Falun Gong is homophobic
April 14, 2012
“I just gotta warn you that the owners are Falun Gong people,” said Andrew. I figured he’d learned that from some wonderfully in-depth discussion with the owner. He is, after all, quite the social butterfly.
”Oh well. I don’t think it’ll be a problem,” I told him. “If they don’t to preach to us I probably won’t even say anything!”
When we arrived at the restaurant I quickly realised the owners didn’t need to tell Andrew a damn thing. The restaurant was plastered with Falun Gong posters and signs. They also had a table near the entrance with Falun Gong literature and video as well as a petition for customers to sign.

My friends Margaret and Alex enjoy their beverages while waiting for their meal at Dundas Fish & Chips. Andrew has already received his won ton soup.
“I don’t do religion in the morning or on an empty stomach,” said Margaret who thought it was all kind of creepy.
Falun Gong, also known as Falun Dafa, is a religious organisation founded in China in 1992. Some of their followers describe it as a cultivation of the central tenets of truthfulness, compassion and tolerance. The practice of Falun Dafa also includes meditation, qi-gong exercise as well as the moral teachings of their founder Li Hongzhi.
Falun Gong presents itself as an organisation concerned about human rights, particularly their own. They regularly stage protests, and campaigns to raise awareness about the human rights of Falun Gong followers in the Peoples Republic of China.
But they don’t really believe in human rights for all – especially not the gays who they say are not worthy of being human.
Referring to a discussion about human rights protections for gay people in many western democracies Li said “I told them [the students in the West], ‘To be perfectly frank, your government may approve of it, but your Lord does not!’”
He has also said that “repulsive homosexual behaviour” bespeaks of a filthy, deviant state of mind that lacks rationality.
Li and his followers predictably use insane superstition to justify their claims. The writings of this “cultivation of practice” make unsupported claims about the existence of deities who have a real hate-on for gay people.
“Let me tell you, if I weren’t teaching this Fa today, gods’ first target of annihilation would be homosexuals,” Li said at the Fa Conference in Geneva, Switzerland in 1998. “It’s not me who would destroy them, but gods.”
He went on to claim that humans were created by “the gods” who also set out standards of behaviour and that gay people, not terrorists or murderers, are their number one target for divine incineration.
“When human beings overstep those boundaries, they are no longer called human beings, though they still assume the outer appearance of a human,” he said. “So gods can’t tolerate their existence and will destroy them.”
I have no intention or desire of convincing Falun Gong practitioners that they espouse a very homophobic philosophy but I think those gay-positive people who would support them should know the truth.
They’ve managed to get support from politically progressive people, including politicians, who are probably unaware of the group’s anti-gay stance. Many of these politicians support gay rights and some of them, including Bill Siksay and Libby Davies, are openly gay or lesbian themselves.
Siksay, who was my MP, chaired an all-party group called “Parliamentary Friends of Falun Gong” which set out to “foster a better understanding of the practice of Falun Gong among Parliamentarians.”
In late 2011 Davies introduced a petition in Parliament regarding the persecution of Falun Gong practitioners in China.
“It concerns the Falun Gong, which is an organization and a practice we are all familiar with, which is the peaceful and beneficial spiritual practice centred on the principles of truth, compassion and forbearance,” she said.
I fail to see how Li’s teachings about homosexuality are remotely consistent with truth, tolerance, and compassion. Li exhibits a profoundly bigoted, wildly ignorant, and shockingly hostile attitude towards LGBT people normally attributed to religious figures such as Fred Phelps of the Westboro Baptist Church.
Oh yeah, they also had food at the restaurant. It made three of us sick. Perhaps it’s part of god’s plan for annihilating gay people!








Didn’t know the extent of the homophobia. Good piece, photos.
Thanks, slantendicular!
Projectile vomit in my case: I ordered a single cheeseburger with one egg and they doubled my order. Lost in translation? It’s too bad Falun Gong can’t even fill a single order of tolerance, let alone compassion or truthfulness!
Andrew: Jeepers! How long before you vomited?
Why did you eat there if they had all their Voodo magic crap on display?
Gino: I had no idea this was all on display!
Creepy! Please, lets never eat there :)
also… Andrew’s face is priceless. It reads ” gag me, can you believe this shit?”
Frankly I don’t see what the fuss is about.
They are people with faith in gods, is that unusual?
If you go to an Indian restaurant you will find their stuff displayed, which I guess is just as shocking :)
In my research about Falun Gong I did not find any protests to ban gay marriage and stuff, only appeals on the chinese communist to stop killing their people in China.
Kuki:
If you’re going to go off and say gay people (or whoever) are inhuman or degenerate you better have something better to back it up with than the “the gods said so” unless you intend to provide evidence that your gods do, in fact, exist. Otherwise you’re just making shit up and in the case of Li, he’s making shit up that’s quite harmful.
In Vancouver it’s not unusual for restaurant owners to put up some display of their religion or faith but usually the display is limited to a painting, statue, or small shrine. At the Dundas, however, they were clearly using the restaurant to proselytize. And while I’ve also witnessed that at other restaurants I have never been to an restaurant (even church restaurants) where so much of the wall space was covered with religious propaganda. It was downright creepy.
I never said that Falun Gong protested gay marriage. And yeah, a rational personal might suppose that a group of people who get killed for their political/religious beliefs would think twice before advocating teachings that further malign a marginalised population.
Kuki sounds a little cooky …
Yuri: I anticipate a lot of comments from Falun Gong types…
Although it wasn’t my intention to eat there because of this post my friend suggested due to the proximity to the laundromat he uses.
Admittedly I don’t know much about Falun Gong (and the promotion of Falun Gong within the restaurant wasn’t as prominent as anticipated) but I can say that $4.95 (+tax) for a no less than half-decent fish burger and fries is a good deal. I will, however, have to get back to you whether or not it is in fact—and I quote—”diarrhea fuel”.