A rally on Aug. 30 in Philadelphia’s Chinatown celebrated 450 million Chinese people renouncing their ties to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
The rally was organized by the Greater Philadelphia Falun Dafa Association.
Rally participants displayed banners, distributed flyers, and engaged passersby to raise awareness about the CCP’s persecution of an estimated 100 million Falun Gong practitioners, as well as the Tuidang (Quit the CCP) movement.
Falun Gong, also known as Falun Dafa, is a spiritual discipline and meditation practice with moral teachings based on the principles of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance. The practice was first introduced to the public in China in 1992 and quickly grew in popularity. In July 1999, the CCP launched a brutal persecution campaign aimed at eradicating the practice and its practitioners.
The Philadelphia rally also drew attention to ongoing related human rights abuses, including forced organ harvesting, with Americans at the event expressing solidarity with victims.
Official Citations Honor the Movement
The Pennsylvania House of Representatives, through a citation sponsored by state Rep. Mary Isaacson, described the event as celebrating the 450 million Chinese people “who have courageously renounced their affiliations with one of the world’s most brutal and repressive regimes.”
It described the movement as “the largest grassroots movement in the history of human civilization” since 2004, noting that many Chinese people were “deceived or coerced” into joining the CCP and its youth organizations but have now “seen through the CCP’s decades of propaganda and have chosen a better future.”
The citation condemned the CCP’s rule as “the darkest and the most ridiculous page in Chinese history,” highlighting crimes such as the killing of more than 80 million citizens since 1949—an estimate equivalent to the deaths in World War II, but during peacetime—and the persecution of Falun Gong, which includes “escalating [the regime’s] transnational repression” through death threats, lawfare, and manipulation of U.S. media.
The state House expressed support for the movement, offering “congratulations and gratitude to the more than 450 million heroic people bringing about a new age of consciousness in China and around the world through peaceful movement.”
The Philadelphia City Council, through a resolution sponsored by Councilman Mark F. Squilla, commended the Tuidang movement for helping millions withdraw from the CCP and its affiliated organizations, such as the Youth League and Young Pioneers.
The council noted that Falun Gong’s adherence to truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance fosters spiritual elevation through doing good deeds and turning away from wrongdoing.
During the event, 49 Chinese individuals publicly renounced the CCP, adding to a growing tide that resonates with human rights advocates across the United States.
Dr. Jessica Russo, a member of Doctors Against Forced Organ Harvesting, said that after the CCP’s persecution of Falun Gong began on July 20, 1999, a surge in organ transplants followed.

“In the United States and other countries with voluntary donation systems, patients typically wait at least a year for an organ transplant. In China, however, a suitable organ match can be found in just weeks or days,” she said, linking this to detained Falun Gong practitioners at risk of being murdered for their vital organs.
Russo called organ harvesting a “crime against humanity, initiated and overseen by the CCP, [that] continues to this day on a massive scale.” She urged support for the Falun Gong Protection Act.
Jen Buerk, a retired state employee and entrepreneur, expressed support for the Chinese people standing up against tyranny. “If you don’t stop communism, it’s going to ruin the whole world,” she said.
Buerk described the rally as “very gentle, very friendly.”
She stopped while passing by and showed her support for the rally. Buerk told The Epoch Times, “The movement is going to help America.”
She said the 450 million renunciations are “very important, because [the CCP] could start with the Chinese people today and then come after the American people.”

Nijeea Cirwithen, a corrections officer, stood firm against China’s communist regime. “I don’t agree with the CCP. I’m standing 100 percent behind my Chinese community. I’m here to fight with the communist party with them,” she told the Epoch Times.
Cirwithen was moved to tears by the revelation of organ harvesting, calling it “heartless.” “These are things that people need; you can’t just strip it from people,” she said.

The 450 million renunciations were “so big,” Cirwithen said.
“That’s a big number; all I can do is support,” she said.
Cirwithen said the rally was a unifying call. “We all are one. So just because it’s happening to the Chinese people, doesn’t mean it can’t happen to the black people, [or] the Indians,” she said.
The rally’s significance was echoed by Maritza Bocceuti, a police officer, who learned of the movement at the rally. She said the 450 million was significant, stressing its importance for human rights. She also expressed shock at the state-sponsored crimes of organ harvesting in communist China.
“I was baffled. I was very surprised. Just for doing some exercises and practicing, and now your organs are subjected to be harvested. That’s horrible,” she told The Epoch Times.
Bocceuti praised the event’s approach: “This is a peaceful event. It’s basically building awareness, making sure everybody knows what’s going on in China.”

Her husband, Paul Bocceuti, a legal assistant, said, “It’s good to bring awareness to a situation where the Chinese government is violating the human rights of people.”
He said the Chinese regime’s crimes of organ harvesting are “terrible.”
“It’s a gross violation of human rights,” he said, noting the CCP’s minority status and the need for economic sanctions against it. He expressed support for the rally’s goal to “bring more awareness as the first step.”





















