logo
An ‘Army of Child Laborers' Enriches Shen Yun, Ex-Dancers Say in Suit

An ‘Army of Child Laborers' Enriches Shen Yun, Ex-Dancers Say in Suit

New York Times18-04-2025
Two former dancers for Shen Yun Performing Arts, the traditional Chinese dance company, filed a lawsuit on Thursday accusing the group of amassing a financial fortune and worldwide renown by subjecting an 'army of child laborers' to brutal working conditions and psychological coercion.
The lawsuit by the former dancers, Sun Zan and Cheng Qingling, is at least the second civil action targeting the group and its leaders since The New York Times last year detailed the treatment of performers and financial practices at the arts company, an arm of the Falun Gong religious movement.
Federal criminal investigators have also been examining possible visa fraud at Shen Yun, and New York State has been investigating the group's compliance with labor laws.
Advertising a glimpse into 'China Before Communism,' Shen Yun performs hundreds of shows a year featuring acrobatic routines by performers in billowy outfits. The group also serves as a messaging platform for Falun Gong, promoting the teachings of its founder, Li Hongzhi, and portraying the Chinese government, which has banned and persecuted his followers, as evil.
Shen Yun accumulated $266 million in assets by 2023, the lawsuit says, while performers worked up to 15 hours a day in training and on a 'crushing' tour schedule for little pay.
'The child laborers were paid generally no more than $500 a month — less than the price of a pair of orchestra seats at this year's Lincoln Center performance,' according to the lawsuit, which was filed in federal court in Manhattan.
Representatives for Shen Yun and Falun Gong said in a statement that the allegations 'are false and present a distorted picture of our organization, our mission, and our faith.'
'We operate with integrity and are committed to upholding the highest artistic and ethical standards,' said the representatives, Ying Chen for Shen Yun and Levi Browde for Falun Gong. They said Shen Yun uses both professional, salaried performers and students following a state-approved curriculum. And they said that a few former performers were spreading a false narrative pushed by the Chinese government while many more performers and their families have defended Shen Yun.
Mr. Sun and Ms. Cheng, who married after leaving Shen Yun and now live in New Zealand, were featured in The Times's coverage. Each had parents who were adherents of Mr. Li, who teaches that people can attain enlightenment in part by following his regimen of meditation and exercises and has implied that he created the universe.
Mr. Li started Shen Yun in 2006 and expanded it rapidly at Dragon Springs, his movement's 400-acre headquarters located northwest of New York City.
The suit describes Mr. Li as 'the mastermind of the entire forced labor scheme,' naming him as a defendant along with his wife, Li Rui, and two schools that Mr. Sun and Ms. Cheng say were used to create the 'pretext' of educating performers. Ms. Chen and Mr. Browde said the schools provide a quality education and their students excel.
The lawsuit accuses Shen Yun of forced labor, human trafficking and other violations of the Federal Trafficking Victims Protections Act, seeking damages for physical and psychological injuries. One of the former dancers' lawyers, Carol Merchasin, has specialized in cases involving abuse in religious and spiritual communities.
Mr. Sun was sent by his parents across the world to Dragon Springs at 15; Ms. Cheng arrived at 13. Their suit described the high-fenced compound as akin to 'a penal colony,' with performers confined there through psychological and physical control and their passports locked in a safe. Representatives for the groups said holding passports for safekeeping is normal at boarding schools, and they are returned upon request.
Performers had a 'dreadful existence' of six-day work weeks full of training and religious practice, the suit says, and just two or three hours of classroom time per day. Instructors allowed Mr. Sun to cheat on exams and sleep in class because of the priority given to training, the suit says.
Humiliation and violence were commonplace, the suit says: 'A late-arriving child laborer could expect to have an instructor's shoe strike their head moments after walking in.' They were told such treatment 'was an indication of talent, and so they should be thankful for being beaten.'
Leaders instilled fear by shaming rule-breakers at schoolwide assemblies. Around 2011, a school principal berated Ms. Cheng's roommate for looking at pornography when she had actually been reading Japanese comic books known as manga, the lawsuit says.
Like other performers, Mr. Sun and Ms. Cheng said they performed through injury and without medical treatment. Mr. Li teaches that only faith can purge the body of illnesses.
Mr. Sun suffered internal bleeding when an instructor told other students to force him into a side split; he had to hold that position for 10 minutes a day for three months and has scarring on his legs, the suit says.
After Ms. Cheng suffered a training injury that made her left arm go numb, Mr. Li ordered a school principal to meditate with her rather than arranging treatment; she has permanent damage to her shoulder, the suit says.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Three Aid Workers Were ‘Intentionally Killed' in Ethiopia, M.S.F. Says
Three Aid Workers Were ‘Intentionally Killed' in Ethiopia, M.S.F. Says

New York Times

time19 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Three Aid Workers Were ‘Intentionally Killed' in Ethiopia, M.S.F. Says

Doctors Without Borders has accused Ethiopia's government of failing to properly investigate the slayings of three of the group's aid workers, releasing a new report on Tuesday that implicates Ethiopian soldiers and demands that the country's government bring the perpetrators to justice. The report was the latest turn in a four-year effort to seek accountability for a notorious episode of violence against international humanitarian workers. The aid workers' bullet-riddled bodies were found on a remote roadside in the northern Tigray region of Ethiopia in June 2021, at the height of a brutal civil war. 'Our team was executed,' Raquel Ayora, a senior official with Doctors Without Borders, told reporters in Nairobi on Tuesday. 'There is no way the perpetrators could not know that they were killing civilians.' Although the report by Doctors Without Borders stopped short of explicitly naming perpetrators, it appeared to suggest that Ethiopian soldiers were responsible. That finding was broadly similar to a 2022 investigation by The New York Times that identified an Ethiopian military officer who gave orders to 'finish off' the aid workers shortly before they were killed. Doctors Without Borders, which is widely known by its French name, Médecins Sans Frontières, noted that the Ethiopian government and its forces had shown increased hostility toward international aid groups in the weeks leading up to the shootings. It also said that retreating Ethiopian troops were present on the road where the team was killed. But the group said that despite repeated assurances from the Ethiopian government that an investigation was underway, the victims' families still have not received 'credible answers' about what happened. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Lucknow court grants bail to Rahul Gandhi in Indian Army ‘defamation' case
Lucknow court grants bail to Rahul Gandhi in Indian Army ‘defamation' case

Business Upturn

time6 hours ago

  • Business Upturn

Lucknow court grants bail to Rahul Gandhi in Indian Army ‘defamation' case

By Aditya Bhagchandani Published on July 15, 2025, 15:03 IST A special MP-MLA court in Lucknow on Monday granted bail to Rahul Gandhi, Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha, in a defamation case over remarks allegedly made against Indian soldiers during the Bharat Jodo Yatra. Gandhi appeared in person before Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate Alok Verma to seek bail after missing five earlier hearings. His appearance followed the Allahabad High Court's rejection of his plea in May, where he had challenged both the defamation complaint and the February 2025 summons issued by the MP-MLA court. The Allahabad High Court had dismissed his challenge stating that while Article 19(1)(a) guarantees freedom of speech, it does not cover defamatory statements against individuals or the Indian Army. Justice Subhash Vidyarthi observed that such statements fall outside the ambit of constitutional protection. The case stems from a complaint filed by former Border Roads Organisation (BRO) director Uday Shankar Srivastava, who alleged that Gandhi's remarks during the Bharat Jodo Yatra on December 16, 2022, defamed the Indian Army. Gandhi had allegedly commented that the Chinese army was 'thrashing' Indian soldiers in Arunachal Pradesh and accused the Indian media of not questioning the government on the matter. Gandhi was represented by advocates Pranshu Agrawal, Mohd Yasir Abbasi, and Mohammed Samar Ansari. Ahmedabad Plane Crash Aditya Bhagchandani serves as the Senior Editor and Writer at Business Upturn, where he leads coverage across the Business, Finance, Corporate, and Stock Market segments. With a keen eye for detail and a commitment to journalistic integrity, he not only contributes insightful articles but also oversees editorial direction for the reporting team.

Northern California county warns of ‘thick, poisonous smoke,' declares emergency
Northern California county warns of ‘thick, poisonous smoke,' declares emergency

San Francisco Chronicle​

time15 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Northern California county warns of ‘thick, poisonous smoke,' declares emergency

Siskiyou County officials are asking for state and federal help in addressing the illegal use of toxic pesticides at unlawful cannabis grow operations in the region. In recent years, cannabis cultivators in the county have increasingly used such pesticides often saturated with insecticides, fungicides and herbicides that pose severe health damages to humans upon contact, according to a Siskiyou County Sheriff's Office news release on Monday. These pesticides pose several environmental harms by contaminating local ecosystems through the soil, water and air, according to the sheriff's office. And their uncontrolled use poses a significant risk to law enforcement and fire personnel, many of whom lack appropriate safety protocols to deal with these situations. 'We are battling something far bigger than just an illegally grown plant. This is about environmental destruction, human trafficking, banned chemical fumigants, and transnational organized crime networks operating with impunity across rural America,' said Siskiyou County Sheriff Jeremiah LaRue in the press release. 'If we don't act boldly and get support from the State and Federal partners, the long-term consequences to public health and California's ecosystems will be irreversible.' Environmental officials have previously flagged Siskiyou County as a hot spot for the use of the Chinese-labeled pesticide fumigant — that are routinely discovered at cannabis grow operations there — compared to other Californian counties, according to the California Environmental Protection Agency. On July 1, the Siskiyou County Board of Supervisors voted 5-0 to declare a state of emergency to address the illegal use of toxic pesticides in the county. County officials warned that if burned, the pesticides 'create thick, poisonous smoke that presents serious risks to public health, the environment, waterways, and first responder safety.' The proclamation directed the county to form a multi-agency emergency response task force and pursue state and federal assistance to address the pesticide issue. It also urged the launch of public education campaigns working with agencies like the Drug Enforcement Administration, CalEPA and United States Environmental Protection Agency. The resolution finally called on Gov. Gavin Newsom to proclaim the county to be in a state of emergency.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store