5
Takeaways From The Times’s Investigation Into Shen Yun

Shen Yun Performing
Arts, the traditional Chinese dance and music group, is an international
sensation — with hundreds of performers on its annual world tour and holdings
of more than $265 million.
But a New York
Times investigation found that the group’s success has come at a high cost
for its young performers, many of whom were teenagers.In interviews with 25
former dancers, musicians and instructors, The Times found that performers in
Shen Yun were routinely discouraged from seeking medical care for injuries and
often worked grueling hours for low pay — while being subjected to emotional
abuse and manipulation.
The show seeks to spread
the message of Falun Gong, a spiritual movement with roots in China that has
been persecuted by the Chinese government for more than two decades. Its
performers come from all over the world to live and train in upstate New York,
and nearly all of them have family members who practice Falun Gong.Many
performers said they pushed themselves to their limits out of reverence for
Falun Gong’s founder and spiritual leader, Li Hongzhi — seeing him as a living
god and the creator of the universe.
Mr. Li, who is in his
early 70s, helped create Shen Yun in 2006. He and other lieutenants oversee the
group’s training inside a secluded 400-acre compound known as Dragon Springs in
Cuddebackville, N.Y. Performers are taught to greet Mr. Li as “shi fu,” the
Chinese word for “master.”In a statement, representatives of Shen Yun and Falun
Gong called the performers who spoke to The Times a “relatively tiny,
disgruntled group” who presented a picture of the dance group and religious
movement that distorted reality “in bizarre and dramatic ways.”
Here are five takeaways
from the investigation:
Many performers arrive
as teenagers and remain well into their adult lives.
Many practitioners see
performing in Shen Yun as a sacred honor because Mr. Li has said that its
shows, which present his teachings as virtuous and the Chinese Communist Party
as evil, are part of his quest to save humanity from a coming apocalypse.
Audience members can be saved by absorbing Shen Yun’s message, he says.
The Times interviewed
former performers who started touring with Shen Yun when they were as young as
12 years old. After moving to the Dragon Springs compound, they studied at Fei
Tian Academy of the Arts, a Falun Gong boarding school. The compound also
houses a college with undergraduate and graduate programs.
Students cannot leave
the compound without special permission, and they often see their parents only
once a year during a two-week summer break.
Performers danced through injuries,
unwilling to ask for medical care.
Mr. Li has said that
true believers in his teachings can expel illnesses from their bodies without
medical treatment. For this reason, many Falun Gong practitioners try to avoid
going to the doctor when they are sick.
At Shen Yun, former
performers said that when they got sick or injured, instructors told them it
signaled something was wrong with their spiritual state. Injured performers
were encouraged to “send forth righteous thoughts,” Mr. Li’s prescribed
meditation technique, in order to heal.
Former dancers said they
performed through dislocated kneecaps, sprained ankles and other injuries because
they did not want to be criticized as insufficiently faithful to Mr. Li.
Unlike many other major
performing arts companies, Shen Yun does not provide routine access to physical
therapists or doctors — even though its dancers perform back-bending flips and
other moves that contain elements of ballet and gymnastics.
The representatives of
Shen Yun and Falun Gong denied that performers who got hurt routinely went
without medical care.
The female dancers were
particularly vulnerable to injury because they were also under constant
pressure to maintain a rail-thin physique. Former dancers described weigh-ins
in which instructors berated them in front of their peers and called them fat.
Performers worked long
hours for low or no pay.
The student performers
endured a punishing schedule, frequently putting in 15-hour days.
On their most recent
five-month tour, Shen Yun’s schedule shows, its eight troupes performed more
than 800 shows. Often, they put on two shows a day.
Many former performers
said they were not paid at all in their first year on tour. By their early to
mid-20s, most of the former performers interviewed by The Times said, they were
being paid $12,000 a year or less.
The representatives of
Shen Yun and Falun Gong said that the program is legal and that the stipends
paid to students are in keeping with standard practice in the industry.
Shen Yun promoted an
atmosphere of fear.
Mr. Li and his
subordinates told performers that any mistakes they made onstage could doom
their audience to hell, the former performers said. After shows ended, some of
Shen Yun’s leaders would seize on errors and cast them as spiritual failings.
The group promoted an
atmosphere of fear, former performers said, stoking a distrust of the outside
world and discouraging dissent. Students were barred from looking at “ordinary
media,” the movement’s name for unapproved news outlets.
Shen Yun also exerted
control over performers’ romantic lives. Former performers said Mr. Li’s wife
sometimes tried to arrange relationships between foreign students and U.S.
citizens, efforts that the students believed were for visa purposes.
Many performers who
wanted to quit faced threats and intimidation.
Shen Yun’s leaders told
performers they would go to hell or face danger if they left, because they would
lose Mr. Li’s divine protection.
Seven former performers
said they were told that if they quit Shen Yun, they would have to repay the
cost of schooling, room and board that they had been given under full
scholarships, an amount that could reach into the hundreds of thousands of
dollars. No one followed through on seeking the repayment, they said.