returning to Chengdu.

Undeterred, he organized private classes to promote traditional culture and values. The holder of a master’s degree in education from Sichuan Normal University, he faced constant surveillance and interference by the police because of his spiritual practice, but was aided by his son and other like-minded individuals, including Ran and Hu.

“Every time he tried to establish an education company, the authorities would shut it down as soon as it started to grow,” Hu recalled. “They’d seize its assets and disband the company. If it showed any signs of success, they’d destroy it.”

Wang Xueming’s Sacrifice

Under pen names including “Yun Xiao” and “Tang Ming,” Wang Xueming was also a noted writer, being a member of the Sichuan Writers Association and earning an award for his blog posts in 2007.

While imprisoned between 2002 and 2005, he wrote a nearly 300,000-word collection of teaching materials—only to have it confiscated by the prison staff before his release. In connection with another one-year sentence served for what the authorities said was “running an illegal business” in 2011 and 2012, the police burned or seized 6,000 books owned or written by Wang Xueming, representing a loss of more than 1 million yuan (about $140,000), according to Minghui.

Despite the abuses he suffered behind bars, he remained in excellent physical condition and traveled throughout China to give lectures.

Hu Yongning supported Falun Gong and its core teachings of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance for many years. However, the persecution in China kept him from taking up the practice.

That began to change in late 2019, when Hu started to develop a painful spinal disorder. Despite undergoing a variety of treatments, his condition did not see significant improvement.

“A doctor told me I might be afflicted for the rest of my life,” he told The Epoch Times.

People gather at an outdoor area to take a swab test during mass testing for COVID-19 in Beijing on June 23, 2020. (Noel Celis/AFP via Getty Images)
People gather at an outdoor area to take a swab test during mass testing for COVID-19 in Beijing on June 23, 2020. Noel Celis/AFP via Getty Images

In 2020, with the onset of the CCP’s draconian “zero COVID” pandemic lockdowns, Hu was isolated at home. Dedicating himself to the study of Falun Gong’s teachings and practicing its five meditation exercises, he experienced a full recovery within a month, he said.

Later that year, however, Wang Xueming was arrested for the final time upon arrival at the airport in Baotou, China’s Inner Mongolia region, according to Minghui. Sentenced to four years in prison, in September 2022, he was transferred to a facility in the city of Hohhot. Days later, prison staff claimed that he “died suddenly.”

Family members were not permitted to see his body before cremation. He was 52.

Exposing a ‘Severe and Hidden’ Persecution

According to Minghui and other human rights organizations, millions of Falun Gong practitioners have been illegally detained or sentenced over the nearly 26 years since the CCP began its campaign to destroy the peaceful spiritual group.
In addition to suffering beatings, torture, sexual abuse, forced labor, and expropriation, thousands of Falun Gong practitioners are murdered for their organs in the CCP’s state- and military-run hospitals on an annual basis, according to a growing number of investigations, such as “Bloody Harvest/The Slaughter,” a 2016 report detailing the abuses.
In 2019, an independent London-based court ruled that Chinese prisoners of conscience, principally those held for practicing Falun Gong, had been victims of organ harvesting “on a significant scale” for years.
A banner calling for the end of forced organ harvesting from Falun Gong practitioners in China is displayed as practitioners demonstrate the spiritual practice's meditation, next to the United Nations in New York City on Sept. 20, 2023. (Chung I Ho/The Epoch Times)
A banner calling for the end of forced organ harvesting from Falun Gong practitioners in China is displayed as practitioners demonstrate the spiritual practice's meditation, next to the United Nations in New York City on Sept. 20, 2023. Chung I Ho/The Epoch Times

Hu expressed concern about the fate of his friends, Wang Yunxiao and Ran Xinglong, given the possibility that they could be killed for their organs.

“They are completely helpless in China. No one can help them,” Hu said. “They have no income now.”

Ran’s wife has traveled to She county in Huangshan to seek her husband’s release, Hu said, while Ran himself has gone on a hunger strike to protest his unjust detention. They have two young children, aged 4 years and 8 months.

Following Wang Xueming’s sudden death, Hu felt a growing need to escape the country and help inform the world—particularly the U.S. government—about what he said are the “severe and hidden” abuses being perpetrated under CCP rule, especially forced organ harvesting.

“When the Communist Party goes after people, they cover it up completely,“ Hu said. “The news is sealed off.”

He pointed out that “when a Falun Gong practitioner is arrested or persecuted, not even their neighbors know” because “the persecution is deeply hidden.”

Li Yuanming contributed to this report.