Shen Yun is Beautiful; Come and See For Yourself

Ms. Lee said the Shen Yun Performing Arts company had never been interfered with directly by mainland operatives, but venues and organisations had.
Shen Yun is Beautiful; Come and See For Yourself
(L to R) State MLC's Ian Cohen and Dr. Gordon Moyes, Vina Lee and John Deller at a press conference held at the Capitol Theatre on Feb 21. The Epoch Times
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<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/oceania_Vina_medium.jpg"><img src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/oceania_Vina_medium.jpg" alt="Vina Lee at a press conference held at the Capitol Theatre, on Feb 21.  (The Epoch Times)" title="Vina Lee at a press conference held at the Capitol Theatre, on Feb 21.  (The Epoch Times)" width="320" class="size-medium wp-image-121323"/></a>
Vina Lee at a press conference held at the Capitol Theatre, on Feb 21.  (The Epoch Times)

SYDNEY—Vina Lee, the Chinese-Australian manager of the Shen Yun Performing Arts International Company, says it would be a “tragedy” if Australians were to be bullied into avoiding Shen Yun or any other company while it is touring Australia.

Ms. Lee, a former principal dancer with the Guangdong Dance Theatre, and later an open class teacher with the Sydney Dance Company, was commenting on reports that the Chinese Consulate had sent letters to a number of government officials, organisations, and even schools, in an attempt to dissuade them from seeing Shen Yun.

“As Australians, why do we have to listen to someone else to tell us what to do. This is not the Australian style. This is not our way of life.

“I really think if Australians change to listen to Chinese authorities telling them what to do, then I really feel that this is a true tragedy.”

Ms. Lee said the Shen Yun Performing Arts company had never been interfered with directly by Chinese regime operatives, but venues and organisations had. She described instances in America, Europe and Australia where theatre management had received calls from Chinese Consulate officials who had endeavoured to bully theatres out of hosting the New York-based company.

“They never stop using any kind of a way to try and stop people watching the show, but it is really up to our society to really rethink who is telling us what to do,” she said.

Shen Yun’s mission is to revive traditional Chinese culture, which includes the belief that humans and the divine are intertwined, the Shen Yun website says. Ms. Lee said that having the freedom to really explore her own culture and the heritage of Chinese people had been a huge awakening.

“I think the most terrible thing in life is that you are living in some kind of environment that you didn’t know you were living in, that you were brainwashed,” she said. “But when you realise, you have this mind to rethink and you have the freedom to do whatever you need to do … I found that traditional Chinese culture actually had a lot of different answers and different perspectives.”

Speaking on behalf of her fellow performers and principal artists, Ms. Lee said that their discovery of true Chinese culture had given them a depth of understanding they had not experienced before.

“We found a lot of history and a lot of beautiful stories that are giving people some kind of hint or enlightenment; to understand that life is more than living day-by-day,” she said.

Through this learning process, she said they were discovering the universality of Chinese culture and seeing that manifest as the company and its art form developed.