Contact is taking a holiday!

Contact is taking a break after 25 years of bringing you news of Tibet and Tibetan issues. We are celebrating our 25 years by bringing you the story of Contact and the people who have made it happen, and our archive is still there for you to access at any time, and below you can read the story of Contact, how it came into being and the wonderful reflections of the people who have made it happen over the years.

When and how Contact will re-emerge and evolve will be determined by those who become involved.

An Open Letter to Michelle Obama

By Rose Tang  /  September 9, 2014;

By Rose Tang, published: March 24, 2014

The letter was originally posted by the author on her Facebook page

Dear Michelle:

I wasn’t the only Chinese who was totally disappointed by your speech at Peking University on Saturday. You did not mention a word about the university being a birthplace of China’s major pro-democracy movements since the early 20th century and a base for some of the country’s most prominent human rights activists, including Cao Shunli and Xu Zhiyong. You didn’t say a word about them. Legal scholar Cao died six days before you landed in Beijing. Cao, aged 53 (only three years older than you), had been detained for six months after she was kidnapped by the police at the Beijing Airport last September when she was about to board a flight to Geneva for a U.N. workshop; Forty-one-year-old university lecturer Xu is serving a four-year jail term for leading the peaceful New Citizens’ Movement calling on the officials to disclose their personal assets. His two-month-old daughter Niu Niu has not met her daddy — having been born after Xu was thrown into jail. History has been repeating itself in China: my artist father had already been in detention before I was born in the Cultural Revolution, for criticizing Mao Zedong in his personal diaries.

In the speech, you said: “It is so important for information and ideas to flow freely over the Internet and through the media. Because that’s how we discover the truth, that’s how we learn what’s really happening in our communities, in our country and our world.”

I hope you know the truth about China, Tibet, East Turkestan, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Southern Mongolia. I voted for your hubby and used to admire you guys for your tenacity and courage. It was my first time to vote in America and I knew it was a precious moment — many Chinese died just for shouting a few slogans in marches for this basic simple right. I was lucky to have survived that massacre in Beijing nearly 25 years ago. 

And now, while you and your daughters are strolling on a completely empty Great Wall that’s usually packed with tourists, you should know many Chinese dissidents have been detained or put under house arrest because of your visit. No wonder Beijing-based activist Hu Jia Tweeted: “(The tour of the Great Wall) was tailor made by the Party for Ms. Michelle. As long as she’s in China, I have to accompany her by being under house arrest (“党为米歇尔女士私人定制的。她只要在中国,我就得陪着软禁”).”

Rose Tang (唐路) in Tiananmen Square in 1989,  among the last students leaving the Square in the morning of June 4th. She is a journalist living in New York City now.

Michelle, you are in China to talk about education and women. You should know how horrible it is for Chinese women to live as women and even as human beings. You’re the wife of a Nobel Peace Prize winner,  you should know Liu Xia, wife of jailed Chinese Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo, has been under house arrest without access to telephone, the Internet, letters or family visits for more than three years. The poet’s only crime is to be married to Liu Xiaobo. Her apartment, her prison, is about two mile away from that swanky courtyard-style restaurant where you dined with Chinese First Lady Peng Liyuan and posed with her and her doughy-faced President hubby Xi Jinping for photo opps, in your gorgeous dress of red roses. 

Michelle, you’ve been surrounded by beautiful Chinese women with stiff smiles. But you should know how many unlucky ones have been dragged off for forced abortions and sterilizations, and how many died, committing suicide or being tortured to death. Your two daughters are very beautiful, and lucky. You should know how many female Chinese babies have been killed or aborted just because they’re girls, including babies of my friends. You should know many many poor kids, children of migrant workers and peasants do not get to study in a school at all. And you should know how horrible eduction (brainwashing) has been in China — millions of students have been fed poisons and lies, to serve the Party and to hate America. Somehow, they’re flocking to America to study, as you mentioned in your speech. You know why? Sure, American schools and colleges are better, but the main reason is that their parents are sending them to a safer place with a better future, off a sinking ship where air, water and soil are full of toxins. Even the daughter of Chinese president Xi Jinping you just met lives in America and has refused to return.

Michelle, soon you’ll be in my hometown Chengdu swooning over pandas and eating at a Tibetan restaurant. Since when did you become so Chinese, having to send some subtle messages (Tibet?) through eating? Where are your teeth? You should know thousands of Sichuanese kids perished in the horrible earthquakes around Chengdu and near the panda areas in 2008 when their shoddily built classrooms collapsed.  To this day, their parents are still banned to visit the sites to mourn their deaths.

You should know pandas are from Tibet and the Tibetans are “endangered people”, who are not even treated as well as the pandas. And the Tibetan culture and environment have been raped by the Chinese Communist regime. So many Tibetans have burnt themselves to death and so many more are in jail — some are in prisons in Chengdu.

I hope your motorcade will pass through Tianfu (Hall of Heaven) Square where that gigantic ugly Mao statue stands. I hope you aren’t blind or brain-damaged and will see how odd the scenery is.

I hope you’ll remember what you’ve seen in China and will say something one day. President Xi and his propaganda humming bird wife Peng Liyuan wouldn’t give a damn about what you said to them or to anyone else, though she might be jealous of your red dress. You should know that dowdy looking pale awkward lady with a beehive hairdo sang songs of praise to the troops in Tiananmen Square (I believe you’ve been there) shortly after they mowed down unarmed innocent students in June, 1989. Twenty five years on, you can’t even see a single picture of that event on the Chinese Internet.

And I don’t give a damn about what you say or wear. We don’t need you. People in that strange piece of land called China are waking up and rising up…the murderers and their cronies whom you met, toured and dined with will be held accountable.

tang luHappy travels and stay safe — you never know what’s gonna happen in China, because mass violence is a daily ritual there…

Take care.

Sincerely yours,

Rose Tang, a U.S. citizen born and raised in China and a Tiananmen Massacre survivor.

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