Finding Truth…Finding Compassion…Finding Courage
by Mark Lentine
Imagine being jailed, persecuted, and tortured for more than a decade. Imagine having your tortured sister’s lifeless body being withheld from you for almost 20 years, by the very people who tortured you. Imagine your school-age nephew being kidnapped to force you to sign over your sister’s body.
Now imagine having the grace to continue to smile, love life, and to practice the very spirituality for which you were persecuted. When you watch the beautifully shot and immaculately-scored film “Finding Courage,” you won’t have to imagine.
The mostly somber Yellow River, the “Cradle of Chinese civilization,” is known to change into a raging torrent so quickly that is also known as “China’s sorrow.” Likewise, “Falun Gong,” a spirituality once embraced by the CCP (Chinese Communist Party), was suddenly targeted faster than the Yellow River changes its moods.
“Ruin their reputations.
Bankrupt them financially.
Destroy them physically.”
Taken from the 1999 edict by CCP General Secretary Jiang Zemin
“My parents brought Falun Gong into our home in 1994. We all became practitioners. Then one day in 1999, the CCP began the persecution. It all changed so quickly,” says Leo Wang, whose wife Sophia adds, “We were a happy, hardworking family, both of us mechanical engineers. We were respected and practiced our faith openly. Kefei, Leo’s sister, was arrested in August, 2001. And then Leo…” her voice trails off.
“One day Leo just didn’t come home.” The CCP rarely, if ever calls family members to tell them of arrests; families are often left to wonder what happened. It is the same dark spirit that allows CCP functionaries to illegally cremate prisoners without alerting the families.
“I was so scared. I didn’t know what happened to my husband,” Sophia says.Twenty days later, a fellow inmate called to say that Leo was alive. The inmate told her that he had never seen anyone so badly beaten. He told Sophia to prepare herself for Leo’s death.
“My world fell apart. The sky fell in on me,” Sophia says. It was a full year before Sophia and their young son Martin were allowed to see Leo.
“Attorneys weren’t even allowed to help, or they would lose their licenses,” Martin says. “For six months, I didn’t sleep. All I could think of was my father. The first time we saw him, he said he was ok, but he looked so very bad.”
The most hunted of CCP targets are those practitioners with printers creating Falun Gong books and materials.“Leo did his printing work, and I did mine, but we rarely discussed it with each other. We thought that, if we were caught, we couldn’t be forced to divulge much
information,” says Leo’s sister, Yifei. Leo maintained the copiers, while Yifei helped produce and distribute printed materials.
The CCP arrested both sisters at the same rally. They were beaten, their flesh burned with an electric baton. Yifei’s husband Gordon, a journalist, was able to obtain his wife’s release.As seen in the film, Gordon’s courage and tenacity paid off when he surreptitiously filmed scenes inside jails, further risking his own arrest by filming inside Longfeng Morgue. Together, Gordon and their young daughter Ava helped Yifei escape to America, while they stayed behind. Unfortunately, Gordon could do nothing to free his sister-in-law.
Four months later, Kefei Wang was dead.
Authorities allowed Yifei a brief glimpse of her sister’s partially frozen, semi-nude body. “Parts of her body were black and swollen. I said, “Kefei, Kefei, don’t scare me like this. You can’t be dead!”
Kefei had been beaten and tortured in an unsuccessful attempt to force her to “name names” and denounce her practice. Guards poked needles in her eyes to deprive her of sleep. She never talked.
“I was scared, but I never gave up my practice,” says youngest sister Tifei, adding “The world must know what happened to our sister. This cannot happen to people. I remember that after they began the persecution, we kept the lights to a minimum. People who once were friends, now kept their distance because they knew we were practitioners. I myself had been in a CCP labor camp for two months. Our home wasn’t much better. We were so scared all the time. Our home was a kind of second jail.”
When asked about CCP-controlled China, Leo Wang says simply, “I now think of China as a prison; a prison full of prisons.”Quiet, unassuming, graying Leo shows no trace of bitterness towards his captors; he upholds the three tenets of Falun Gong which are Truth, Compassion, and Tolerance. “I don’t have the luxury of hatred,” he smiles. “Our Master says we must clarify the truth to everyone. This is what I did.”
Leo Wang says he converted about 200 of those he met in prison. Some of them were guards, but most were prisoners. Some guards actually began referring to him as “Mr. Wang.”
Once released, it took Leo a year to re-learn how to walk.
Stephanie Li is interpreter, family spokesperson, and executive producer of the film. Her sister, was also arrested by the CCP. “These kinds of things are happening time and time again".
For decades, we, the good Chinese, have tried to warn America about the CCP. Few listened. We know the CCP has infiltrated this country. We knew it decades ago. We know what they’re capable of.”
With news of Eric Swalwell’s purported ties to a CCP spy, New York University’s ties to Chinese communists, and the State Department’s warning that “…the CCP poses a real threat to American sovereignty,” Li’s warning is prescient to say the least.
For 30 years, the river flows east and for 30 years the river flows west…and for 19 years, Kefei Wang’s body has remained frozen in Longfeng Morgue.
Yifei Wang promised her sister and her dying father that she would find the courage to demand answers for her sister’s death. “Who did this to her? They must be held accountable. We will never give up until they free our sister’s body.”
A Chinese proverb says, “Dripping water chisels through stone.” If that is the case, then “Finding Courage” is the first drop in what the Wang family vows will become a never-ending torrent in the fight to free their sister’s body from the stone wall of the CCP.
The Wang Family would like to give their sincere thanks to Mark who spent over 9 Days and countless hours with the family and Stephanie Li to understand the enormity of the evils of the CCP.
Mark Lentine is a writer, independent investigative journalist, actor and singer who was born and raised in South Philadelphia. He wrote his first articles for a local weekly newspaper at age 21, in 1982.