#CCPTransnationalRepression

#StandwithShenYun

CPP Wages War on Arts, Even Ours

By Diana London

Wednesday, 23 April 2025 

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has perfected the art of suppression — silencing free thought, rewriting history, and controlling cultural narratives. This influence is no longer limited to China’s borders.

The CCP’s authoritarian reach has expanded into democratic societies, using propaganda, cyberattacks, diplomatic coercion, and even direct threats to silence those who expose its oppressive nature. One of the most striking examples of this transnational repression is the CCP’s relentless campaign against Shen Yun, a New York-based performing arts company that has revived a cultural heritage that the party has spent decades trying to erase.

For 5,000 years, China flourished as a civilization of immense spiritual and artistic depth. Guided by Confucian, Buddhist, and Taoist principles, Chinese culture emphasized virtues such as compassion, integrity, and respect for the divine. From the Yellow Emperor of antiquity to the splendor of the Tang Dynasty and the refinement of the Qing, China’s rich traditions formed an enduring legacy.

But when the CCP seized power, it launched one of the most aggressive cultural purges in history. The Cultural Revolution led to the destruction of temples, the banning of religious practices, and the replacement of China’s traditional identity with state-controlled ideology.

With this long history of erasure in mind, Shen Yun was founded in 2006 as an effort to restore China’s lost artistic heritage. Unlike any other performing arts company, Shen Yun exists outside the reach of the CCP, allowing it to freely present a version of China that the party has worked so hard to erase.

Shen Yun’s world-class artists — drawn from across the globe — work tirelessly to revive a heritage that was nearly lost. They are not only preserving history but also challenging the CCP’s monopoly on Chinese identity.

Beijing fears them because the CCP understands that its control over the narrative of Chinese history is fragile. If audiences around the world see the beauty of China’s pre-communist traditions, they may begin to question the legitimacy of the party’s rule.

This is why the CCP has waged an aggressive war against them, working to suppress it at every turn.

The CCP’s hostility toward Shen Yun extends beyond mere criticism — it actively seeks to sabotage the group’s performances worldwide. Chinese embassies have contacted theaters, demanding they cancel performances or face consequences.

Venues that refuse to comply often experience harassment, technical failures, website hacks, and even direct intimidation. At the same time, state-run media outlets push disinformation, branding Shen Yun as controversial to deter audiences from attending.