According to legend, the Yellow Emperor founded the Chinese civilization in 2697 B.C. He is said to have stabilized China: It was he who united tribes and changed society from one that relied on hunting to one that grew crops, and his reign glittered with prolific inventions. Essential knowledge for the civilization of humanity became known during this time, such as music, medicine, arithmetic, the written word, and the making of boats, silk, and clothes.
He is said to have achieved spiritual enlightenment during his life. According to the legend, when he was ready, heaven opened for him, and a yellow dragon came down. He is said to have flown skyward on that yellow dragon, taking with him more than 70 officials who also achieved enlightenment, and leaving behind an enriched civilization and 10,000 witnesses of the spectacular flight.
Two other great influencers of Chinese culture, Lao Zi and Confucius, were born about 2,500 years later. Both were born in the long Zhou Dynasty during its decline. Lao Zi instructed people to return to their original, pure nature and left for people “The Classic of Dao and Virtue,” commonly known as the “Dao De Jing.” Confucius taught benevolence, and that through benevolence people can achieve the Dao.
In A.D. 67, the teachings of Buddha Sakyamuni, originating in India, swept through China, advocating self-salvation and meditation, further enriching the spiritual thought and culture of China.
Divine Culture Continues
Approximately 5,000 years after the reign of the Yellow Emperor, in 2006, a group of artists formed a performing arts company in New York, which they named Shen Yun Performing Arts. Their vision was to restore and disseminate traditional Chinese culture, retaining its depth and essence, and conveying its wisdom to people in the world today.Even the name, “Shen Yun,” is a reminder of the profound essence of the culture the arts company tries to convey. “Shen Yun” translates roughly as “the beauty of divine beings dancing.”
The company’s website says: “Since ancient times, China has been known as the ‘Celestial Empire.’ This refers not only to China’s strength and position as East Asia’s Middle Kingdom, it also captures a more profound meaning, describing a land where the divine and mortal once coexisted.
“It [the name “Celestial Empire”] refers to the belief that the divine, through various dynasties, transmitted a rich and abundant culture to the Chinese people. Chinese culture is thus known as ‘divinely inspired,’ and is the only culture in the world to have a continuous recorded history of 5,000 years.”
The types of experiences that many people talk about after watching Shen Yun productions indicate that the wisdom of the Land of the Divine, home to Confucius, Lao Zi, and countless sages, is reaching the audience.
After watching Shen Yun’s 2019 production in Paris, Laurent Dassault of the Marcel Dassault Group said: “I felt that there was deep thought going into the Chinese culture, through its history, and so it touches us Europeans a lot because we don’t have all this history throughout our families, and especially in this France that we love.”
And after watching Shen Yun’s performance in Boston in January, businessman Mike Li said: “What I see is not just performing arts. It is China’s traditional culture, a divinely inspired culture—one with a few thousand years of venerating the heaven and earth.”
Embodying Chinese Culture
Shen Yun Performing Arts transmits these meanings to modern audiences through the Shen Yun performers. All performers, from Shen Yun’s orchestral musicians, to solo virtuosos, to classical Chinese dancers, to the conductor and stage technicians, work together to uplift the audience with the essence of Chinese culture.Confucius said, “Wherever you go, go with all your heart.” Shen Yun performers, exemplifying this saying, are focused and disciplined. Each year Shen Yun’s 80-member touring companies (six of them for the 2019 season) travel the world, imparting the brightest wisdom that emerged from a culture made over the course of many dynasties.
Like many monks and sages throughout Chinese history, Shen Yun performers meditate daily together, and apply self-discipline not only to their bodies but also to their hearts and minds.
After watching the performance in Tokyo, Japanese dancer and choreographer Erika Akoh said: “Every performer’s dancing skills are superb ... Though no vocal languages are employed, they depicted every character’s state of mind by means of body language and dance.”
“I deeply felt the world’s indispensable qualities of truthfulness, compassion, gracefulness, and peacefulness in the program,” she said. “Through dance performance, these qualities are transmitted in a natural manner. The traditional values are portrayed exquisitely so that they are easily understandable.”
Performing in theaters all over the world and at many sold-out shows, Shen Yun continues to expand its tours. The company is now in its 13th season, has added new cities to this year’s itinerary, and has increased the number of performances in several major cities.
There are billions of people in the world, but the word is getting around: Shen Yun Performing Arts not only performs divine culture—it radiates it.