LATEST ARTICLES
Fraternity and the Tai Ji Men Case Discussed in a Hybrid Seminar
Scholars and human rights activists gathered in person and electronically in Walnut, California, on February 5.
Tai Ji Men: The Soft Power of Education
Protesting injustice has been an extraordinary educational experience both for Tai Ji Men dizi and for those who have helped them.
The Tai Ji Men Case and the Principle of Participation
Participation means that good citizens should respect the law and the institutions, but when the governments make mistakes they have a right to protest.
“As We Were Saying Yesterday”: Education, Persecution, and the Tai Ji Men Case
Persecuting independent education is the mark of injustice. In the end, however, education often prevails.
The Power of Education and the Tai Ji Men Case: An International Webinar
Persecuting Tai Ji Men was an attempt to destroy a unique educational experience, said scholars and human rights activists from various countries.
U.S. National Religious Freedom Day and the Tai Ji Men Case
As the United States celebrated freedom of religion or belief, scholars and activists issued a powerful reminder that it is not being granted to Tai Ji Men.
The Rule of Law as a Path Towards Higher Freedoms and the Tai Ji Men Case
Nobody is above the respect of just laws. Taiwan’s high rank in the Global Corruption Index scale is not coincidental, and is validated by the Tai Ji Men case.
On Judicial Day, Remember the Tai Ji Men Case
Taiwan should be commended for celebrating every year the rule of law. Now, it should apply it to Tai Ji Men.
The Tai Ji Men Case: How the Rule of Law Was Breached Twice
There are two ways to violate the rule of law. In the case of Tai Ji Men, both were at work.
Calling for a Solution of the Tai Ji Men Case
We join Tai Ji Men in respectfully asking the government of Taiwan, whose commitment to democracy in a region plagued by non-democratic regimes we appreciate and applaud, to return through a political act the confiscated sacred land to Tai Ji Men and publicly confirm that, as Taiwan’s Supreme Court stated, they never violated the law nor evaded taxes.
It would be a small step for Taiwan’s government, but a crucial one to tell the world Taiwan is truly committed to freedom of religion or belief and to the protection of religious and spiritual minorities that were once persecuted by its authoritarian and post-authoritarian regimes.
FUTURE EVENTS
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a chronology
“The Tai Ji Men Case” web site is a project by Action Alliance to Redress 1219 whose aim is to collect and put at the readers’ easy disposal articles, documents, and videos—from academic studies to magazine articles—about the case of Tai Ji Men, a mempai (similar to a school) of qigong, martial arts, and self-cultivation headquartered in Taiwan, which has been victim of discrimination and persecution in its home country since 1996, and whose street protests have generated widespread international protests. Here you can find an exhaustive chronology of the case.
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