home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
052989
/
05298900.029
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1993-04-15
|
6KB
|
115 lines
<text id=89TT1406>
<link 93HT0328>
<link 89TT2543>
<title>
May 29, 1989: Beware The Dunce Caps
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
May 29, 1989 China In Turmoil
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 47
Beware the Dunce Caps
</hdr><body>
<p>Will the Cultural Revolution repeat itself?
</p>
<p> To Liu Anyi and his wife Li Lanting, the street scenes in
Beijing last week seemed eerily reminiscent of another spasm of
unrest that began to rock China 23 years ago. Then, as now,
students marched in the streets by the hundreds of thousands,
waving red flags and chanting slogans defying an entrenched
political establishment. Destination: Tiananmen Square. Then,
as now, the demonstrators vilified aging national leaders --
including, as he must have recalled bitterly last week, Deng
Xiaoping, then Communist Party General Secretary, who at one
point was paraded around Beijing wearing a dunce cap.
</p>
<p> The students of 1966 were the Red Guards, and for nearly a
decade their movement convulsed the country in chaos, violence
and dictatorial excess. Millions of Chinese, including nearly
everyone who enjoyed a privileged status, were sent to
"re-education camps" in the countryside, where they underwent
humiliating rituals of "self-criticism." Political leaders who
had been trying to modernize China's economy were branded
"capitalist roaders" and in many cases were read out of the
party and power. In the name of glorifying the "masses" and
"bombarding the bourgeois headquarters," libraries were
ransacked, factories and schools closed, and the country turned
completely inward, virtually shutting off a billion people from
the rest of the world.
</p>
<p> Liu Anyi, then a senior manager in the Ministry of
Petroleum, found himself a target because he had worked on
Taiwan prior to choosing to return to the mainland shortly
before the Communist takeover in 1949. "The Red Guards branded
me as a big capitalist and an undercover (Taiwan) spy," Liu, 71,
recalls with a wry smile. "They kept me in solitary confinement
for over a year and later organized a pictorial exhibit of my
crimes." These included photos of various articles of
Western-style dress belonging to Liu and his wife that Red
Guards had found in the course of ransacking their apartment.
</p>
<p> Is Liu afraid that the current unrest may lead to a second
Cultural Revolution? No, mostly because the first explosion was
inspired and directed by the country's leader, Mao Zedong.
"Today's protest is a genuine student movement, spontaneous, yet
well disciplined," he says. "We do not feel threatened." In
fact, Liu's son and daughter-in-law have gone to Tiananmen
Square to show their solidarity with the protesters.
</p>
<p> But it was with great reluctance that the Lius allowed
their granddaughter to visit the square. "I fear that a single
incident could set off a mass panic," says Liu. Liu also
concedes that this innocent movement could deteriorate into a
government backlash that might not carry the widespread
vindictiveness of the Cultural Revolution but that nonetheless
would result in a shake-up at the top.
</p>
<p> Furthermore, despite the uncertainty as to where the
student demonstrations may lead, there is no evidence that the
movement is running amuck. Yang Ting (not his real name), a
20-year-old Red Guard in 1966 and now an interpreter, recalls
with a shudder the killing and widespread looting during those
years. "From the very outset this time, the movement was well
organized and the students did not harbor any intention to tear
apart the Communist Party." Another positive sign, he says, is
that the "students' demands conformed with the wishes and will
of the broad masses, especially the calls for a crackdown on
corrupt officials."
</p>
<p> Liu Binyan, a former top journalist on the official
People's Daily now attending Harvard University as a Nieman
Scholar (and no kin to Liu Anyi), notes that not all the
similarities between the Cultural Revolution and this year's
protests are superficial. "The two major causes of both events
-- official corruption and the contradictions in ideology among
the leaders -- are quite similar," he says. Liu speaks as
another of the Cultural Revolution's victims: as an "unrepentant
rightist," he was among the first group of 15 intellectuals
purged at Mao's order. Readmitted to the party in 1979, he was
kicked out again in 1987 for the alleged sin of supporting
bourgeois liberalization and today is one of the country's most
prominent dissidents. "Mao was right in attacking the privileged
party leaders and the emerging new bureaucratic class," he says.
"His mistake was in pushing the mass campaign without changing
the political system."
</p>
<p> Most of the youths who participated in last week's
demonstrations are too young to remember the beginnings of the
Cultural Revolution. According to Liu Binyan, however, graduate
students and university lecturers who lived through the turmoil
of those years may have played an important role by giving
their advice and support to the student movement. For them, says
Liu, the Cultural Revolution serves partly as an inspiration for
today's protest -- but also partly as a cautionary tale. "People
learned a great lesson from the Cultural Revolution. They can
no longer follow a leader blindly."
</p>
</body></article>
</text>