home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- NOSEC, Page 30A Day in The Life . . .. . . Of ChinaBy Howard G. Chua-Eoan
-
-
- What is a single day to a nation that has lived through more
- than 1 million days? For China, April 15, 1989, promised to be
- nothing out of the ordinary. Yet it would prove to be portentous.
- Editorials in that morning's newspapers sounded Malthusian alarms
- at the news that China's population had officially reached 1.1
- billion. A devastating forest fire raged in Inner Mongolia,
- destroying precious woodlands. More tales of bureaucratic
- corruption bubbled up. And Hu Yaobang, the reformist Communist
- Party leader ousted two years before, died at age 73. By nightfall,
- students, inspired by Hu's liberal views, began covering walls with
- posters denouncing the system that deposed him. Over the next 50
- days, first a few demonstrators and then hundreds of thousands
- would occupy Tiananmen Square and paralyze the regime, which struck
- back the only way it knew how -- with the army. It all began on
- April 15.
-
- Just as he had done for projects on the U.S., Japan and the
- Soviet Union, David Cohen dispatched 90 photographers to capture
- a 24-hour period in the People's Republic. A Day in the Life of
- China, due Oct. 1 from Collins Publishers ($45) and presented here
- in a 27-page selection, aimed simply to be a snapshot of an ancient
- country trying to come to terms with modernity. Coincidence would
- have it chronicle April 15, the day China began to tremble.