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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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1960
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<text>
<title>
(1960s) China's Cultural Revolution
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1960s Highlights
</history>
<link 07903>
<link 07438>
<link 05787>
<link 00178><article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
China's Cultural Revolution
</hdr>
<body>
<p> [In October 1964, after 14 years and an investment of $200
million that was much needed elsewhere, China finally succeeded
in exploding a small, crude nuclear device in the deserts of
Sinkiang, becoming the world's fifth atomic "power." Then China
itself exploded in the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution,
the paroxysm of violence and youthful revolt that the aging Mao
Tse-tung set in motion, beginning in 1966, in order to
reinvigorate his huge, impoverished country.]
</p>
<p>(September 2, 1966)
</p>
<p> It had been clear for weeks that China was heading for some
sort of momentous crescendo, but no one knew exactly what to
expect. Last week, as the impact of the Great Proletarian
Cultural Revolution abruptly spilled out across the land, the
nightmare of it all became chillingly clear. Mao Tse-tung aimed
to blot out not only all traces of foreign influence, but to
tear out China's own cultural and historical roots as well.
Yearning to subject his country to the same hardships that he
had endured on the Long March, Mao chose as the weapon for his
campaign a new organization whose name derived from the civil
war of the 1930s: the Red Guards. Originally, they were
peasants who served Mao's Red army as porters and scouts.
Today's Red Guards are high school and university students,
often clad in military-type khaki trousers and belted jackets,
and always wearing a red arm band. They seemed to be under the
command of Mao's longtime ghost-writer, Chen Po-ta, 62, now a
leader of the Cultural Revolution. Chen's order: "You must
temper yourselves by going among the masses and getting
yourselves covered over and over again with muck."
</p>
<p> The Red Guards began carrying out Chen's version of Mao's
"thinking" early last week by posting along Peking's major
streets a "Declaration of War on the Old World." The Guards'
vow: "To mercilessly destroy every hotbed of revisionism." Down
the streets they rampaged, roughing up Chinese in foreign dress,
ordering shopkeepers to stop selling books except those that
reflect Mao's thinking and to rid themselves of imported
articles or luxury items. In the place of cosmetics, ordinary
floor soap was put on sale for facial care.
</p>
<p> The transformation was often painfully crude. Kangaroo courts
convened in the streets and meted out embarrassing punishment
to anyone guilty of associating with foreigners. Doctors, for
example, were forced to walk on their knees in the gutters
because they had treated foreign patients. At Peking University,
Red Guards encouraged students to spit on their professors.
</p>
<p>(January 13, 1967)
</p>
<p> Mao's Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, aimed at
"purifying" Chinese Communism, erupted into strife and stridency
so bitter that it produced widespread chaos and verged on civil
war. The revolution that for 18 years has enchained China's 750
million people to Communism openly degenerated into a personal
power struggle virtually unprecedented in history in its scope
and stakes. Chinese fought Chinese in the cities, and the
ubiquitous tatzebao, or posters, attacked with such catholic
ferocity--condemning both Mao's enemies and his lieutenants--that there may soon be no one left undenounced in all of Red
China.
</p>
<p> In the eastern Chinese city of Nanking (pop. 1.5 million),
the words and pictures of violence gave way to violence itself.
The Czechoslovakian news agency reported that some 500,000
workers had poured into the city, determined to wipe out Mao's
local Red Guard contingent and end its harassing techniques. For
four days, the two factions fought furiously in the streets.
More than 60,000 prisoners were taken by both sides, and many
were tortured in the best Chinese fashion. Japan's Kyodo news
service reported that 54 persons were killed, 900 wounded and
6,000 arrested and the city's rail and telephone service were
cut. The Great Revolution has clearly begun to devour itself.
</p>
<p> Despite the new violence and threats of more violence,
however, the main war is still being fought with
words--thousands upon thousands of them. Most of them deal in
sharp vilification of the villains opposing Mao's revolution,
or make an effort to arouse indignation and sympathy for Mao and
thus broaden the base of mass support that he and Lin Piao must
command to make their purge successful.
</p>
<p> President Liu Shao-chi last week was depicted in wall cartoons
as Don Quixote charging against Mao's teaching. Beside him, as
Sancho Panza, rode Liu's chief ally against Mao, Party Secretary
Teng Hsianoping. A less kind cartoon showed Liu as a barking dog
being drowned under the sun of Mao's teachings, and Liu's wife
was crudely caricatured as a prostitute. That catty note may
well have been the inspiration of Mrs. Mao, who likes to go by
her screen name of Chiang Ching, which she acquired as a grade B
bit actress in Shanghai in the 1930s. In the last two months,
she has emerged from 25 years of obscurity to take over the
cultural direction of the revolution.
</p>
<p> Purposely or not, the result has been that Mao and the purgers
have antagonized and threatened nearly every educated man and
woman gainfully employed in Red China. To the men who care about
China's future and want to bring it into the modern world of
comparative well-being and technology, the revolution threatens
to sweep all the painful achievements of nearly 20 years into
the dustbin and consign China to a dark age of mindless communal
litanies and Mao sun worshiping. To the men in the governments
of the provinces far from the politburo battles of Peking, the
revolution brings trainloads of Red Guards usurping their
authority and rocking tidy little boats that have been carefully
caulked over the years.
</p>
<p>(August 4, 1967)
</p>
<p> The signs of failure and frustration abound. The Maoists have
yet to restore order to China's economy, yet to persuade the
majority of Red Guard youths to go back to school, yet to rein
in the factional infighting that has troubled their ranks.
Lawlessness and violence flare each week from Manchuria in the
north to the Vietnamese border in the south. The summer
harvesting has been badly, perhaps grievously, hindered. And,
backed by the local populace, a regional military commander in
the strategic Yangtze River city of Wuhan openly defied Peking
and abducted two of its top officials.
</p>
<p> Peking's response to the "abduction" of its envoys was
immediate. Peking garrison troops loyal to Mao made a rare march
through the streets of the capital, brandishing placards
demanding RESCUE COMRADES HSIEH FU-CHIH AND WANG-LI!, STRANGLE
CHEN TSAI-TAO TO DEATH! and LIBERATE WUHAN! Radio Peking
broadcast an ultimatum ordering the rebels to surrender or be
wiped out by the Chinese army. Amid this show of force, Premier
Chou En-lai, Peking's most experienced mediator, quietly went
to work behind the scenes to negotiate with General Chen for the
release of the two prisoners. He succeeded, and last week the
freed emissaries returned to Peking and a hero's welcome at the
airport by Maoist officials including Chou and Mrs. Mao and tens
of thousands of cheering Pekingese.
</p>
<p>(December 22, 1967)
</p>
<p> The violence has not yet approached the massive defiance and
anarchy of the summer and early fall, when Mao, on a tour of
the provinces, was reportedly shocked into the admission that
"some people say this is not a civil war, but I say it is."
Still, there are new dimensions in the current strife that make
it potentially even more dangerous than the old. The battles are
no longer being fought just in the cities, but throughout the
countryside as well. Nor is the fighting any longer confined to
the ideological rivalry between pro-Mao and anti-Mao forces. It
has degenerated into a sort of blood feud, curdled by the
atrocities committed by each side against the other, motivated
by revenge and the determination to seize--or retain--power
for its own sake. The erstwhile Cultural Revolution that started
it all has splintered into literally thousands of factions, each
with militant followers, many equipped with heavy weapons
raided from local armories.
</p>
<p> No less ominous, the hopes have been shattered that Mao's
2,700,000-man army can restore order at will. The peace imposed
by the army lasted only through the harvest season--a time in
China when all energies, including those of the army, must be
devoted to bringing in the crops that will feed the country
through the winter. The harvest is now over, and the army's
control appears to be slipping as violence spreads. Despite its
enormous manpower resources, the army simply does not have
enough men to contain strife across a land of 750 million people
and 3,800,000 square miles.
</p>
<p>(December 22, 1968)
</p>
<p> In Canton, a crowd of 300,000 turned out to give a rousing
send-off to 60,000 middle-school graduates, all of them
teenagers bound for China's remoter regions. In Wuhan, a similar
rally was staged to bid farewell to 10,000 Red Guards from 150
local schools. In Kwei-yang, more than 20,000 students have set
out for the mountains and paddylands. Since September, the
Peking government has shipped more than 2,000,000 university and
high school students, including thousands of young guardsmen,
to the boondocks. Hundreds of thousands more of the nation's
intellectual elite are scheduled to follow.
</p>
<p> Chinese broadcasts emphasize that the mass upheaval is part
of Chairman Mao Tse-tung's plan for a revolution in the
country's educational policies: he is said to believe that the
present setup tends to perpetuate urban, bourgeois values. It
is also something of a "rectification" campaign, designed to
punish the young Red Guards who ran wild after Mao proclaimed
his Great Proletarian Cultural in 1966.
</p>
<p> [The country finally regained a degree of control. The
following year a party congress put a period to the anarchy, but
the consequences of the Cultural Revolution, for the ruined
economy and for ordinary Chinese whose lives were smashed (not
to mention the thousands upon thousands who were killed),
persisted until Mao's death in 1976.]</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>