| Iron stomach needed for exhibition of Chinese bodies(AFP)
 Updated: 2005-11-24 10:06
 
 Skinned and dissected, muscles, tendons and organs in full view, 22 bodies 
provided by a Chinese university have become one of the most controversial 
exhibitions seen in New York in recent years. 
 
 
 
 
 |  Skinned and dissected, muscles, 
 tendons and organs in full view, 22 bodies provided by a Chinese 
 university have become one of the most controversial exhibitions seen in 
 New York in recent years. The bodies have been placed in normal poses 
 inside glass cases for people to gaze upon as part of 'The Inner You: 
 Bodies, the Exhibition' at the South Street Seaport Exhibition Center. 
 [AFP]
 |  The bodies have been 
placed in normal poses inside glass cases for people to gaze upon since 
Saturday.
 Many people are questioning who these bodies belong to and why they have been 
turned into a show. 
 But the three US firms who are backing "The Inner You: Bodies, the 
Exhibition," say they want the event to help people understand "what lies 
beneath" and "see their own bodies in a fascinating way they never have before." 
 "We know surprising little about ourselves," said Roy Glover, professor 
emeritus of anatomy and cell biology at the University of Michigan and the 
exhibition's chief medical director. 
 "For centuries, this world has been off-limits to the public -- open only to 
doctors and medical professionals. Now, for the first time, we are pulling back 
the curtain and allowing the public to see it for themselves, up-close and 
personal," he added. 
 At the Exhibition Center, the 22 bodies and 260 body parts, form a bizarre 
parade. 
 One body is in the position of a baseball pitcher, his arm coiled back ready 
to release the ball. Another is sitting down, ruminating as in Rodin's The 
Thinker. Yet another looks like he is directing an orchestra. 
 Their muscles are tense, the nervous system seems to be tingling. Everything 
is there except the skin. 
 Further down the aisle there is a group of foetuses, a body heavily covered 
in body fat, a healthy lung sits alongside another one blackened by years of 
smoking. 
 The organizers say the exhibition will help people of all ages learn about 
health: "The exhibition will change the way people see themselves. It is 
designed to enlighten, empower, fascinate, and inspire." 
 But even in New York, where provocation is no surprise, the exhibition raises 
eyebrows and an avalanche of comments. 
 "You'll need a strong stomach and a stout heart to see a bizarre new show 
opening at the South Street Seaport," said the New York Daily News in a report 
on the "macabre exhibit". 
 But beside its visual shock, "Bodies" poses questions about the origin of the 
exhibits themselves. The bodies come from the Dalian Medical school in northern 
China, where human rights advocates in China have voiced concern. 
 Harry Wu said that during the 19 years he was detained in a work camp in 
China, he frequently watched medical students help themselves to bodies from the 
prison cemetery. 
 "These are real things not commodities. We have to know who are they," the 
executive director of the LaoGai Research Foundation told AFP. 
 "Are they male or females? How old are they? Are they caucasian, blacks, 
Asian, Mongolians? I think it's reasonable to ask," said Wu, who has become a US 
citizen. 
 Arnie Geller, president of Premier Exhibitions, one of the organizers of 
"Bodies," said he did not know the identities of the exhibits, but answered some 
of the criticism. 
 "We've heard those stories before," he said, adding that his company spent a 
great deal of time in China researching how the bodies were collected. He said 
they all were found by police and that nobody claimed them before they were 
donated to the medical school. 
 "With the results of our investigations we feel 100 percent satisfied that 
these bodies were legally obtained; we're 100 percent satisfied that these 
people who worked on these specimens are the finest dissectors in the world," 
Geller told AFP. 
 The tissues have been preserved by a silicone treatment that, after a year, 
makes muscles, nerves, bones, blood vessels and organs take on a plastic 
appearance that never decomposes and facilitates dissection. 
 "Bodies" was first put on display this year in Florida 
where there was an equally heated controversy but huge numbers flocked to see 
how their insides work.  
 
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