There is no freedom without justice and no justice without freedom. This is also true for the Tai Ji Men case: and love is needed, too.
Tai Ji Men
Prince Shotoku and the (Non-)Independence of Law
The 7th-century Japanese ruler taught that law and its enforcement cannot be independent from conscience.
Tai Ji Men Deserves Real Justice
January 11 was Taiwan’s Judicial Day. Participants in an international webinar expressed the hope it would be an opportunity to reflect on what went wrong in the Tai Ji Men case.
A Sad Anniversary Becomes an Opportunity to Call for Justice on the Tai Ji Men Case
The reasons why the Tai Ji Men case was started on December 19, 1996, and continued for 26 years, are hard to understand rationally. But we all understand a solution is needed now.
Tai Ji Men as a School of Solidarity
Caring for the others is not just sharing material interests but recognizing the value of all human beings. This is what Tai Ji Men teaches.
Solidarity in Islam and the Tai Ji Men Case
Muslims believe that solidarity is a natural feeling, but it should be cultivated. Similar ideas exist in most religions, and inspire us in our solidarity with Tai Ji Men.
Solidarity with Tai Ji Men and All Victims of Judicial and Tax Persecution
A seminar in Pasadena discussed the global significance of the Tai Ji Men case and the proposal of an International Day Against Judicial and Tax Persecution by State Power.
Durkheim, Solidarity, and the Tai Ji Men Case
One of the fathers of sociology presented solidarity as the necessary cement of societies. Tai Ji Men tells us it should be based on conscience.
Human Rights’ Roots in Conscience: A Basic Tai Ji Men Teaching
Conscience expresses the peculiar, irreducible, and intangible human nature, which makes all persons both similar and diverse. Human rights derive from it.
Tai Ji Men: A Human Rights Case
On United Nations Human Rights Day, international scholars and human rights activists called for a solution of the Tai Ji Men case.









