作者:陈婷
编辑:韩唳 责任编辑:胡丽莉 翻译:吕峰
在这个全球高速流转、技术日新月异的时代里,人类最基础的自由——生存的权利——却在某些阴暗角落悄然滑落谷底。一则原本意图掩盖的信息意外泄露,让世人短暂撕开了遮羞布,也照见了现实的冰冷真相。
9月23日中共举办的一场阅兵活动中,一段麦克风未关闭的录音引爆全球舆论:习近平与普京的对话中,涉及“器官移植”与“长生不老”字眼,引起外界广泛关注与震惊。美国众议院议长麦克·约翰逊随即发声谴责,称: “我们听过太多恐怖的中国器官移植故事,这些器官都来自‘不情愿的捐献者’,这样说已经是轻描淡写了。”他的语气不带修辞,却比任何宣传口号更具穿透力:“他们的世界观是何等邪恶!”
这不是第一次关于“活摘器官”的真相浮出水面,也不会是最后一次。早在2006年起,数以千计的证人证言、研究报告、国际媒体调查便反复指出:中国境内存在系统性、国家支持的强制器官摘取,受害者多为宗教信仰者、良心犯,尤其是法轮功修炼者、西藏僧人、维吾尔族群体。2019年“独立中国法庭”判定,中共确实“持续多年大规模活摘器官”,构成“反人类罪”。2021年,联合国人权专家再次发出警告,对中共“以种族、宗教信仰为目标群体的器官掠夺”表示“深切担忧”。
麦克风事件之所以格外刺目,在于它的“日常性”:这不是秘密会议,也不是私人访谈,而是在举国欢庆的天安门前、世界领袖聚焦的场合中自然流露出的“内部默契”。那一刻,器官并不是生命的延续,而是某些特权者用于维系自我权力、欲望与生命延长的筹码。而“人”,在这种语境下,不再是拥有独立人格与尊严的生命体,而是冰冷数字、临床指标、可替代的“零件”。
我们必须追问:当一个国家的权力中心可以将他人的身体视为备用仓库,其余的“自由”是否还有意义?在这样的体制中,生存的权利若无法保障,言论自由、信仰自由、迁徙自由等权利几乎全数归零。一个活着的人若无权保有自己的身体,那么他在精神、政治、社会上的“自由”也不过是纸面幻象。
佛教中将世界划为六道轮回,其中“人道”最为殊胜,因人具有理智、觉性与修行的可能。但若一个社会将人贬低为供他人食用、拆解的“部件”,则这个世界已从“人道”堕落为“畜生道”。那不是比喻,是现实。贪婪驱动着“器官移植产业链”;恐惧令被关押者噤声;麻木让旁观者习以为常。正是这些因素,将“人间”一步步推向失控的深渊。
藏传佛教堪布索达吉曾说:“若一个人放弃了对他人生命的尊重,他已经开始远离善根。”这一句话,不只是修行者的自警,更应是每一个人类社会制度设计的底线。器官移植本是延续生命的医学奇迹,如今却成为剥夺他人生存权利的罪恶通道。在权力遮蔽之下,它从慈悲走向残暴,从救人走向谋杀。
在这样的现实中,保持觉知,是每个清醒者的起点。觉知不是愤怒的爆发,而是持续的、不愿接受不公的决心。不因恐惧噤声,不因沉默妥协,不因疲惫遗忘。这种觉知,本身就是一种抵抗。
从宗教伦理的角度看,器官摘取并非不能讨论。但任何建立在“非自愿”基础上的器官获取,都是对伦理的践踏。基督教强调“生命是上帝的赐予”;佛教认为“身体为父母所授,不应轻毁”;伊斯兰教强调“清洁与正义”;犹太教甚至明文禁止未经同意的尸体使用。这些传统并非古旧条文,而是文明之所以为文明的根基。
面对中国日益成熟且秘密化的器官“产业链”,世界必须共同作出回应。首先,各国应通过与美国《制止强制器官摘取法案》类似的法律,禁止与涉及强摘行为的医院、研究单位、医疗供应商合作。其次,应设立全球器官移植追踪机制,严查跨国移植旅游。第三,所有信仰团体应联合发声,将此事提升为全球道义议题,抵制所有将人体视为交易对象的邪恶实践。更重要的,是我们每一个人的回应。在社交网络上转发真相;在社群中讲述事实;在自己的生活中拒绝冷漠——这些微小的行动加总,便能撬动现实的边界。
正如藏地修行者所说:“即使在最黑暗的洞穴中,哪怕一束光也能照亮方向。”这束光,不是别人给的,而是我们自己点燃的。
若世界是一片黑夜,愿我们仍能点灯前行;若制度是高墙,愿我们的声音成为裂缝中的风。生存的自由,绝不能成为少数人延命的工具,而应是所有人的底线。为此,我们必须行动、必须呼吁、必须抵抗。因为,一旦生存权被夺走,其余一切自由都将成为空谈。而一个社会、一个国家,若连最基本的生存自由都不再保障,它也终将失去合法存在的道义根基。
哪怕活在暗夜,也要守住生存的光明。
Even in the Darkest Night, We Must Guard the Light of Life—On the CCP Military Parade Microphone Incident
Author: Chen Ting
Editor: Han Li Responsible Editor: Hu Lili Translation: Lyu Feng
Abstract: This article takes the CCP’s “microphone incident” during a military parade as its point of departure to probe deeply into the issue of systemic forced organ harvesting in China. It argues that the right to life is the cornerstone of all freedoms, condemns this crime against humanity from the perspectives of universal ethics and faith, and finally calls on the international community and individuals to act together in safeguarding the bottom line of human civilization.
In today’s world of rapid global circulation and ever-changing technology, humanity’s most fundamental freedom—the right to life—has, in some dark corners, quietly sunk to its lowest point. A piece of information originally meant to be hidden was accidentally exposed, briefly tearing away the fig leaf and revealing the cold reality.
At a CCP military parade on September 23, an unmuted microphone recording set off a global storm: in a conversation between Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin, the words “organ transplant” and “immortality” appeared, drawing widespread shock and concern. U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson immediately condemned it, saying: “We have heard far too many horrific stories of organ transplants in China, and these organs come from ‘unwilling donors’—and that phrasing is already putting it mildly.” Without rhetorical flourish, his words pierced more sharply than any slogan: “What an evil worldview they have!”
This is not the first time the truth about “live organ harvesting” has surfaced, and it will not be the last. Since 2006, thousands of witness testimonies, research reports, and international media investigations have repeatedly pointed out that systemic, state-backed forced organ harvesting exists in China. Victims have included religious believers and prisoners of conscience, especially Falun Gong practitioners, Tibetan monks, and Uyghurs. In 2019, the Independent Tribunal into Forced Organ Harvesting from Prisoners of Conscience in China concluded that the CCP had engaged in “large-scale organ harvesting over many years,” constituting “crimes against humanity.” In 2021, United Nations human rights experts again voiced “deep concern” over China’s organ plunder targeting groups defined by ethnicity and religion.
What makes the “microphone incident” so striking is its normalcy: it was not a secret meeting nor a private interview, but a moment of “internal consensus” that slipped out in front of Tiananmen, during a national celebration, under the eyes of the world’s leaders. In that instant, organs were not about sustaining life but chips for certain elites to extend power, desire, and longevity. In this context, human beings were no longer dignified individuals, but cold numbers, clinical indicators, and replaceable “parts.”
We must ask: when a nation’s center of power can regard others’ bodies as spare warehouses, do any other freedoms retain meaning? In such a system, if the right to life cannot be guaranteed, then freedom of speech, religion, or movement all collapse into nothing. For a person who cannot even possess their own body, political, spiritual, and social “freedoms” are illusions on paper.
Buddhism speaks of six realms of reincarnation, with the human realm the most precious because humans have reason, awareness, and the potential for cultivation. But when a society reduces people to consumable parts for disassembly, it falls from the “human realm” into the “animal realm.” This is not metaphor—it is reality. Greed drives the “organ transplant industry chain”; fear silences detainees; numbness makes bystanders complicit. Together, these forces push humanity step by step toward the abyss.
As Tibetan Buddhist Khenpo Sodargye has said: “If a person abandons respect for others’ lives, he has already strayed far from virtue.” This is not merely a warning to practitioners but should be the bottom line of any human social system. Organ transplantation should be a medical miracle that prolongs life, but under the shadow of power it has become a channel of atrocity—transforming compassion into cruelty, healing into murder.
In this reality, maintaining awareness is the beginning for every awake individual. Awareness is not an outburst of rage, but a sustained refusal to accept injustice: not silenced by fear, not compromised by silence, not dulled by fatigue. This awareness is resistance in itself.
From the perspective of religious ethics, organ donation can be a subject of discussion. But any organ acquisition based on coercion is a violation of morality. Christianity teaches that life is a gift from God; Buddhism teaches that the body is bestowed by one’s parents and must not be desecrated; Islam emphasizes purity and justice; Judaism explicitly prohibits the use of a corpse without consent. These traditions are not relics of the past, but the very foundations of civilization.
In the face of China’s increasingly sophisticated and secretive organ “industry chain,” the world must respond together. First, nations should pass laws similar to the U.S. Stop Forced Organ Harvesting Act, banning cooperation with hospitals, research institutions, or suppliers implicated in such practices. Second, a global transplant-tracking mechanism should be established to investigate cross-border transplant tourism. Third, all faith communities should unite in making this a global moral issue, opposing every practice that treats the human body as an object of trade. Most importantly, each of us must respond: by sharing the truth on social networks; by telling facts within our communities; by refusing indifference in daily life. These small actions, when accumulated, can shift the boundaries of reality.
As Tibetan practitioners say: “Even in the darkest cave, a single beam of light can show the way.” That light is not bestowed by others, but lit by ourselves.
If the world is a dark night, may we still light lamps and press forward. If the system is a high wall, may our voices be the wind through its cracks. The freedom to live must never be reduced to a tool for a few to extend their lives; it must remain the bottom line for all. For this, we must act, appeal, and resist. Because once the right to life is stripped away, all other freedoms become hollow. And a society or nation that fails to safeguard the most basic freedom of survival will ultimately lose the moral foundation of its legitimacy.
Even in the darkest night, we must guard the light of life.

