Chinese Embassy Repeatedly Fails to Block Shen Yun

Seemingly whenever Shen Yun, a show of classical Chinese dance, appears, the People’s Republic of China try to block it.
Chinese Embassy Repeatedly Fails to Block Shen Yun
The audience experiencing Shen Yun at the Badminton Theater in Athens, Greece, gives the performers a standing ovation on June 3, 2010. (Jason Wang/The Epoch Times)
6/8/2010
Updated:
6/29/2010
<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/Athens-Jason_Wang_IMG_2158_medium.jpg"><img src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/Athens-Jason_Wang_IMG_2158_medium.jpg" alt="The audience experiencing Shen Yun at the Badminton Theater in Athens, Greece, gives the performers a standing ovation on June 3, 2010. (Jason Wang/The Epoch Times)" title="The audience experiencing Shen Yun at the Badminton Theater in Athens, Greece, gives the performers a standing ovation on June 3, 2010. (Jason Wang/The Epoch Times)" width="320" class="size-medium wp-image-106904"/></a>
The audience experiencing Shen Yun at the Badminton Theater in Athens, Greece, gives the performers a standing ovation on June 3, 2010. (Jason Wang/The Epoch Times)

Seemingly wherever Shen Yun, a show of classical Chinese dance and music touring the world appears, officials of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) seek to block it from performing. Nonetheless, nearly all of the hundreds of performances have taken place on schedule. Cancellations have occurred in countries that were part of the former Soviet Union—Ukraine, Moldova, Russia, and Romania—or where the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has strong leverage, such as in Hong Kong, South Korea, and Singapore.

Two performances of the New York-based Shen Yun Performing Arts in Greece on June 3 and 4 nearly didn’t happen. The details are unique to Athens, but the story is similar to other venues.

On May 21, exactly two weeks before the first scheduled performance, the Falun Dafa Association of Greece, the sponsor of the show, discovered that the ticket sales for Shen Yun were disrupted. The Athens Music Hall did not inform them about stopping ticket sales, but the sponsor became suspicious when they were no longer getting daily updates.

Soon thereafter, the sponsor received a faxed message from the Athens Music Hall, saying that the shows had to be “postponed” due to technical problems at the venue, which could only be fixed between June 1 and 7—a period that included the days of the scheduled Shen Yun performances.

At first, the theater would not specify the “technical problem.” Later, they disclosed it as a ventilation problem. No explanation was provided as to why the alleged ventilation problem could not be fixed prior to the Shen Yun shows, as the theater’s calendar indicated several days with no scheduled performances beforehand.

It is not hard to surmise where the pressure to “postpone,” which would have meant canceling the shows, came from. Greece has been in an economic crisis with a $300 billion debt. On the day the sponsor of Shen Yun learned that their shows would be “postponed,” Reuters reported May 21 that China Ocean Shipping Group (COSCO) would go ahead with investments to modernize Piraeus Port as part of a 3.4 billion euro concession deal with Greece.

According to Greek media reports, the spokesperson for the Falun Dafa Association of Greece said that COSCO’s president and senior managers met with Greek politicians at the theater on the same day, May 21.

In the end, a second theater, the Badminton Theater, was found. One report from a person involved in the negotiations said that this theater too had received a phone call from the Chinese embassy, on the day the show started, seeking to persuade the theater not to hold the performances. The local sponsors of Shen Yun had already met with the second theater’s management, explaining in depth the role played by the CCP. The second theater allowed Shen Yun to proceed with the shows, but indicated that they absolutely did not want to get involved in political matters, and if media contacted them about China’s interference, they would respond with ‘no comment.’

Cancellations in Moldova and Ukraine

As with the incident in Greece, the evidence reveals a link between the PRC and the cancellations of Shen Yun shows in Moldova and Ukraine. The performance scheduled for May 28 in Odessa, Ukraine, was suddenly canceled when the Ukrainian government suspended the theater contract and annulled Shen Yun performers’ visas.

According to Shen Yun’s master of ceremonies Leeshai Lemish, the letter from the Odessa Regional Council said that the PRC officials requested the Council to cancel the Shen Yun performance. Two performances scheduled in the Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, were similarly canceled in April.

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<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/Athens-Jason.Wang-clap-IMG_2100_medium.jpg"><img src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/Athens-Jason.Wang-clap-IMG_2100_medium.jpg" alt="The audience responds to Shen Yun in Athens, Greece on June 3, 2010. (Jason Wang/The Epoch Times)" title="The audience responds to Shen Yun in Athens, Greece on June 3, 2010. (Jason Wang/The Epoch Times)" width="320" class="size-medium wp-image-106905"/></a>
The audience responds to Shen Yun in Athens, Greece on June 3, 2010. (Jason Wang/The Epoch Times)
Shen Yun was scheduled to perform in Chisinau, Moldova, on May 25 and 26. On the day of the first show, however, the performers were not allowed inside the theater.

One of the dancers reported: “The show was sold out, and we had no idea that something like this would happen. We tried talking to them [the theater’s management], but the director [of the theater] refused to see us and ran away—literally.”

The theater director indicated that she received “daily” visits from the Chinese Embassy, said Mr. Lemish. The director and the Moldovan Minister of Culture were told that Moldova would face financial repercussions if the shows were not canceled.

Interference Repudiated

In 2009, Shen Yun Performing Arts held 311 performances in over 100 cities worldwide. In most countries toured by Shen Yun, officials and theater management expressed resentment that the Chinese regime would dare to interfere with their freedom of expression and the arts.

Many of the CCP’s letters to the theaters and elected officials have been passed to Shen Yun organizers, and public officials have openly condemned the regime’s actions.

The Chinese Consulate in Frankfurt sent letters to the government leaders and foreign consulates in Germany on Jan. 6, 2009, “reminding” them not to see Shen Yun. The letter was made public and was credited with causing many people in the region, who were previously unaware of the show, to attend the performance. European Union Parliament Chairman Hans-Gert Poettering and Vice Chairman Edward McMillan-Scott both sent letters wishing the show success.

Disregarding pressure from the CCP, 25 members of the Swedish Parliament published a joint statement in 2008, saying they were going to see Shen Yun and adding, “We warmly welcome the first visit of the Divine Performing Arts [the former name of the Shen Yun Performing Arts] to Sweden! We, members of different political parties in the Swedish Parliament, condemn the Chinese Embassy for violating freedom of speech in our country.”

In 2007, California’s Chairman of Orange County’s Board of Supervisors Chris Norby received a letter from the Chinese Consulate in Los Angeles, requesting him not to see the show.

Mr. Norby responded: “Your request is an insult to me. Of course I will not comply.”

Reviving Culture

According to Mr. Lemish, the CCP is interfering with the performances “because it is terrified of Shen Yun.”

The New York-based Shen Yun Performing Arts is a nonprofit organization that has set out to restore the traditional culture of China and “breathe new life into traditional Chinese culture while providing audiences everywhere with an experience of sublime beauty,” according to the company’s website.

The show has been targeted by the CCP because the very culture Shen Yun has set out to revive is the one that the CCP has spent decades trying to destroy, explained Mr. Lemish through e-mail.

“This is a 5,000-year heritage, steeped with spirituality and ideas such as there being consequences for every action—good or bad—that we take,” Mr. Lemish said. “These are ideas that the Party has labeled as superstitious and tried to uproot and replace with atheism, Marxism, and absolute materialism.”

This article was corrected June 19 and June 22. The original article said the theater in Athens backed down and allowed the Shen Yun performances. This is incorrect. A second theater in Athens was found where the Shen Yun performances took place at the scheduled time. We regret any misunderstandings this may have caused.