Eliminate the Evil with Righteous Thoughts Strong as Diamond

Tai Shan

PureInsight | February 3, 2003

[PureInsight.org] Recently Falun Gong practitioners around the world held a peaceful three-day global petition in various forms, including press conferences, candlelight vigils, and group practice of Falun Gong exercises, in front of the Chinese embassies and consulates worldwide for a collective agenda: to further reveal to the world Jiang's brutal persecution against law-abiding, peaceful Falun Gong practitioners in China, and to ask Jiang to stop slaughtering Falun Gong practitioners and to cease all persecution against them.

In Boston where winter is long, harsh and freezing, Dafa practitioners joined forces with fellow practitioners worldwide for this righteous cause. Dafa practitioners in Boston went to China Town where they sent forth righteous thoughts and held candlelight vigils throughout the cold nights. Although the evil forces appeared to be hard at work, they were just putting up their final struggle while in fact they were like a dying candle in a blast of wind.

At seven o'clock of the second day when we were sending forth righteous thoughts, two strong blasts of wind came directly at us, brushing against my face and ears. The blasts were so strong that the ruffling noises were almost deafening. One could hardly walk or stand straight in this wind. All of sudden the words, "strong as diamond", appeared in my mind. I immediately realized that I must maintain that state. I kept my back straight and kept sending the thought, "mie", as strong as turbulent tides capable of crashing giant rocks into pieces. Before I knew it, ten minutes had passed. I opened my eyes and saw that there was already a thin layer of snow flickering on the ground within the brief ten minutes but the blasts of wind had stopped. Apparently the evil was capable of maintaining the wind for only ten minutes. The evil has become so weak and frail that it has few days remaining in the universe.

Translated from:
http://www.zhengjian.org/zj/articles/2003/1/14/20065.html

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