Sunday, October 21, 2012

A Festive Protest in Seoul (Photos)

By Jarrod Hall
Epoch Times Staff
A Waist Drum troupe emerges from the shade into a patch of afternoon sun in the Myeongdong district of Seoul. (Jarrod Hall/The Epoch Times)
A Waist Drum troupe emerges from the shade into a patch of afternoon sun in the Myeongdong district of Seoul. (Jarrod Hall/The Epoch Times)
Last weekend, I photographed a colorful parade that was held in one of the busiest shopping districts in Seoul. The prevalent mood was calm and friendly and the whole thing felt more like a party or a festival than a call for an end to the largest totalitarian dictatorship in the world.
There was a brass-band, a Chinese waist-drumming troupe and a hundreds, possibly thousands, of people holding banners. There were Koreans, Chinese, and a sprinkling of Westerners in the crowd. There were children in strollers, elderly people who looked to be in their eighties and every age in between. They were celebrating the withdrawal of 125 million people from the Chinese Communist Party and its affiliated organisations.
It was clearly not a patriotic march or an anti-China event. There was no aggression or anger shown. No effigies were burnt and there were no calls for revenge or retribution. In fact, recent South Korea-China tensions such as illegal Chinese fishing were not mentioned at all.
The Celestial Band leads the “Tuidang” or Quit the Chinese Communist Party parade through the streets of Myeongdong in Seoul. (Jarrod Hall/The Epoch Times)
The parade was organised by a group called “The Global Service Center for Quitting the Chinese Communist Party.” They have been urging the Chinese people to abandon the Chinese Communist Party and documenting their exodus since 2004. The Global Service Center’s message is that the Communist Party does not have a monopoly on Chinese culture; that it has been committing crimes against humanity and still is; and that by quitting the Party Chinese people can do their bit to repair some of the damage.
Here are some figures for you. According to the World Bank, there were 1,344,130,000 people in China in 2011, of that number only about 80,270,000 are officially members of the Communist Party. Now you might be asking, how could 125 million people have withdrawn from The Party when there are only over 80 million members? Because almost every single child in China must pledge to love and serve the Chinese Communist Party when they are still in school. So what many people are doing is effectively unpledging. They are swearing that they have no love for the Chinese Communist Party and no longer wish to serve it.
On it’s website, the Global Service Center states: “Many recall their suffering under Great Leap Forward, the Cultural Revolution, or the suppression of Falun Gong. And where some people were victims of the Communist Party’s numerous violent campaigns, others were the perpetrators of human rights violations, now seeking absolution and forgiveness for their complicity.
Activists recreate scenes of the forced organ harvesting from prisoners that is believed to be taking place in China. (Jarrod Hall/The Epoch Times)
Activists recreate scenes of the forced organ harvesting from prisoners that is believed to be taking place in China. (Jarrod Hall/The Epoch Times)
Members of the public stop to read the banners being held by activists in Myeongdong in Seoul. (Jarrod Hall/The Epoch Times)
Members of the public stop to read the banners being held by activists in Myeongdong in Seoul. (Jarrod Hall/The Epoch Times)
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