SHEN YUN PERFORMING ARTS REVIEWS

Miami Rings in the New Year With Celebration of Faith and Tradition With Shen Yun

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Miami Rings in the New Year With Celebration of Faith and Tradition With Shen Yun
Genevieve Morejon-Lopez brought her daughter Zari and father Bernardo Shen Yun Performing Arts at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, on Jan. 1, 2023. Dongyu Teng/The Epoch Times
MIAMI—When Bernardo Morejon said he wanted to celebrate the new year with his family at Shen Yun Performing Arts, his daughter Genevieve Morejon-Lopez said no, not if this was from China because she didn’t want to support communism. Mr. Morejon said Shen Yun showed “China before communism” and, intrigued, Ms. Morejon-Lopez brought her father and daughter Zari to see the performance.
“We really enjoyed this show. We love the way that it depicted the Chinese culture. But it also depicted the things that are happening in China, unfortunately, at this time,” said Ms. Morejon-Lopez, a real estate investor, on Jan. 1 at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts.

“My mother is from Chinese descent, from back in China. And my father is Cuban. So we understand the terrible things that happened in the family in the community with communism. So we really enjoyed the fact that this was depicted and it was shown during the performance,” she said.

Cuban Americans comprise nearly a quarter of Miami’s population, including many who left Cuba to flee a communist dictatorship.

China, currently under communist rule, was for 5,000 years a land where teachings from Buddhism, Taoism, and Confucianism formed the bedrock of civilization. The ancient Chinese believed in harmony between heaven, earth, and humankind, and believed their culture was divinely inspired.

Shen Yun, based in New York, aims to revive this civilization and show the world the beauty and goodness of China before communism through music and dance.

Mr. Morejon said the show was spectacular, and Ms. Morejon-Lopez helped translate his comments from Spanish: “Very enchanting and an extraordinary performance. I loved the choreography, the colors—beautiful. And the emphasis of not separating humanity from our Creator. And we, as you know as humanity, as people, we should really separate ourselves from dictatorship.”

When Mr. Morejon learned that many of Shen Yun’s artists had fled persecution for their faith in China, and that many of the company’s members’ families still face persecution today in mainland China, he could relate.

“He feels the same way he felt in Cuba when he left the country when I was a baby because of that, to get away from the dictatorship. China has penetrated the capitalist society to their favor. But one day this will be over—We have faith,” said Ms. Morejon-Lopez.

Ms. Morejon-Lopez said she loved the spark of divinity in Shen Yun. “[They] continue to show that we must believe in the Creator ... we must stay with our morals, and try to continue to separate the modern thoughts, which takes us to the divine. That was very beautiful.”

Zari is 13, and Ms. Morejon-Lopez said she loved that she was able to share this heritage with her daughter, who will bring it into the future with her own family one day.

“I even told my father I really love the way that that’s reminded because even when I bring my daughter who’s 13, we were able to inspire her to understand that and continue with her family in the future. So I love that, as a parent, I really love that that is reminded in the performance,” said Ms. Morejon-Lopez.

Reporting by Dongyu Teng. 
The Epoch Times is a proud sponsor of Shen Yun Performing Arts. We have covered audience reactions since Shen Yun’s inception in 2006.
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