WINNIPEG, Canada—Surgeon David Kinsley and his 7-year-old daughter were delighted by the Shen Yun Performing Arts performance at Centennial Concert Hall in Winnipeg on April 20.
“The performance was amazing. The colors, the choreography, the forms, the dancing, the movements were absolutely beautiful,” Dr. Kinsley said.
Dr. Kinsley was especially impressed with Shen Yun’s erhu soloist.
“That was impressive,” Dr. Kinsley said. “The two strings and the way she played them and went up and down the scales. It was amazing!”
“They had that exact … perfect … when they came down from the heavens and then popped up onto the screen—it was flawless,” he said. “My daughter asked me how they did that. I said it was just the magic of theater. … She really enjoyed that part.”
“She had a great time,” he added. “ It was good for all ages, and very well-done.”
This was the first time Dr. Kinsley and his daughter has seen Shen Yun.
“I brought her here to experience some culture, and this definitely filled the bill,” he said, noting that his daughter has an interest in China.
“She had been learning about it in school … and she loves dance, [so] when I saw this, I said, ‘Well, we'll have to take her!’”
Along with myths and legends from ancient times, Shen Yun presents story-based dances depicting the persecution of Falun Dafa, also called Falun Gong, a meditation and spiritual discipline based on the principles of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance.
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) launched a persecution against the practice in 1999, and adherents have since been subjected to unprecedented imprisonment, torture, and abuse.
One dance piece depicts the state-orchestrated crime of forced organ harvesting from Falun Dafa prisoners of conscience in China, part of the CCP’s persecution campaign.
“I just read an article about that in the medical literature … about the illegal harvest of organs in China. So, it really brought home … that that is happening,” said Dr. Kinsley. “What a tragedy,” he added.
“Hopefully culture and art will prevail and bring that heritage back to China,” he said, “Hopefully, it'll be spirituality, art, and a renaissance of those cultural beliefs.”
Regarding Shen Yun’s mission to revive traditional culture, Dr. Kinsley said “it’s wonderful that … someone’s gone to these great lengths to preserve such a rich and beautiful heritage and culture. Hopefully, someday we'll be able to see this in China, because it’s such a rich heritage.”
“Anything that brings cultures together where they can sit down and experience something beautiful … I think absolutely … opens corridors of communication and breaks down barriers,” he said. “I think it’s the only way and the best way to break down any bias or problems between people.”
Lucky Vandenbroek, an interior designer and owner of Vandenbroek Interiors, was enchanted by the energy and beauty of Shen Yun.
“You feel it … from their hearts, their souls, their desire to show people.”
China was once known as “The Land of the Divine” and Shen Yun presents this culture by drawing upon the Middle Kingdom’s Buddhist and Daoist philosophies. In the past, artists looked to the divine for inspiration and cultivated virtue in order to create uplifting art. Today, Shen Yun’s artists follow in this noble tradition, which is why audiences feel there is something different about Shen Yun, says the company’s website.
Mr. Vandenbroek said that before buying tickets to see the show, “I would see the advertisements and I just … felt that looks amazing.”
He told many people about Shen Yun before coming tonight to see the show.
“When I was watching it tonight, I thought I’m excited to tell everybody about it!” he said.
“I think it’s important to keep traditions alive,” he said. “It gives me a deeper understanding just coming to the see the show, especially what [the communist party is] doing.”
He noted that “it’s corruption, … it’s oppression,” and “it’s definitely not freedom,” while adding that it’s important to distinguish between the Chinese people and the authorities ruling over them.
“It’s awful what the government is doing—not the people themselves, but … the government,” he said