|
Brian Rudman: Memo Santa police: Stop raining on
Falun Gong's parade
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/author/story.cfm?a_id=1&objectid=10468535&pnum=0
Last December, Santa personally awarded the Falun
Gong participants in the annual Downtown Calgary Christmas parade the
prize for "most enthusiastic entry". The year before, the Chinese
spiritual group's entry in the famed Edinburgh Arts Festival's cavalcade
won "best speciality award" for the fourth year in a row.
Indeed, a quick internet search suggests that
these days a parade isn't a parade without these ubiquitous apostles of
truthfulness, compassion and forbearance: Columbus Day Parade, San
Francisco; Annual Veterans' Day parade, New York City; Annual Nambour
Sugar Festival, Queensland. Wherever you look, there they are, marching
or drumming or posing as little fairies on giant lotus blossoms.
Everywhere, that is, but Queen St, Auckland City,
where for the past seven years the trustees of the annual Farmers Santa
Parade, headed by Chamber of Commerce chief executive and regional
councillor Michael Barnett, have resolutely resisted their approaches.
Last year they almost sneaked in, until the
organisers discovered the 60-piece Divine Land Band that they had
accepted into the parade was made up of Falun Gongsters.
Overnight the group which had been welcomed as a
great addition to the parade and offered $250 for expenses became an
organisation that "does not fit with the Santa Parade". Its
participation would not meet the trust deed's requirements to "turn
children's fantasies into reality".
The door is still firmly closed, as a testy
exchange of emails last Friday between Mr Barnett and Auckland City
councillor Cathy Casey underlines. Dr Casey, a lone voice of outside
support for the Falun Gong, in a polite hurry-up to Mr Barnett, asked
him to reply to their application to take part dated July 7. "Please
allow the Divine Light marching band to participate this year. You will
not be sorry."
Mr Barnett's response was blunt. "Your approach is
aggressive and unhelpful. This may be your style but it is not conducive
to changing people's minds."
Certainly Mr Barnett's response suggests a mind so
closed it's going to take more than sweet nothings from Dr Casey to
change it.
Last year, the Falun Gong were kicked out of the
Wellington Santa Parade despite, in previous years, winning awards for
excellence. The city council claimed no pressure had come from the
Chinese Embassy, it was all about "tightening things up in terms of
length and quality ... "
Dr Casey believes that, like Wellington City
Council, Mr Barnett's business leader's cap is getting in the way of his
Santa hat.
"There's absolutely nothing wrong with a group
wanting to celebrate in this country their particular spiritual
dimension. In China they are persecuted. Here we should be a lot more
inclusive. The Chinese consulate cannot dictate how we approach some of
our citizens."
Santa Parade general manager Pam Glaser gets
rather exasperated about the whole issue. She says the parade "is not a
platform for organisations to use to get messages out there".
She admits it's a marching band on offer, not a
travelling propaganda bus, "but they're still Falun Gong and the tune
they play isn't Jingle Bells, it's Falun Gong's theme song and
they only play one song in the parade".
But she then goes on to talk about a Japanese
dance group that is acceptable each year which "chooses the most awesome
song" to dance to. Jingle Bells perhaps? She says not.
As for the parade not being the place to sell
messages, the reality is, it's full of commercial sponsors and their
loud messages. Ronald McDonald, for example, is there in all his glory.
But that's okay, she says, "he's a kids' icon".
Pam Glaser also says that elsewhere, Falun Gong
have distributed propaganda around parades.
In Palmerston North, she said, they handed out
origami lotus blossoms which opened to scenes of torture.
Palmerston North City Council community and
commercial services manager Jane Julian says Falun Gong did distribute
leaflets while participating in a Christmas parade two or three years
ago and were warned it was not in the spirit of Christmas. They accepted
that and have paraded with "no problem since".
Personally, I think it's time for Mr Barnett and
his trustees to lighten up. A good act is a good act no matter who
performs it and whatever one thinks of their spiritual hang-ups, the
Falun Gong are proven masters of a putting on a good show.
What harm would there be in giving them a trial
run?
|