Twelve years ago, Liu Hsiu-lien (劉秀蓮) emigrated to Israel for love, but like a seed drifting into a wild field, she has taken root there and is now trying to overcome cultural obstacles — and a failing marriage — to pioneer qigong in the Jewish state.
“I hope that in the near future, qigong can be as popular as yoga in Israel,” said the forty-something Taiwanese woman who moved to Israel more than a decade ago with her husband, whom she met and married in Taipei.
Liu runs a small massage clinic in Ashkelon, an ancient coastal city with a population of 100,000 people, including 61 Taiwanese, that lies just a few kilometers north of the Gaza Strip.
PHOTO: CNA
SPRAINS AND PAINS
Her main business involves treating customers’ sprains and back pains or restoring their energy levels with Taiwanese style oil massages.
She also teaches qigong at a health club in Tel Aviv, describing in fluent Hebrew people’s acupoints and “meridians,” the channels through which a person’s qi circulates — both essential concepts for qigong practitioners.
“Oil massage is my side business to earn a living here, but qigong is my lifelong devotion,” Liu said.
Trying to operate a massage business and promote qigong in southern Israel has some inherent geographic hurdles — but also some benefits.
“The global financial crisis did not beat me, but missiles fired by Hamas [the Islamic Resistance Movement] late last year from Gaza scared away many of my qigong students,” she said.
“Nonetheless, business at my clinic was especially good at that time, because people came to treat the bruises and sprains they suffered when seeking shelter in the air raids,” she said.
Ashkelon residents, including Liu, live under the threat of missiles launched from northern Gaza and they must quickly take cover in anti-air raid shelters — which most houses have — whenever an alarm sounds.
CHALLENGES
More than Hamas missiles, however, have brought hardship to her life in Israel.
She said she has had to overcome all kinds of inconveniences in her everyday life, not the least of which is the language barrier.
“I did not have the slightest knowledge of Hebrew,” she said, and learning it was not easy.
In the Hebrew classes she attended, Liu was always the only student who was not an immigrant from the former Soviet Union.
“All my classmates were Jewish immigrants from former Soviet Union republics and I was totally lost when the other students and the teachers conversed in Russian and Hebrew,” she said.
At least life is now much more convenient in Ashkelon compared with more than 10 years ago, Liu said, when established restaurants or common vegetables like mushrooms and spinach did not exist.
LIFE-CHANGING
Liu met her husband more than a decade ago in Taipei, where he was studying taijiquan and acupuncture after learning judo in Japan. It was he who introduced her to health-oriented qigong.
As her husband was completing his courses in Taiwan, she was earning professional certification in oil massage and qigong. The two decided to move back to Israel and spend their lives together there.
Liu found, however, that it was very difficult to start up a business from scratch. She distributed leaflets introducing her massage clinic in the street and inserted them in the mailbox of every family in the neighborhood.
She also set up a Web site to attract more customers, though in some cases, it drew a type of clientele she did not welcome.
PREJUDICE
“I got a lot of telephone calls every day, but many of them were by strange men seeking special sexual services,” she said.
“Some people thought the worst of my business and claimed I would end up in the sex business, despite the massage signboard on my clinic,” she said.
Nothing, however, compared with the distress she has felt over a failing marriage. She and her husband are separated.
“If life could start over again, I wonder whether I would have come this far … even for love,” Liu said.
Despite the professional and personal setbacks, she refused to succumb to negative thoughts and decided to bravely confront her future.
Liu made sure to give her customers the best and most professional massage she could, employing the skills and techniques she learned in Taiwan. She developed a loyal clientele, even as attacks characterizing her business as a brothel continued.
“Maybe my sincerity and service really touched them. Many customers who complained jokingly of my ‘torture’ began introducing their friends and relatives to my clinic,” she said.
To compete with other massage shops (many of which are run by people from former republics), she herself visited their shops and had a massage at each to learn about different techniques and to perfect her own skills. Her efforts have paid off.
“Aside from more tips, now some customers will bring me gifts on traditional Jewish holidays, thanking me for my service,” she said. “When customers give me the thumbs up, that is their highest praise to me and my native Taiwan.”
Although Liu’s massage clinic has established itself in Ashkelon, her major goal is still to popularize qigong in Israel.
“As qigong and yoga are based on a similar theory that stresses the importance of breathing and exercising one’s inner energy, I do believe that qigong will become equally popular in Israel,” she said.
To date, however, she has made little progress in her quest except for Tel Aviv, where she opened a qigong class.
Reflecting on her time in the Middle Eastern country, she surveyed a field of golden wheat undulating in the breeze next to her home and described it as symbolizing her struggles over the years.
But driven by a firm desire to succeed, Liu insists she will not succumb to economic problems, missiles or cultural bias and said she is prepared to ride on the crest of the next wave and help qigong make inroads into the daily lives of Israelis.
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