Sydney resident David Liang had flown to Johannesburg on June 28, 2004, with several other Australians. Their purpose—to sue the then-Chinese-Vice-President Zeng Qinghong on his state visit to South Africa.
Little did David and his companions expect that they weren’t going to achieve their objective that evening. It soon became apparent to the group as they drove along the highway to the capital city of Pretoria that they were being tailed by a hired hitman, who soon lined his vehicle up with their rented car and unleashed a barrage of bullets from an AK-47 assault rifle.
Initially mistaking the sound for fireworks, they realized they were under fire, and David had been hit. David lost function of his feet. The group’s car veered off the highway at a high speed. Fortunately, the long grass beside the highway slowed their car to a complete stop.
The hitman stopped too. He looked back. David and his group wondered if he was going to shoot them dead. The gunman eventually took off. He wasn’t interested in robbing them. The attack was to stop them from reaching the Presidential Guest House, where the former Chinese vice president was.
A retired journalist named Dan witnessed the attack. He helped David into his car and rushed him off to the hospital for emergency treatment.
The Aftermath
Things looked grim for David at that point. His feet had gaping wounds. “I had a golf-ball-size hole in my right ankle,” said David, who was in immense pain. “I did not take the hospital’s suggestion of having an amputation.”Dr. Moosa was concerned that David may not be able to walk again, guessing a conclusion could only be made in 2–3 years. “And in terms of fixing the bone it will be very, very difficult,” he added.
A Grim Prognosis
David visited Dr. Lunz, a respected ankle and foot surgeon in Sydney, and was told he may never be able to freely move his feet again, let alone return to taxi driving for a living.“This right ankle joint is totally destroyed and it is most likely he will never again be able to walk at all,” Dr. Lunz said. “Even with surgery he is unlikely to be able to walk functionally.”
Road to Recovery
When David’s friend Peggy heard of the surgery’s repercussions, she made a suggestion to save David’s feet that didn’t involve surgery. Peggy, a former doctor of Chinese medicine and acupuncture, is also a Falun Gong practitioner.“David is a Falun Gong practitioner, and he’s practiced for a while,” said Peggy. “So I shared my thoughts with his family. Eventually, they all agreed with me. Therefore, David was discharged from the hospital. We told his doctor that we would try the practice of Falun Gong. If this did not work we would come back.”
Peggy helped David to remove his gauzes and clean his wounds. She wrapped his feet with fresh bandages.
In the subsequent period of time, David practiced Falun Gong’s seated meditation. Doing so calmed his mind.
A Month After the Shooting
After a month, David was able to stand on his two feet, though he would still require crutches to walk.“It’s miraculous,” said David on his recovery. “At least they had not been infected.”
“Chinese people all know that qigong, especially Falun Gong, has high-energy matter that can help disinfect wounds and decrease inflammation,” explained Peggy.
“Everyday I would just wash his wounds with saline, tincture of iodine and ethanol. However, I know that tincture of iodine and ethanol are not enough to stop the infection in such serious gunshot wounds. It won’t work at all.”
“Honestly it was not my nursing that resulted in his healing,” says Peggy. “Tissue had grown back inside the wound, and the holes had become filled.”
Three Months After the Shooting
David returned to South Africa to show the doctors how he had recovered from practicing Falun Gong. Though it was originally estimated it'd take 2–3 years to determine if David could ever walk again, here he was walking three months later, and without having undergone any surgery.David’s Thoughts Post-Recovery
“Some people ask me if I hate the shooters for doing this to me,” said David in a conference in South Africa.“My answer is no. As Falun Dafa teaches me to tolerate and forgive.”
Throughout his entire recovery, David has insisted on keeping up his practice of Falun Gong and adhering to the spiritual practice’s three tenets of “Truthfulness-Compassion-Tolerance.”