(Minghui.org) Medical Genocide, a documentary on the forced organ harvesting in China, was screened at the University of Delaware on the evening of April 26, 2023. Sponsored by the university’s Rotary Club, the event took place in conjunction with the Rotary Club of Community Action Against Human Trafficking and Rotary Satellite Club to End Forced Organ Harvesting.
In the Trabant Student Centre theater, the audience learned about the soaring number of organ transplants and mysterious ample supply chain in China. Mounting evidence showed how this was related to the country’s human rights abuses and genocide. Many people were stunned to learn this and condemned the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). They said they would share the information.
Following the screening, WDEL radio host Rick Jensen moderated a forum. The panelists included Chen Zhiyu from the Taiwan Association for International Care of Organ Transplants, TAICOT; Jessica Russo with Doctors Against Forced Organ Harvesting, DAFOH; William Huang, who was imprisoned in China for five years for practicing Falun Gong; and another Falun Gong practitioner Alex Luchansky.
Russo talked about the history and current status of the CCP-sanctioned forced organ harvesting that targets Falun Gong practitioners. When the regime started to suppress Falun Gong in July 1999, there were about 100 million practitioners. They were discriminated against and mistreated. Many were detained, imprisoned, and tortured, and some became victims of organ harvesting. Several countries have passed laws to ban transplant tourism to China, including Israel, Spain, Italy, Taiwan, Norway, Belgium, and Canada. The U.S. House of Representatives also passed H.R. 1154, the “Stop Forced Organ Harvesting Act of 2023,” on March 27, 2023.
Students: The Importance of Facts
Chandana Elavarthi from the Rotary Club is an undergraduate student majoring in medical diagnostics. She thought the event was very important. “I feel one of the most appalling things is, we’re always taught about medical ethics and being very aware of how you’re treating your patients, so it was scary to see a lot of these doctors who are knowingly doing these, like murdering, in China,” she said. She hopes the U.S. passes laws to end such tragedies.
Another member of the Rotary Club, Monica Elavarthi, is in the MBA program. “I was very surprised to see just the sheer number of the forced organ transplants,” she remarked. “I’m glad that we were able to host this event. I hope that we’re going to be able to host more events in the future to bring awareness of that too horrible crime.”
Emily Lewie, a senior in English and linguistics, was also appalled by the documentary. “I had no idea that anything of that scale was going on anywhere in the world. I was just shocked to hear that kind of thing is happening. It was just awful,” she said, adding she would write articles to inform more people about the situation in China.