Initiatives for China header image 4

Entries Tagged as 'Activities of Initiatives for China'

Opening Remarks, Fifth Interethnic/Interfaith Conference

October 8th, 2009 · No Comments

Oct.8, 2009 ,Washington D.C.
Many of us have traveled great distances to be here today, but all of us have traveled even further mentally to make this conference possible.  The tensions and hostilities that have divided us are like so many open wounds on the body of our common cause.  Only by healing these wounds will [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Activities of Initiatives for China · speeches and remarks by Dr. Yang Jianli

Remembrance and Truth - Remarks by Carl Gershman, President of the National Endowment for Democracy

June 10th, 2009 · No Comments

June 4, 2009
At the Capitol Hill 20th Anniversary Commemoration of the Tiananmen Square Massacre
Later this month, here on Capitol Hill, the NED will honor five brave Cuban activists, three of whom are in prison, by presenting them in absentia with a replica of the Goddess of Democracy, the statue that was dramatically unveiled in Tiananmen [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Activities of Initiatives for China · Human Rights

U.S. House Speaker Pelosi on Tiananmen Anniversary: ‘We Will Not Rest Until There is Freedom of Speech and Assembly and Openness in China and in Tibet’

June 10th, 2009 · No Comments

06/04/2009
 Washington, D.C.— Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Members and human rights activists participated in an event on the West Front of the Capitol this afternoon to commemorate the 20th Anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre.  Below are the Speaker’s remarks:
“Good afternoon.  Thank you very much Yang Jianli and the Initiatives for China for bringing us together [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Activities of Initiatives for China · Human Rights · Special Event

Introduction to the Founder

Dr. Yang Jianli

Founder and President of Initiatives for China, Dr. Yang Jianli was born in Shandong Province in northern China. A graduate of Beijing Normal University, Dr. Yang holds a PhD. in Mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley, and a PhD in Political Economy from the Harvard University Kennedy School of Government. In 1989, at the age of 26, his fellow graduate students at Berkeley selected him to go to Beijing in support of their counterparts in China who were demonstrating for democracy in Tiananmen Square. He arrived in Tiananmen Square in time to witness the massacre of thousands of peaceful demonstrators by the guns and tanks of the Chinese government. This event fundamentally changed young Jianli's future. He narrowly escaped capture and returned to the United States where he committed himself to studying democracy. Read more...