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Non-Profit Media Campaign Award Winner 1989
Independent Federation of Chinese Students and
Scholars
Yongchuan Liu, Chairman
by Serena Chen *
Historians in the 21st century may report that 5,000 years of feudal
history were brought down by a relatively recent invention - the fax
machine. Despite attempts by the Chinese government to stifle freedom
of speech and freeflow of information, students were able to transmit
the latest news of the unrest gleaned from U.S. newscasts back to China
via fax. One of those courageous individuals who kept the lines
communications open was Yongchuan liu, a 29-year-old Stanford graduate
student and current chairman of the newly formed Independent Federation
of Chinese Students and Scholars in the U.S.
Liu started out as a mechanical engineer, working in Jiangxi
province after his graduation from college in 1982. But once he began
working, he realized that there was a surplus of trained engineers like
himself working far below their skill level. He talked with friends in
similar situations and realized that "we needed to change the
system before China could successfully modernize."
In 1983 he entered Beijing University to study sociology. Before
long he was in the thick of a movement protesting the government's
decision to stop allowing graduate students to buy half-price train
tickets. As executive director for the graduate students' association
at the university, Liu organized "peaceful dialogues" with
officials; as a result, graduate students could continue purchasing
tickets at the lower rate.
After several years of organizing in Beijing University, Liu decided
to study abroad and entered Stanford's doctoral program in sociology in
1986. By 1988, he was the president of the Association of Chinese
Students and Scholars at Stanford, one of the first groups to organize
Chinese students after the Tiananmen Square massacre.
Emboldened by the changes going on in China, Liu opened up a
dialogue with officials from Taiwan, discussing such issues as
reunification. "I was perceived as being pro-PRC (People's
Republic of China)," Liu said, "I maintained good relations
with the Chinese consular office in San Francisco and was invited last
summer by the [PRC] state committee on education to visit Beijing and
Guangzhou [as a representative of overseas Chinese students]."
But the visit also demonstrated that China was not all that ready to
listen to dissenting opinions. "I said things the Chinese
government didn't like and they refused to let us meet with any of the
higher rank leaders," Liu said. "Later on I heard they said
that was the 'last time they wanted to talk to overseas Chinese
students.' "
A need to collect dissertation data brought Liu back Beijing on
April 10 of this year and into the midst of growing students protests.
Liu said he played a supportive role in the democracy movement by
advising other student leaders.
He thought there was one point where the "students had a
chance. On may 17 and 18, both the conservative and reform sides
contacted the students," he said, but nothing came of it due to
the students; "lack of political technique."
When Liu left China to return to Stanford on May 27, Chinese customs
officials took his materials related to the democracy movement despite
protests that they were part of his dissertation. In retrospect, Liu
considers himself fortunate that he was able to get out at all.
Back in the U.S., Liu redoubled his efforts to organize Chinese
students, linking up student organization from different colleges and
universities. Local and national press converged on Stanford's student
group, talking to Liu and other leaders and photographing and taking
video of students constantly faxing news reports back to China.
In early July, he helped form the United Association of Chinese
Students and Scholars in California. By the end of July, he also helped
form the first nationwide coalition of Chinese student groups, the
Independent Federation of Chinese Students and Scholars in the U.S.,
which was created at the end of a congress of resident Chinese students
and scholars held in Chicago July 23-30.
More than 380 official delegates and 100 nonvoting delegates from
202 universities throughout the U.S. attended the Chicago congress.
There were also some 20 delegates from Canada, Japan, Australia, West
Germany and Hong Kong. Special guests included recently escaped
pro-democracy leaders Yan Jiaqi, Wuerkaixi Duolaite, Li Lu, Xin Ku, and
a representative from Poland's Solidarity Union.
The group's purpose is to promote democracy in China and to push for
such "basic human rights as life, freedom, property and pursuit of
happiness and the right of the Chinese people to choose their own
government." They seek to support US laws protecting Chinese
students from retribution, support efforts to get news and information
to China, and to sponsor conferences to analyze the social, political
and economic conditions in China and to explore possible paths that
will lead China to democracy.
* Serena Chen is the editor of East/West News.
[Note] Now, Dr. Yong-chuan Liu (Alex) lives in Los
Angeles and directs a project of measuring democracy.
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