In the days and weeks leading up to Shen Yun Performing Arts’ Australian tour, which kicks off in the country’s capital, Canberra, on March 31, fans and ticket-holders have reported that Facebook has restricted their ability to share the company’s ad posts on the social media platform.
“Just so you know, I have tried twice to share, and both times [I’ve] been told: ‘To prevent any misuse, we’ve temporarily restricted your ability to use this feature on Facebook. You can try again later.’ Have you turned off the share feature ... ?” Facebook user Marie Louise wrote as a comment on a Shen Yun post in March.
A second user, Gail Klement, reported the same problem two weeks earlier: “I tried also [and] it wouldn’t let me. It gave me the option of disagreeing with [Facebook’s] decision, so I did.
“Beautiful dance form,” she added, referring to the art form of classical Chinese dance at the heart of the New York-based company’s performances.
“Thank you for trying!” Shen Yun replied to both users. “Many people have reported this same problem. Please report this to Facebook. You can alternatively post our homepage.”
A spokesperson for Meta, Facebook’s parent company, confirmed the issue was due to a bug in the system.
“There is a technical bug which is preventing people from sharing this video. It has been escalated to our engineering team to investigate and resolve,” the spokesperson for Meta told The Epoch Times on March 29.
On that note, Shen Yun’s 2022 ads tell potential audiences that what it presents on stage is “China before communism,” making the dance company’s ads a sensitive topic for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
This is because the mission of Shen Yun’s elite dancers, musicians, and artists—who came together in New York to form the company in 2006—is to revive 5,000 years of traditional Chinese culture, which had come close to extinction after 70 years under the atheistic CCP, which deemed China’s ancient Buddhist and Daoist spiritual heritage an ideological threat.
In fact, many Shen Yun performers have endured persecution under China’s communist regime for practising Falun Dafa, a spiritual discipline with moral teachings centred on the principles of truthfulness, compassion, tolerance, and meditative exercises.
Amid pressure from the CCP, Shen Yun’s dancers declare they are bringing authentic Chinese culture back to life, and within its two-hour show, they present legendary tales from history, ethnic folk dances, solo performances, and also story-based pieces that depict vignettes of communist oppression in modern-day China.Shen Yun has performed to millions in sold-out venues such as the Lincoln Center in New York, Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., and Palais de Congrès in Paris.
Shen Yun will perform in Canberra, Sydney, Melbourne, Bendigo, Adelaide, Gold Coast, and Toowoomba this year.
In both instances, Meta investigated the issues, and most of the restrictions were removed after gaining media attention.