2011/08/10

Communists suspected of New York thuggery

On July 6, Tang Boqiao, the spokesman and vice-president of the Chinese Transitional Government, was assaulted at the Hollywood Karaoke Bar in Flushing, New York City.

Mr. Tang said he went there on a friend’s invitation. As soon as he arrived there, he was urged to leave immediately by a guest.There were two men with northern Chinese accents who began to push him as soon as he sat down. Tang decided to leave when he found that polite protests were ignored, however, he was punched in the face and the other man threw beer bottles at him as he tried to leave, fracturing Tang's hand.

As an ambulance took Tang to hospital, it was followed by a large white car, which disapperared when Tang reached hospital. Police are searching for this car.

Tang is convinced that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) was behind the attack, and Mr. Wu Fang, President of the Chinese Transitional Government, fiercely condemned the CCP.

Tang said “I will not stop pursuing this matter”

Wu Fang stated: “This is the CCP`s doing. Recently Our Transitional Government has been active, expanding our organization, nominating several secretaries. By contrast, the CCP is now beset with difficulties and contradictions both in internal and external affairs. Meanwhile, we have spoken out Deng Yujiao, Shishou, and the protests in Urumuqi. We are a thorn in the CCP`S side.”

Wu Fang continued: “This is a replay of the Flushing incidents last year when CCP thugs attacked Falun Gong practitioners. The CCP tries to transform its internal contradictions to overseas countries. And it may be a sign that the CCP is beginning to disintegrate."

 Wu Fang said that a democracy such as the U.S. could not allow the CCP to export its repression.

CCP repression

Mr Tang, in an interview at his home where he was recovering from facial injuries and a fractured hand, put forward the reasons as to why the CCP would want to assault and try to intimidate him.
First is the Falun Gong and Quit Communist Party issue.
Virtually the entire world now knows, that Falun Gong is what the Chinese communists are  most afraid of, and Falun Gong is most severely persecuted by the CCP for 10 years now. The CCP is becoming more and more weak - many people are making public statements denouncing the CCP.

I and my colleagues in the Chinese Transitional Government support Falun Gong in their efforts on "put an end to persecution and disintegrate the CCP". The goal of the Chinese Transitional Government is to overthrow the Chinese Communist dictatorship; to establish a democratic society. Because only the overthrow of the Chinese Communist tyranny can solve all the problems in China.

Also, in recent days, the bloody massacre in Urumqi, Xinjiang by the CCP, with the communist media stirring up ethnic conflicts to divert attention from the CCP troubles throughout China.

I had publicly expressed that I am against the CCP persecuting Chinese Uyghurs and Chinese Han people; I call for Chinese people not to be fooled by the communists, I raised a valid point: "In today's Xinjiang, today's China, there is no difference between Uyghur and Han; only rulers and the ruled, the oppressor and the oppressed. All the killings and disasters in China have been created by the CCP.

We, the oppressed, shall stand together in order to prevent the atrocities committed by the CCP; in order to put an end to suffering and killings. This is where it hurts the Chinese communist party.

Nuclear reactor in use 1.8 billion years ago

In 1972, A French factory imported uranium ore from Gabon, and found surprisingly that the uranium had already been extracted!
Natural uranium contains 0.7202% of uranium-235, the fissionable isotope contained in nuclear fuel; but Uranium in Oklo. Gabon contains less then 0.3%.
So scientists around the world gathered in Gabon to explore this phenomenon. They have found that it is a highly technically designed underground nuclear reactor which is beyond the capabilities of our present scientific knowledge. This nuclear reactor came into being 1.8 billion years ago, and was operational for about 500 thousand years.

Scientists investigated the uranium mine and the results were made public at a conference of the International Atomic Energy Agency. The uranium indeed had been used. One may wonder what exactly happened at Oklo?

French scientists found traces of fission products and fuel wastes at various locations within the mine area. These observations were puzzling at first because it is not possible for natural uranium to go critical, except under very special circumstances such as the presence of graphite or heavy water as a moderator, neither of which could reasonably be expected to have been present in the vicinity of Oklo.

The half-life of U235 is 7.13E8 years, which is considerably shorter than the half-life of U238 at 4.51E9 years. Since the original formation of the earth, more of the U235 had decayed than the U238. This means that the natural uranium ore had a much higher uranium concentration many years ago than it does today. Indeed, it is easy to show that about 3 billion years ago the U235 concentration was in the neighborhood of 3 w%, sufficiently high to reach the critical point for a chain reaction to occur in ordinary water, which was present near Oklo at that time.

Surprisingly, this uranium mine's nuclear reactor was well designed. Studies indicate that this reactor was several miles in length. However, for such a huge nuclear reactor, the thermal impact to its environment was limited to 40 meters on all sides. Even more astonishing is the fact that the radioactive wastes have still not migrated outside the mine site. They are held in place by the surrounding geology.

Faced with these findings, scientists consider the mine to be a 'naturally occurring' nuclear reactor. The Oklo reactor has been documented for its importance as an analogue (a structural derivative of a parent compound) in the disposal of nuclear fuel wastes. But few people are bold enough to go one step further.

Advanced civilization?

Rene Noorbergen, in his book Secrets of the Lost Races, says:"Following the publication of Dr. Perrin's report by the French Academy of Sciences, however. questions concerning his conclusions were raised by many experts.

Glenn T. Seaborg, former head of the United States Atomic Energy Commission and Nobel prize winner for his work in the synthesis of heavy elements, pointed out that for uranium to "burn" in a reaction, conditions must be exactly right.

This water most be extremely pure. Even a few parts per million of any contaminant will "poison" the reaction, bringing it to a halt. The problem is that no water that pure exists naturally anywhere in the world!

A second objection to Dr. Perrin's report involved the uranium itself. Several specialists in reactor engineering remarked that at no time in the geologically estimated history of the Oklo deposits was the uranium ore rich enough in U 235 for a natural reaction to have taken place.

Even when the deposits supposedly were first formed, because of the slow rate of radioactive disintegration of U 235, the fissionable material would have constituted only 3 per cent of the deposits—far too low a level for a "bum," Yet a reaction did lake place. suggesting that the original uranium was far richer in U 235 than a natural formation could have been.

If nature was not responsible, then the reaction must have been produced artificially. Is it possible that the Oklo uranium is the residue from an antediluvian reactor that was destroyed by the Flood and redeposited in West Africa?"

As a matter of fact, many people today know that the reactor is a relic from a prehistoric civilization. It's probable that two billion years ago there was a fairly advanced civilization living at a place now called Oklo. This civilization was technologically superior to today's civilization. Compared to this huge 'natural' nuclear reactor, our current nuclear reactors are far less impressive.

Danger for freedom of expression in Hong Kong

Thousands of people block the streets in a huge protest march
against a controversial anti-subversion law known as Article 23 in
Hong Kong, 01 July 2003. (Peter Parks/AFP/Getty Images)
The Hong Kong Journalists Association (HKJA) has released its 2009 annual report on freedom of expression in Hong Kong. The report this year focuses for the first time on an event outside Hong Kong - the passage in Macau of national security legislation.

This issue is vital for Hong Kong, because the move puts undoubted pressure on the Hong Kong government to follow suit - possibly before the chief executive, Donald Tsang, steps down in June 2012. Hong Kong has already - in 2003 - tried to enact such legislation, but strong opposition forced the administration to withdraw the bill. One of the biggest factors in this process was the half-million strong march on July 1st 2003.

Macau's legislation was passed with little debate, just four months after a public consultation document was published. The law contains offences which in some cases are extremely broad. If they were adopted in a Hong Kong national security law, they would pose a very serious threat to freedom of expression, including press freedom.

The HKJA argues in its report - called "Macau Takes The Lead" - that the Hong Kong government should resist pressure to enact national security legislation. And if such legislation is enacted it should contain robust safeguards. These should include relevant provisions of the Johannesburg Principles on National Security, Freedom of Expression and Access to Information, as well as proper public interest and prior publication defences.

The report also notes that little is being done to strengthen the protection of media freedoms. The government has failed to issue a consultation document on Radio Television Hong Kong's future, it has refused to heed calls for changes to the Telecommunications Ordinance to allow greater media diversity, and nothing has been done to enact a freedom of information law to give the public a statutory right to demand government information and documents.
A
bout the only area where the government has acted is on legislation governing indecency and obscenity. But the HKJA fears that the government may restrict freedoms in this area - in particular in dealing with internet publication. Indeed, any move to legislate on what the internet can and cannot publish may have repercussions that go far beyond the area of obscenity.

This move comes as there are growing indications of self-censorship in the media, in particular in areas that are sensitive to China. The 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre is one such area, with several organisations playing down the significance of the 20th anniversary of the massacre - despite a record turnout for a vigil to remember the victims. Indeed, participants in events marking the anniversary were critical of certain Hong Kong media organisations, which they accused of taking a line more akin to that of Beijing.

The five-chapter report focuses on the debate in Macau on national security legislation and its implications for Hong Kong; the radio debate in Hong Kong; the government's obscenity proposals; new China reporting rules; and the effect of the financial downturn on the media industry.

Copies of the report may be downloaded from the HKJA website.

NTDTV presents International Classical Chinese Dance Competition: photos

Jennifer Su's "Fairy of the Phoenix" (NTDTV)
The third annual International Classical Chinese Dance Competition (Adult Female Division) hosted by New Tang Dynasty Television (NTDTV) took place on June 19 (Friday) afternoon in New York. Contestants were divided into Group A and B, performed self-selected dance and required dance techniques.

Contestants from all over the world deduced Chinese historical stories and figures with Chinese classical dance techniques in their self-selected dances, such as "Moon Godess", "Celestial Lady of Galaxy", "Ode to the Lotus", "Nezha", "Lady Warriors of Yang Family", "Lady Meng", "Junior Yingtai", "Mulan", "Crystal Sound and Jade embroidery", "Chang'e Flying to Moon", "Tang Concubines", "Zhaojun in Tears", "Twilight", "Fairy Lady with Leather Fans" and etc.

NTDTV International Classical Chinese Dance Competition is divided into four parts: the Male Adult Division, the Male Junior Division, Female Adult Division, and Female Junior Division. Each division will award one Gold Prize, one Silver Prize, two Bronze Prizes, and three Honorable Mentions.
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U.S. navy tracks North Korean ship

WASHINGTON/SEOUL—The United States is monitoring a North Korean ship for weapons and has deployed anti-missile assets to the Pacific in case Pyongyang launches more missiles, U.S. officials said on Thursday.
The U.S. Navy is monitoring a vessel called Kang Nam at sea under new U.N. sanctions that bar North Korea from exporting weapons, including missile parts and nuclear materials, they said.
The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the ship based in North Korea became "a subject of interest" after leaving a North Korean port on Wednesday.
They declined to say what the ship, now in international waters, might be carrying.
The Kang Nam is the first ship to be monitored under the U.N. sanctions adopted last week after Pyongyang raised tensions by test-firing missiles, restarting a plant to produce arms-grade plutonium and conducting a nuclear test.
Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, declined to discuss specifics at a briefing, but he stressed the U.N. resolution would allow the U.S. Navy to search a ship only with its flag country's consent.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Washington was also concerned about the possibility of North Korea firing off more missiles, possibly in the direction of Hawaii.

Shock ads warn of China-Australian deal

Ian Melrose, an Australian millionaire businessman, has aired advertisements on Australian television showing images of the bloody 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. His message was to warn the Rudd Government not to let China take control of Australian resources.
As a row broke out with the West Australian Government, Mr. Melrose said that governments had become too close to China and were ignoring its human rights abuses to get money and economic gains.
All those brave and honorable politicians and businessmen who say you shouldn't mix human rights with politics, if they were next in line for the firing squad because they'd spoken up against the Chinese Government, or they were next to go into the torture room, having heard other people screaming, they'd change their position instantly,” he told the The Australian newspaper.
The issue at stake is the proposed increase in stake by the Chinese government-owned Chinalco in Rio Tinto, a world leader with interests in copper, gold, iron, coal, aluminum and other mineral resources. Mr. Melrose said that the ownership increase to 18 per cent by Chinalco was the last straw and he had to make a stand. The Foreign Investment Review Board is due to make a decision within weeks. Australian Premier Colin Barnett yesterday slammed the television advertisements and warned they could damage Australia's relationship with China, which is the nation's biggest export market.
Mr. Barnett said the Tiananmen Square massacre was a low point in modern China's history but it should be allowed to move forward as a modern economy.
To try to tie links between that violation of student rights, and a proposal for Rio Tinto to develop a partnership with Chinalco, I think is just drawing a bow that doesn't exist. It will do it (our relationship) no good at all,” he said.
Mr. Melrose, who is spending more than $200,000 on the ads to air on television all week, said the public had to be warned. He felt that no amount of money was too much to spend.
If they want to get into bed with a country that has a human rights record like China, kills hundreds of thousands of Tibetans, tens of thousands of Falun Gong and a couple of thousand in Tiananmen Square, if that doesn't set alarm bells ringing that you shouldn't give them control of our strategic resources, then they have no brains,'' he said.

Tibetans morns on anniversary Date

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the 1959 Tibetan rebellion against the Communist takeover of Tibet. According to a secret file from 1960, the Chinese army killed 15000 Tibetans in 3 days in 1959. Additionally from March 1959 to October 1960, 87000 Tibetans were "eliminated".
Usually the Chinese Communist government uses the military to tighten control over Tibetan areas weeks before this sensitive time, but in this 50th anniversary the atmosphere is much worse. A large number of troops have been sent there much earlier, and foreign travelers have been restricted from visiting Tibet a month earlier than usual.
The media in China has been filled with Communist party propaganda, accusing the Dalai Lama of trying to separate the country. The state television network, China International Television Corporation, showed special movie clips telling the Chinese people the Communist version of the history of Tibet.

While the Chinese government controlled mass media criminalizes the Dalai Lama, the sound of support for Tibetan freedom can be heard in almost every democratic country. Candlelight vigils have been held around the world for the Tibetans killed by the Chinese army last year.
Recognizing the plight of the Tibetan people on the 50th anniversary of the uprising against Chinese oppression and the exile of His Holiness the Dalai Lama, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution calling for a "sustained multilateral effort to bring about a durable and peaceful solution to the Tibet issue".
A few hundred exiled Tibetans gathered in Belgium, the headquarters of the European Union, urging them to put pressure on the Chinese regime to release jailed Tibetans, and to allow the European Union to send an investigative team into Tibet to uncover the truth regarding the 628 political prisoners and 1200 missing Tibetans.
In Hong Kong students and human rights activists held a commemoration in front of China’s correspondence office in Hong Kong. The students presented a letter to the office, but the security officer refused to accept the letter. The students left the letter in front of the office door.
Tibetans in Taiwan also held a candlelight vigil. According to the Tibetan information center, there are about 200 thousand Tibetan exiles that live outside of China.

A story about ginseng

Wild ginseng is found in northeastern China. The remote Changbai Mountain in Jilin Province is especially well-known for growing wild ginseng roots that are hundreds or even thousands of years old. But the legend has it that the real hometown of ginseng is Shandong, not northeastern China.
Here is the story:

A long, long time ago there was a temple called Yunmeng temple on Yunmeng Mountain in Shandong. (Yunmeng means “dreams of clouds” in Chinese). There were two monks in the temple, one master and one disciple. The master was never in the mood for reading Buddhist scriptures or working in the field. He treated his young disciple very cruelly, and the young monk became pale and looked very weak.

One day the old monk left the temple and left the young disciple to work alone in the temple. A child wearing a red bib showed up. Nobody knew where he was from. He helped the young monk work. From then on, whenever the old monk left, the child came to help the young monk work in the temple. As soon as the old one returned, the child disappeared.

As time passed by, the old monk noticed that his disciple looked ruddy and he seemed to be able to finish every job he was assigned. The old monk was bewildered and he thought this was something really strange. He called his disciple over and interrogated him about what was going on. Reluctantly, the young monk told him the truth. The old monk thought, "There are few people living on the mountain, so where is the kid with the red bib from? He must be the legendary 'herb stick' (ginseng)." Therefore, he took a red thread out from his suitcase, threaded it onto a needle, and gave it to the young monk. He ordered the young monk to stick the needle into the kid's red bib if he showed up again.
The next day, the old monk left. The young monk wanted to tell the child what had happened, but he was too scared. He finally stuck the needle into the child 's red bib when the child was hurrying to go home. Early in the morning of the next day the old monk locked his disciple in the temple, and then he picked up his pickaxe and followed the red thread with a all the way down to an old red pine tree. There he found one herb stick. He was extremely excited at this discovery. He lifted the pickaxe to dig out a ginseng child (ginseng that is very old takes the shape of a child).
The old monk took the ginseng child back to the temple and put it in a pot with water. Then he weighted the lid with a stone. Then, he called his disciple to make a fire and cook it. Unfortunately he had to leave again on an urgent summons from his friend which he could not refuse. Before leaving, he told the young monk seriously, "You are not allowed to open the lid before I come back." After the old monk left, the pot unceasingly emitted a fantastic smell.
The young monk was overcome with curiosity. He ignored his master's instructions, moved away the stone, and lifted the lid from the pot. The smell was so good that he tore off a piece of the stick to sample it. It was so sweet and juicy! So, forgetting everything, the young monk ate up all of the ginseng and soup. Just then, the old monk came hurrying back. The disciple was too anxious to do anything so he ran towards the temple. Suddenly he felt his legs lightening, and he flew up into the sky. While the old monk saw this scene, he knew that the disciple had eaten the entire ginseng. He was very sad.
Actually, the child with the red bib was a ginseng root. It was one of a pair of ginseng sticks living under the old red pine tree. Since the old monk took only one of them, the one left behind cried from loneliness. The red pine tree said, "Good boy, don't cry. I will bring you to northeastern China where there are few people. There I can protect you forever." The ginseng stopped crying, and followed the pine tree to flee away. They settled down on Changbai Mountain in northeastern China. Since then, there were no more ginsengs in inland China. Instead, ginseng roots on Changbai Mountain became more and more plentiful.

High flying dreams

Chinese kite
China is the homeland of kites, also known as ‘paper birds’.  Kites have been made in China for more than 2,000 years. It was said that the craftsman Lu Ban "cut bamboo in the shape of a magpie and flew it". This is considered as the predecessor of kites.

Li Ye who lived during the period of the ‘Five Dynasties’, once in his office linked a line to fly a kite as a game.  He also put a bamboo flute at the head of the kite.  When flying in the wind, the flute made the same sounds as the zheng, an ancient musical instrument, and so was called the 'flying zheng.'

In the Song Dynasty, a 'magic fiery crow' appeared.  It was a kite fitted with gunpowder and flew above the camps of the enemies, so as to achieve military objectives.

No wonder the famous British scholar Joseph Needham included kites as one of the major scientific inventions of the Chinese nation.

In 1749, British scientists put a thermometer on each of six flying kites. This was the first time the temperature of the atmosphere at high altitudes had been measured.

In 1877, the Russian naval officer Mozhaiskeasky, for the first time tied himself to a big kite pulled by a troika and flew with the kite for 10 minutes.

In 1893, the U.S. National Weather Service constructed 17 high-flying observatories and flew them in different directions. They successfully measured the weather situations of the relevant areas.

In 1901, when Marconi was sending a telegraph, the transmission antenna was broken by the wind. It suddenly occurred to him that he could replace it by using a kite to lead the line. Eventually the cross-Atlantic wireless telegraph was successfully sent.

The obscenity of public executions - Part 1

In 1946, I had my first experience of watching an execution as a young boy in a public school. The communist regime chose a venue for the execution - the “Daowai” garden, a small local attraction for the public to watch monkeys, black bears, tigers and peacocks as well as to play on a slide, swing and others.  In the post-Spring season, it swarmed with visitors who wanted to enjoy the flowers and animals.

It was inconceivable why a beautiful and tranquil little garden, from which I had derived enormous pleasure, be converted to a public killing field. Executions at an interval of eight or ten days so terrified residents that they dared not walk along the surrounding streets at night, or even in broad daylight.

I was too young to comprehended or even know the words on the billboard erected inside the garden, such as 'identity verification,' 'bound and conveyed to the execution field' and 'summary execution,' but the big ticks in red on the billboard evoked terror. When later we played a childrens game called 'execution' in two groups, a 'secret agent' captured was bound to be executed, accompanied by the loud yelling out of a few clichés on the billboard, since a 'secret agent' was considered equivalent to 'counter-revolutionary'. If the fake execution of the 'agent' did not look real enough, the shots would be repeated. In hindsight, the games are implausible. Shall I attribute this to our childish state of mind or to something else?

It was on a very cold day in late autumn that I witnessed an execution for the first time in my life. Four or five of the condemned, all trussed up, were walking in front of the procession. Two of the elderly even exchanged some whispers. One of them wore a robe, another one an expensive overcoat with a fox-fur collar. A young man, whom I guessed to be in his twenties, was walking close to the side of the street. His gait resembled that of university students, wearing a student cap with the emblem of a technology university and a black cotton-padded Soviet-style jacket.

Members of the death squad were walking behind, each having a shining pistol in hand. Blindly I followed the youth for a few dozen meters along the footpath. I stared at his eyes set in a pale face, blank and expressionless, which seemed to me to be querying where he was heading for. And he seemed to have no idea what was happening to him, neither did I know that he was on his way to execution, or was to be shot dead in a moment. But another young man, of similar age, was following him. The only difference was that the former was heavily bound while the latter was holding a shiny gun. Behind each of the tightly bound prisoners was an indignant and angry man. Why they were so angry was beyond me. Would they really kill these tightly bound people?

Further back was the masses shouting slogans and waving paper flags. Their chief was so energetic that his voice reached almost to a yelling pitch and he held the flag higher. His action was simulated by those surrounding him. However, the people who lagged behind were far less resonant in shouting every time they waved the flags. Some faked a posture while actually lowering their heads momentarily when raising flags and had only weak voices. Apart from the organized procession, there were many residents around – children and adults alike – to watch the execution for fun.

As I scurried along, I heard a burst of gunshots from inside the Garden. On hearing this, men and older boys rushed to the scene to be the first to see the dead. When I edged my way inside, my eyes were greeted by corpses. The youth resembling a university student was lying near the entrance of the Garden, facing down; a large pool of blood was oozing from his head, his cap gone.

I found among the watchers the only son of my landlord, nicknamed 'fatty', who was three or four years my senior, as well as our thirty plus year old night watchman. Always a single man, he scratched a living by watching over thirty households in our compound in return for a small wage that we managed to collect for him. To his credit, he never failed to open the compound gate for later-comers in the midst of a winter night, in defiance of rain, snow or freezing temperatures. In addition, as tap water was unavailable at that time, he was hired to deliver water to many households, particularly those living upstairs unable to access water. The demand was heavy in severe winter season.

The execution field was swarming with onlookers, as if they were having fun in a fair, except for the ghastly atmosphere and the expressions people wore. A few minutes later, an elderly woman arrived, a big gourd in her left hand and a small one in the other. With both hands stained with fresh blood, she solicited the bystanders in a hoarse voice:” Anyone can help to turn it (a dead body) around?” For sure, a brave man volunteered to meet her request. It was the night watchman, I found, and wondered why he should poke his nose into this business and whether anyone dared to hire him in the future.  Then I caught sight of a big hole in the right eye socket of the dead 'university student' and the scalp and flesh in that part were gone – probably under the watchers’ feet at that moment. The woman then began to scoop the brains with the small gourd and poured it into the big one, in a way like spraying spice into a bowl of noddle.  When questioned why, she answered:” my son was frightened into madness when he watched a gun execution last time. I learnt there was a cure for this by drinking soups made of dried human brain powder.” Her words were so impressed on me that I would never forget them in my life.

Terrible scenes

Somehow this episode became a subject at an old schoolmate get-together when I visited my hometown in 1993. I was very surprised to learn that Mr Li Huaiming also witnessed that terrible scene.
“You were there as well?” I asked.
“Yes. Many in our compound went to see it, children as well.” He replied, adding:” the Garden of 20th Street had been turned into an execution ground at the time. People were so scared that few walked along that street even in daylight.”

That night-watchman, I was told, had blood on his fingers after turning the corpse around and was wondering where to clean them when 'Fatty', the son of the landlord, happened to put his head close. So the watchman simply scraped his fingers on Fatty’s face, leaving two scarlet bloody lines from under one of Fatty’s ears across to the chin. He surely meant a joke, but that went too far. Instantly the boy become very pale and ran home. I felt lucky that I was absent, otherwise I might have also got the clean-up on the face and burst into loud cries from fright. That was my first experience of watching brutal executions at the field. The subsequent fear would keep me awake in bed. Even if I fell asleep, I would wake up from frequent nightmares.

After watching numerous killings, I was numbed, feeling no more fear but an empty sympathy for the crying wife and children beside the dead husband or father whom they were collecting. “He has lost his father”, I would say to myself, at the sight of the child of a similar age with mine moaning at the side of a body. “What crime had his father committed?” I would wonder…….  I was deeply struck by the horror that hang over the execution field in my young age, but that proved nothing compared to the atmosphere at the execution spot where Zhang Zhixin was shot dead during the Cultural Revolution.

Why should human compassion lose to numbness? It is a subject most worthy of studying. I would be grateful if some of the younger generation would undertake this theme for research. The last half century saw large-scale political movements rolling out every twenty years when massacres took place and intimidation of the population was rife.It was as if the devil had been let out to torture the good-natured folks.

It happened at the end of March or beginning of April, a season that was warm during the day but freezing at night, when a few of the executed dead came back to life. However, again … … Somehow, I had always been possessed with terrible images about these incidents, so much that I often woke up from nightmares. It was then, I saw a dead old man lying down at the side of a round 50 cm-deep cement pool about 20 to 30 metres further down from the entrance of the Garden. He had not been shot in the head and there was little sign of bleeding. After the executioners left the field, the watchers scrambled to break inside the Garden through a hole on the dilapidated wooden fence, which comprised wooden board measured roughly 10cm by 200cm at an interval of about 10cm. People could peep through the gap into the garden.

As the crowd closed in to look at the dead, a man in his thirties suddenly jumped out and walked directly to the corpse. With just a few strokes, he stripped the dead of his clothing. Apart from the first execution where the dead were lucky enough to be covered in clothing, I saw on late occasions men surging forward to the dead at the gunshots and then stripping the dead bare while kids were rushing to catch up. The dead were completely exposed, like undressed guests in public baths who however still hold a towel to conceal their private parts. On this occasion, the looter was thorough as usual, as he shamelessly pulled down the underpants and the socks as well as other clothes from an old dead man. Then, all of a sudden, the man, believed to have been dead, jerked and sat up, probably on account of severe coldness.  The onlookers were terrified and unprepared.

The looter still stood by with the booty on his shoulders when the old man, naked as if he was in a public baths, knelt down and entreated: ” spare me, spare me, please, please.”  He grabbed his cream colored woollen trousers from the looter and repeated the words piteously. Did he just want the trousers or all of his clothes? Then the looter shot him an angry look, kicked him to the ground. When the old man loosened his grip, the looter ran away.  In the commotion, I heard someone saying “this set of clothes could fetch a fortune.” At that time, the old man kept kowtowing and bowing with both hands folded to everyone around. This put all of us at a loss. I did not know what was in his mind. We were so close to him – less than five meters – we saw him clearly – very thin, a pale face, purple lips shivering. I guess fear and coldness caused him to tremble all the time. Then someone from the crowd said: ”He is doomed anyway. Don’t let him suffer any more.” Bricks and sticks were soon collected. The man, stoned and beaten, finally drew his last breath. I stood at a distance aghast, watching as I clinched my teeth hard trying to stop myself from shaking. Some older boys followed suit to hit his groin with clubs, bricks and stones. His testicles soon turned purple and were swollen to the size of a melon and would become as big as the old man’s head if this continued. Laughter broke out among some onlookers but most remained nervous and silent.

I was a timid boy, yet very keen to watch the process from the beginning to the end. I did not know why. It could be because I lacked the courage to go home alone, so were my other little friends. Why should I follow the procession of execution every time I saw it… … ? I would even regret missing a chance while attending school. Once I heard an account of how the counter-revolutionists Li Jiupeng and Yao Xijiu were treated.  Before being shot dead, they were bound to a tree and whipped with leather strips until the executioners felt their anger had been vindicated. Why we were so keen to watch the scene even though remaining fearful? It was beyond me. Now in hindsight, I believe my psyche was abnormal at that time, and so were all the watchers. The bloodcurdling environment may serve as a start to nurture a mentality of hatred, which, reinforced by every political movement of revenge and violence, eventually caused people to lose the nature of human beings.

But I have never participated in any persecution. With my 'bad' family background, I worried all the time for troubles as light as a tree leave to befall on me. How could I venture to hurt anyone? Moreover, I was not empowered to act, since I was always a target myself in every political campaign. I remember these words I wrote in a letter to a friend:” My parents did not bequeath me any legacy, nor any assets that I might be proud of. But what they did leave me are a gold heart, a resilient temperament and a pair of able hands.” Thanks to God who has given me true love and immense strength, I was able to survive. God also teaches me to treat our fellow humans with love.

Who robbed the dead of their clothes? I heard that families could handle the rest after their beloved ones were shot dead. But if the executed had no family members, the authorities would dump corpses in the mass burying ground near the rubbish dump area known as 'area with no council admin' or 'jian ba wai', 'quan he' . The mass burying ground was the domain of wild dogs and ravens that fed on the corpses. Many a time, rag-pickers saw wild dogs fighting for human flesh with the winner running away with an arm or leg in its mouth.
According to the rumour, this was how the clothes-stripping began. Initially, the thieves were not as brazen and stole the clothes in the burying ground quietly. No one knew exactly who the thieves were – some identified the rag-pickers whereas some believe there were more involved. Why did no one dare to strip the dead on the execution field at the onset? It was hard to ascertain, but there could be several reasons. First, people would rather die in poverty than to resort to that kind of behaviour. Second, it would be a big shame to the thief if identified by those who knew the executed. Who would want to associate with such a name then? Third, the clothing on the corpse would worth much more than that of the rag collected after several days.

It is said rag-pickers had discussed it before they ventured to the burying ground in groups to embolden themselves. After all, it was too wild a place for any individual to visit, not to mention the ravenous wild dogs that were hunting around all the time. It took even more guts to pull clothes from stiff corpses.  Further, such clothes were a great temptation, sometimes it made one’s heart ache to see dogs tear them apart. So better to go there earlier than late, as we often say “there is always someone earlier than you.” 

The above considerations might have precipitated a rush to strip the dead at an earlier stage. Looting at the buryial ground ceased and the looters waited at the execution field instead. Moreover, it was easier to pull off clothes while the body was still warm. Someone even joked that it was better to strip the prisoners before the execution, if it was allowed. Indeed I heard a comment from a non-looter like “it is better to pull off the clothes first, to avoid blood spilling”. I believed that was exactly what was in the looters’ mind. I lamented the degeneration, my heart palpitating in pain. It must be a bad omen to buy the clothes at the fair and be dressed in them.

Photos: Han Couture of China

Award-winning styles at Global Han Couture Design Competition

The final of the Han Couture competition
The Global Han Couture Design Competition ended successfully on October 19, 2008 in New York City. The final competition and award ceremony was held at the Prince George Ballroom. The two thousand Western and Chinese audience members in attendance enjoyed the graceful and simple designs presented by approximately fifty contestants.

The audience was given a taste of genuine, traditional Han couture, including typical clothing styles from the Han Dynasty, Tang Dynasty, Song Dynasty and Ming Dynasty. The competition designs were categorized as casual wear or formal/business wear.

Han couture has two basic styles: A two-piece set consisting of an upper garment with an open cross-collar shirt and skirted lower garment, and a one-piece robe consisting of a long dress. The most striking characteristic of Han couture is its collar, which consists of a right-sided lapel. Traditional Han couture has persisted for thousands of years.

The gold medal winner for casual wear was an elegant design in the Song Dynasty style. It consisted of an upper garment with a short skirt in the style of “jiaoling youren” (wrapping a piece of fabric from the right side across to the left side). It was made of fine linen and silk. The upper garment had a greenish color with an inlaid silver-gray, broad border. The skirt had pink flowers scattered across a lighter green fabric. The costume was elegant, not decadent. When the model walked slowly past the audience with her classic beauty, she appeared as if she had just stepped out of an ancient painting.Han_comp_3_670564503.jpg

The gold medal winner for formal attire was a classic dress that would have been worn in the Tang Dynasty. The upper garment was a sapphire open cross-collar shirt, and the long tulle skirt was embroidered with an orchid design. The waist skirt was tied high, making the model slim and graceful.

Cultural values

The above-mentioned costumes all had in common a dedication to the traditional elements of Han couture: clean color, simple fabric, and simplicity over creativity. These elements comprise the true essence of the Han Couture Competition. On the other hand, you can also see within these works a nobility and grace inherent in the purity and simplicity of the designs. The longer you look at these articles of clothing, the more beautiful you feel they are. The competition truly helped people appreciate China’s splendid culture displayed through Han Couture.Han_comp_4_815920020.jpg

Wearing traditional Han Couture transmits the values of the culture to the person wearing the garments. The person becomes kind, polite, humble and tolerant. This applies to both men and women. Men should be Yang and strong while women are naturally Yin and gentle. When Yin and Yang supplement and complement each other, society is harmonious and cordial.

Han Couture has such a profound inner meaning because Han culture is divinely imparted. The harmony between heaven and humans is reflected in every detail of Han Couture. For example, the back seam in traditional Han Couture is sewn down the middle of the dress. This reflects the value of being upright. A skirt consists of 12 pieces, with each piece indicating a month. Ancient Chinese wore a piece of jade hanging from their belt--it was not just for decoration but was there to remind people to behave properly like pure jade.

Han Couture is also very practical and comfortable. Genuine Han Couture doesn’t have zippers or buttons. Instead, it is fastened using ribbons or ties. For example, the upper garment has an inner tie on the left and an outside tie on the right. The belt for the skirt and trousers is a long, thin cloth. The fabric is made of natural materials, such as silk, cotton, or linen. When you walk slowly wearing Han Couture, you will have a calm and peaceful mind.
Han_comp_5_412384971.jpg

Special assignment: making cigars for Chairman Mao

An elderly man, Mr. Guao Rong Fan now aged 82 recalls the time he was assigned to produce cigars for Mao Ze Dong.
His career began making cigars in the late 1950’s at a tobacco factory in Shi-In city. He developed superior skills at making hand-made cigars during this time. One day in autumn 1964, a Communist Party secretary from the factory ordered Mr. Guao Rong Fan and three co workers to pack up their personal belongings and go to Cheng Du city. Thus he had to leave his home and family unsure of what lay ahead. This would have been quite worrying as so many Chinese people were starving and living in terrible conditions.
The four selected workers arrived at the tobacco and drug department located in Cheng Du city. The old man recalls” at beginning we didn’t know what they wanted us to do, then we found out it was to make cigars for General He. We stayed in Cheng Du city for about 4 months, working 8 hours a day, and everybody must produce 100 to 200 cigars per day.”
Not long after they returned to their homes, they were sent back to the Chen Du city factory, this time put to work to make cigars for Chairman Mao Ze Dong.
Mr. Guao Rong Fan gave a detailed insight of the cigar making process. “The techniques required to hand-make cigars are very high. First of all we need to select the best quality tobacco leaves, process them roughly, remove the stems, and then steam the leaves in Vietnamese cinnamon and the top quality of Chinese rice wine, to increase moisture, followed by bleaching with the best jasmine tea. The procedures varied according to different desired flavour. After the cooking, baking and drying process in the sun, the leaves are rolled and finally dried in an oven, there were 10 cigars packaged in each box and then be taken by special delivery to Beijing.”
The old man further explained more requirements in the making of a top quality cigar. Not only was the flavour to be good, but also the ash had to be of a high standard. Snowy white and able to hold a complete shape when the ash falls to the ground, make the optimum cigar.
The security involved for leaders of the Central Committee (the CCP) of the Chinese government is very high. The room where the work was carried out was like a fortress. Steel wire bars around the walls. The finished products were locked up in a large cast iron chest. All the doors and windows were sealed. Thus preventing anyone tampering with the goods.
Even with these tight security measures a huge “breach” was created. Mr. Guao Rong Fan recalls the time he returned from holidays. He took the seals off the door, entered the room and tried to grab the light switch cord, but it had disappeared. Immediately he reported the incident to the senior officials. The security bureau and the district military were called in to investigate. “Think about it, the seals, the doors are all well locked, how can the light switch cord have disappeared, what happened?” After a lot of drama, the security people climbed up to the roof, lifted the tiles and discovered the mice had taken the light switch cord to make a bed for themselves.
Such small mice could create such a security threat to the leaders of the country.
In 1971, Guao Rong Fan, Bing Fu Huang, Yue Rong Jiang were all moved to Beijing from Shi-In.  This cigar making group was called “Group 132” following the cigar no.13 and no.2 favoured by Mao Ze Dong and some officials. They were located in a building opposite Middle-South Ocean (Chong Nan Hai, the head quarters and residence for the high officials of the government.) Here the security was also very tight.  There were electrical wires all over the walls, soldiers guarded the doors.
“Our work was directly supervised by the Administration department of Central Committee; all the raw materials were still provided from Shi-In city. “.  Every month they had to produce 15 to 20 boxes of cigars.
After 1976, “group 132” ceased producing “especially made cigars” all of the three workers, including Mr. Guao Rong Fan became employees of the Beijing Cigarettes Factory.

The mysterious defeat of an Emperor's army

In ancient China, during the years 1643-1645BC, Li Zicheng was famous for his rapid rise from poverty, remarkably, to holding an emperor’s seat, albeit a short lived reign.
But the downfall of Li Zicheng has always remained a mystery.

For more than a century, experts have held different opinions about the possible cause of his demise. Was it through losing popular support, pride, complacency or even corruption? Others suggest a femme fatale as the cause and so on. Yet none of them are convincing. Why? Because all of these explanations cannot explain one problem. Within 40 days of Li Zicheng's powerful army occupying Beijing, the troops seemed to suddenly lose their fighting ability, and collapsed at their first encounter with the Qing Army.

According to Qiku’s analysis, Li Zicheng’s army was highly disciplined and had abundant wealth, about 70 million worth of silver, which is an amount equivalent to that raised by  the Ming Dynasty’s 10-year tax. Even during a time of extreme shortage of military funding, Li Zicheng was able to build his massive army, but why did he lose his fighting prowess after becoming rich? Why could he not organise an adequate defense after occupying Beijing?

Li Zicheng was known for his indomitable character. Several times during his previous campaigns, he was almost completely annihilated, one campaign leaving only 18 of his men standing. On another occasion only just over 50 of his soldiers were left. It can be seen that Li Zicheng staged comebacks again and again, eventually commanding an army of millions and taking down the Ming Dynasty in Beijing.
After arriving in Beijing, what undermined his power? In  papers written by Cao Shuji such as “50 Years of Historical Research Papers”, we may well be able to find the answer. Li Zicheng was not defeated by Qing, but was defeated by the plague which was rampant at that time.
The plague epidemic was rife at the end of the Ming Dynasty, before and after Li Zicheng’s arrival in Beijing. A number of documents record the plague epidemic in and around Beijing at that time.
Plague is a highly infectious disease caused by the Y. pestis bacterium, which spreads mainly among people, fleas and mice. It is characterized by swollen "nodes" and the black colour of the victims corpses. Research shows that when the plague spreads to a new region where the immune resistance of the people is low, it causes high death rates, usually higher than 50%. Documents from 7th century Europe recorded that the first plague epidemic in Europe had a death rate of up to 70%. The plague is a dreadful disease which is highly infectious, making it difficult to control and causing high rates of mortality.
Li Zichengs' army arrived in Beijing in March of the Chinese Lunar Calendar (April 5 of the Gregorian Calendar). Accounts recorded in ”Autumn of Chongzhen 16th year”, the plague appeared in the vicinity of Beijing and due to the low temperature in winter, the spread of it slowed. When spring came in March and the flowers were in bloom, the mice and fleas became active, causing a large-scale outbreak.
Due to the high mortality rate of plague, it is not surprising that the imperial guards of “Chongzhen” lost their strength over a short period of time. Li occupied Beijing without a big bloody battle, although after arriving in Beijing, Li's army quickly became infected by the plague, thus their strength in battle was greatly reduced. Even though the Qing army was a lot smaller it quickly defeated Li’s debilitated army.
The defeated army had become a source of transmission of the plague, according to the documents of “Where the thieves went so went the epidemic”. Although Li was wealthy at the time, and could recruit a large army, the new recruits would be infected and unable to resist the strong army of Qing. The plague spread throughout the barracks and, unable to shake it off for a long time, the spirit of Li and his army suffered a devastating blow, and he lost his position and collapsed after a single defeat.

Because soldiers were living as a group, the plague was devastating for the ancient army. The outbreak of the plague in 14th century Europe had caused 25 million deaths, with the majority of them being soldiers. Li’s 100 million strong army was helpless, and was left with no option but to wait for their demise in the face of the plague.
This poses another major question for that time in history. Why the Qing army did not suffer from this plague?
Wall paintings and accounts from 14th century Europe recorded that only the cavalry escaped the plague. So it has been concluded that the plague was spread by fleas. It is known that fleas are repelled by the odour of horses, and so, the cavalry was not infected. The Qing army was mainly composed of cavalry, so they did not suffer from the plague. Even though they were greatly outnumbered by Li’s army, they were in much better health, and thus in much better condition to fight.
Plague was a new type of infectious disease and was not known to Chinese people at that time, nor was their a readily known treatment. Under such conditions, the demise of the Ming Dynasty and Li Zicheng was inevitable.

Li’s army of millions was alas brought down by a relatively small plague which greatly benefited the Han Man military and played a significant role in the birth of the Qing Dynasty. Thus a great and talented leader of many uprisings was defeated, and at his death, with his last breath, was recorded as sighing “it is heaven who has eliminated me”.

A monk bears no grudges

There was once a young woman from a rich family who fell in love with a peasant. When the peasant learnt of her feelings for him, he was overjoyed and later, as a result of their secret union the girl became pregnant. The young woman's family and the towns people soon came to know what had transpired. The townspeople were outraged and felt that this behavior could not be accepted, as a result it was determined that the young woman be sentenced to death for committing such an unpardonable sin.  The people put her into an animal cage to drown her in the sea.  Before she was to be executed, the townspeople questioned her as to who was responsible for the child.  The girl did not want to give her loved one away; so without thinking, she put the blame on the monk who lived in the temple to the East.

All the people were furious,“how could a monk be so shameless and immoral”, “he seduced an earthly woman”, they quarreled amongst themselves. The townspeople could not turn a blind eye to such depraved behavior. So they went in droves to the temple, holding poles and hoes in hand, without saying a word, they beat the monk. Half dead, the monk asked for the reason. After listening to the story, he knelt down and said in tears “you folks, it’s completely all my wrongdoing. My life is of no value. I beg you to spare the lives of the girl and her child”. Seeing the scene, the people decided to expel the monk from the temple. He was then left homeless. The life of the girl with the unborn baby was spared.

Because she fell pregnant out of wedlock, the girl could only marry the family's servant. With the birth of their son, the family lived together happily.

The poor monk had to wander everywhere. He endured the coldness in winter and the heat in summer. In his old age, he set up a grass-shed next to the temple from where he had been expelled, that was where the monk would stay for the rest of his life.

One day, the girl heard that the old man in the grass shed was the monk who had been expelled. She came with her husband and her son to thank him for saving her life. When she saw the monk, she asked in tears, “can you still recognize me? You have been suffering a miserable life just because of me”. The old monk looked at the girl for a while and said, “I can’t remember what you speak of”. The girl went on to say, “I'll build you a temple to reward you for your grace”. The monk was neither moved nor interested: to this the monk replied, “you and I don’t know each other, please leave me.”

Multiple personalities

photo by Tan Ming/Secret China
Here is a real story of a patient of mine with multiple personalities.
Western medicine approaches the case of multiple personalities differently to Chinese medicine. Chinese medicine believes that a case of multiple personalities occurs when a person abandons his main consciousness and his mind is thus disturbed or manipulated by a malevolent energy. In other words, Chinese medicine considers multiple personalities as symptoms of being ghost-ridden or demon-ridden. Clinical symptoms for this malady can be defined as lack of clear conscience, coupled with irrational behavior.
Carolyn came to my clinic for treatment of her diabetes. One week later, her diabetes symptoms mysteriously disappeared. Then she returned for treatment of symptoms of hepatitis. But that too soon disappeared. After that, every once in a while, Carolyn would appear to be inflicted with a new disease that is quite serious and she would truly suffer from all the typical symptoms of that disease. The test reports, CT scan result and doctors' diagnoses reports all confirmed that she actually suffered from those diseases. Different diseases kept plaguing Carolyn. By now I am sure you will understand how perplexed both she and her doctors were, especially since she was so young.
She also had a strange fashion sense. From the American Indians' native costumers, to African style long skirts, to French baroque dresses of the 18th century, to Japanese kimonos, to jeans, to cotton-wadded Chinese robes, Carolyn's constant variations of style bedazzled me. Even more surprising was her posture, voice and demeanour matching her outfits perfectly.
I always tried my best to treat her, but I often was puzzled by the way she dressed. I thought to myself, "This is a hospital clinic, not a stage or a fashion runway. What does she think she is doing?" Since Carolyn came with a different disease and a different style or outfit each time, I began to ask myself if there could be any correlation between the two.
Finally, to find a clue to her behavior, I asked Carolyn about her family history. From that, I understood the root cause of her strange behavior. This is the story she told me.
"I just moved here from another city. I have a mother and three siblings. My father was a well-known attorney, an extremely healthy and energetic man who worked diligently and really took care of his health. We used to be a very happy family until one night when happiness suddenly vanished like a dream. Here is what happened:
I received news that my father had died of a sudden heart attack while exercising in a health club. I was so shocked that my whole body became numb. But what happened next was even more shocking. Before my father's funeral service was about to begin, a black woman who seemed to be well-educated and enjoy a certain social status came to the memorial service with three grown children, and began to sob uncontrollably. I thought that they must have come for a different memorial service, so I approached them politely saying, 'I think you may be in the wrong place.' They produced a family portrait showing five people, my father being one of them. Good God! My father had another family! Another wife and three children! My father had been carrying on a double life for more than 20 years. I almost fainted and thought I was living a nightmare.
Right then my mother and grandmother came into the room. Apparently, Mother did not know about the other family either. I asked the other family to go to another room and hold a private memorial service on their own. But they firmly refused. The two families ended up standing at each side of the coffin and bid farewell in rage, with lots of questions unanswered from this well-known attorney who would never be able to answer them.
I almost convinced myself that my father had the ability to be at two places at the same time, because in my memory he had always been with us when I grew up. He had never missed our birthday parties, and he always made arrangements for all the major holidays. The only thing that stood out was that my father frequently visited my grandmother. When I asked my half brother from the other family about our father, he told me the same thing: Father was always with them, including Christmas Eves, Thanksgivings, birthdays and so on. He celebrated all of the holidays together with them too. The only thing that he knew was that Father would often make business trips. Because father was an attorney, it was normal and understandable to them.
Our grandmother knew about all of this. When she met my father's mistress at the memorial service, she said only one thing, "The game is over." We learned afterwards that my grandmother's home was the place for my father to change "make-up and costumes" between scenes of his two roles in this play. Everyone had thought that my father was a filial son and visited grandmother all the time."
Having finished the story Carolyn started to cry, saying, "I miss him. I do not blame him because he must have agonized and been exhausted. He never had a real rest until his heart stopped beating. To me, he had always been a good father."
I asked Carolyn why she constantly changed her fashion style, "Could you be following in your father's footsteps by playing different roles with your fashion costume?"
She was stupefied at first, and then she told me that sometimes she did not really know who she was. One thing she knew for certain was that all the disease symptoms were real, and that the feelings of sickness were real, although she did not understand why her diseases disappeared as suddenly and quickly as they had come.
Based on her descriptions I decided that the root cause of her diseases was the lack of a clear main consciousness. Whenever a person's righteous spirit is weak, the evil spirits invade a person's body and/or mind.
According to traditional Chinese medicine, there are thirteen "ghost apertures" in a human body, which are the body's communication channels to the outside world. Specifically, the thirteen ghost acupuncture points are the "Ghost Palace (or philtrum), Ghost Message (or Shaoshang), Ghost Heart (or the two main mausoleums, Ghost Rampart, and Ghost Road), Ghost Pillow, Ghost Bed, Ghost City, Ghost Hole, Ghost Hall, Ghost Hide, Ghost Feudal Official and Ghost Seal."
In order to protect Carolyn from the invasion of demon spirits, I closed all thirteen "ghost apertures" with two acupuncture techniques known as "Blue Dragon Twirl" and "White Tiger Spin."
After the treatment, Carolyn became sober-minded and gradually returned to her normal self. She no longer spoke in a varying voice and started to talk in a normal voice. The symptoms of multiple personalities vanished. In other words, the malevolent ghost spirits had been expelled from her body.
Carolyn's case proves that a human body could be compared to a piece of clothes. Whoever dons it controls the human body. When the ghost apertures are open and a person's main consciousness is not strong enough, demon spirits can invade and control the body. After the ghost apertures were closed, malevolent spirits no longer interfered with Carolyn. The symptom of multiple personalities thus vanished.
I wrote a poem to record Carolyn's medical case:
Multiple Personalities -
Results of invasion from hundreds of demon spirits;
Closing the ghost apertures blocks all invasions.
My teacher's marvellous medical education
Makes the rampant demons disappear without a trace.

Ear Acupuncture

Man Undergoing Auricular Acupuncture
The various positions on the body have corresponding points on the ear.
The auricle of the ear is a unique microcosm that can display complete information about the whole body. The human body's twelve yin and yang channels on the hands and feet all reach the ear either directly or indirectly. In "The Chapter of Verbal Enquiries" in Ling Shu (Spiritual Junctures), it says, "In the ear, all of the energy channels are put together." In "The Chapter of Essays on Words of Gold and Truth" in Su Wen (Questions of Simplicity), it says, "Red from the south goes to the heart, opens on the ear, hides spirit in the heart." So, we can tell one's congenital physique from one's ear color, high or low position, thickness, flat or round shape, and firmness. We may even be able to tell the pathologies of many generations from the ear's shape and appearance.
So, how do we judge the actual situation of the internal organs by observing the ear's color, shape, or thickness? In "The Chapter of Organs" in Ling Shu it says, "If the ear is black and small, the kidney is small. If the ear is thick, the kidney is big. If the ear is high, the kidney is high. If the back of the ear falls then the kidney is low. If the ear is firm, the kidney is firm. If the ear is thin the kidney is weak. If the kidney is small then it is safe and difficult to be injured. If it is firm, it does not get sick. If the kidney is big, big means empty and an empty kidney causes deafness or tinnitus."
Most of us may not know that one of the major characteristics of ear acupuncture treatment is stopping pain with obvious curative effectiveness.
One day, a patient with tooth pain came to see me. He said, "Doctor, the money I spent on dentists over these past years could buy a house…." After one ear of acupuncture treatment, the pain stopped and he didn't have tooth-pain anymore.

This article originally appeared on http://www.pureinsight.org/node/1343

Chinese Medicine Can also Cure Emergencies or Acute Illnesses

Press acupoint Du26 for fainting patient. (web photo)
In many cases, Chinese medicine is actually the best choice for urgent and acute illnesses.
I learned my acupuncture skills from my family going back several generations. My patients near and far know me as a diligent and conscientious doctor. I try my best to deserve that reputation.
My clinic has three treatment rooms. Most of the time things are relatively quiet. My patients are from various backgrounds, comprised of various races, ages and dispositions. For the most part, they come to see me for their back pains, headaches, sore shoulders, pains in their arms, knees, wrists, and ankles, and stomach troubles. But from time to time I do treat emergency cases and complicated illnesses that other doctors feel helpless to treat.
You may ask, "Why isn't a patient in an emergency situation sent to an emergency room, instead of to a Chinese medicine doctor who can only inspect the tongue and read the pulses? Does this not endanger the patient's life?" Many people think that Chinese medicine is capable of only treating and curing chronic illnesses. Actually, other than emergencies such as amputations and surgical organ removal because of serious internal bleeding, Chinese medicine is actually the best choice for many urgent and acute illnesses.
This is because, 80% of patients who visit emergency rooms are forced to go there because they suffer from symptoms that cannot be controlled, such as angina pectoris, excessive bleeding, heatstroke, coma and asthma. The pains or the symptoms of the illnesses are beyond their tolerance level, and they cannot wait for an appointment that might be two or three months down the line. The patients feel helpless and have to seek urgent help from the emergency services. Acupuncture can promptly treat, control and cure many acute illnesses, and take patients out of danger.
In fact, using acupuncture to treat acute disease is not a new invention. It has a long history in China. Many such cases are documented extensively in ancient Chinese books. For example, Shi Ji: Bian Que Chronicles described how Bian Que, a famous Chinese doctor who lived during the Period of Warring States, used acupuncture to bring back a prince who had been pronounced dead for half a day. In the book Prescriptions for Emergency Cases written in the Eastern Jin Dynasty, Ge Hong described how to use acupuncture to save people from heart failure and other complicated, acute illnesses such as cholera.
In Theories on the Root Causes of Various Diseases written in the Sui Dynasty, Chao Yuanfang described how to use acupuncture to treat stroke and other acute heart problems. In Essential Emergency Prescriptions, Sun Simiao of the Tang Dynasty wrote extensively on using acupuncture to treat acute diseases such as stroke, severe vomiting and diarrhea, urinary obstruction, uterine bleeding, lung problems, swollen midriff, snake bite, rabies, epilepsy, and other acute illnesses. He indicated that these treatments were highly successful in clinical applications.
Recently, I treated a patient who had a long history of having fevers so high that he would fall into a coma. When his family brought him to my clinic, he had become allergic to all kinds of medicines and his body was covered with a rash from the allergic reactions. Doctors of western medicine did not know what more they could do. The patient's fever just would not go down and he was beginning to exhibit signs of respiratory failure. I used a needle to scratch his ear lobe and let out 5 to 7 drops of blood. In less than five minutes, the high fever was gone. The medical effect was so remarkable that the patient's family members were astonished.
Why is it that letting go of several drops of blood from the ear by means of an acupuncture needle can lead to something western medicine and treatment cannot achieve?
It is because there is a direct relationship between the ear and internal organs. I will cover that in the next instalment.
Origin of article: http://www.pureinsight.org/node/1312