After the crackdown on June 4, the
Chinese Communist Party accused Su Xiaokang as one of the "blackhands" behind the protest, subsequently charging him with the crime of "inciting counter-revolutionary propaganda"; his exile began in an effort to escape the arrest warrant. During the exile, Su had to hide in the mountains and remote villages for three months before
Operation Yellowbird successfully smuggled him to Hong Kong. Su proceeded to France and later reunited with his wife and son in United States. Since the beginning of exile, Su has actively participated in speeches and seminars to advocate for a democracy movement in China. He founded a web-based magazine called Democratic China to continue the pro-democracy movement. Su wrote his memoir, titled
A Memoir of Misfortune, published in 1997 in Chinese and in 2001 in English. The memoir documents the hardship he and his family endured after his exile and a tragic automobile accident in the Buffalo City that paralyzed his wife. After
A Memoir of Misfortune, Su wrote another book,
The Loneliness of Delaware Bay, telling of the struggles and the challenges he faced since moving to the United States. In 2013, Su published
The Era of Slaying the Dragon, tackling subjects from Mao's
Great Leap Forward and other atrocities occurring under the Chinese Communist Party's rule. In 2003, Su returned to China for his father's funeral under three conditions imposed by the Chinese government: • No interviews with the press. • No making speeches. • No meeting with political activists. Su's story was also featured in the Home coming campaign, funded and founded by Chu Yiu Ming, with a goal to restore the exiled democracy activists' right to return to China. ==References==