At around 1:30 p.m. on July 27th, 2010, Hebei Xingtai Municipal Public Security Bureau Chief Zhang Yinchao led six policemen to break into practitioner Guo Haixiang's home in Huining Village, Xingtai County. They took Guo away after ransacking his house.
Guo's wife was not able to eat, drink, or sleep for days after his sudden arrest. She has been crying and feeling the pain while thinking about their life together.
Guo Haixiang is an only child and was previously very spoiled, lazy, and greedy. He indulged himself in drinking, gambling, and other bad habits. He used to drink until he was intoxicated, then yell and hit his wife. He once pulled a handful of hair from her head. Her mother persuaded her to divorce him, but as soon as she divorced him, she found out she was pregnant with their child. Guo and his mother begged her to stay. Guo, however, didn't stop his bad habits. One time after becoming intoxicated, he kicked his wife's belly and almost seriously injured her. The wife gave up on him and left him.
Before the baby was born, Guo Haixiang knelt in front of her, expressing his regrets, and asked her to go home with him. She agreed but only under the condition that they would not remarry and that if he drank and hit her again, she would leave him for good.
Later one of Guo's relatives gave him a copy of the Falun Gong book, Zhuan Falun. Surprisingly, Guo finished reading the book and told everyone that it was a great book. He began cultivating and his temperament changed. He became a good person, and quit drinking, smoking, and gambling. He worked hard growing and selling vegetables. From then on, he lived with his wife harmoniously and happily, and often told others: "Falun Gong is good."
Falun Gong mended this broken family and gave his wife a "new husband." So what kind of crime has Guo Haixiang committed? Will he be "transformed" [forcibly renounce Falun Gong] in jail, and if so, into what kind of person?
Guo's wife is in great pain and is worried about her husband, as she knows the police are persecuting him.
Chinese version available at http://www.minghui.org/mh/articles/2010/8/8/228091.html
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