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1994-05-02
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<text>
<title>
China's Problem Exorcising Mao
</title>
<article>
<hdr>
Foreign Service Journal, June 1991
China's Problem Exorcising Mao
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By A. Dane Bowen, Jr. Mr. Bowen, professor of history and
economics at Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania, is a retired
Foreign Service officer. He was national security adviser to
Secretaries of the Treasury John Connolly, George Shultz, and
William Simon.
</p>
<p> Some time ago China's octogenarian leader, Deng Xiaoping,
told an Italian journalist, "We're not going to do to Mao what
Chairman Khrushchev did to Stalin." In other words, Deng--who
was purged not once but twice under Mao Zedong and whose family
suffered terribly during the Mao era--intends to embark upon
no de-Maoization program resembling the de-Stalinization program
of the Soviets. It was during Mao's last and most egregious of
a long line of blunders and offenses, the movement with the
Orwellian name the "Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution,"
that Deng's grown son was thrown out of an upper-story window
and abandoned with a broken neck. He is now spending the rest
of his life in a wheelchair.
</p>
<p> Why no casting out of Mao Zedong from the Chinese Communist
hagiography? China seems unable to resolve its ambivalence
about Mao. On one hand, his image is neglected and his "little
red book" impossible to find in China. Leaders speak of him
only with some embarrassment. On the other hand, there is no
official repudiation of his rule. Some students even seem to
admire him.
</p>
<p>Resting in heavenly peace
</p>
<p> Mao's tomb has not suffered the fate of Stalin's. When I
visited Red Square in Moscow in 1968, Stalin's body had
recently been removed from where it had rested on public display
beside Lenin's. It was re-interred between Lenin's tomb--something of a forum for the nation--and the great medieval
Kremlin wall, which affords a backdrop to the tomb. Stalin's
grave was at the end of a long row of graves of old Bolsheviks,
going back to the Russian Revolution of 1917. But unlike the
other graves, which had a bust of each on top of a fair-sized
headstone, and had the grave framed by red granite, Stalin's
grave was unmarked.
</p>
<p> In contrast, Mao's cadaver remains ensconced in the heart of
Beijing, in an enormous mausoleum in the middle of his
creation, the enlarged Tiananmen Square, the largest in the
world. The mausoleum is the southern terminus of a central,
north-south axis of the imperial Forbidden City, which begins
at the base of a hill in the north and runs through building
after building, pavilion after pavilion, courtyard after
courtyard, and gate after gate, exiting through Tiananmen Gate
onto the Square, and ending with Mao's remains. Mao's mausoleum
thus blocks the imperial symbolism of opening out to all of
China to the south.
</p>
<p> Of this scene, a Chinese poet wrote this bitter verse:
</p>
<qt>
<l>Chairman's tomb and Emperor's</l>
<l>palace face each other across the</l>
<l>square,</l>
<l>One great leader in his wisdom made</l>
<l>our countless futures bare.</l>
<l>Each and every marble staircase</l>
<l>covers heaps of bones beneath,</l>
<l>From the eaves of such fine buildings,</l>
<l>fresh red blood drops everywhere.</l>
</qt>
<p>(Quoted in Jonathan D. Spence, The Search for Modern China)
</p>
<p> Just as Mao's mausoleum dominates the south end of Tiananmen
Square, so his portrait commands a central position over
Tiananmen Gate, from the top of which Mao in 1949 proclaimed
the founding of the People's Republic. As the leaders of the
Soviet Union stand on Lenin's tomb to review the parades in Red
Square, China's leaders gather on Tiananmen Gate to review
functions in the square. The Chinese even once sang a popular
song called "I Love Tiananmen!"
</p>
<p> During the height of the demonstrations in the square in May
and June of 1989, some demonstrators splashed paint on Mao's
portrait. Leaders of the student demonstrators helped workers
replace it! Moreover, demonstrators shortly before the
massacre carried posters with huge portraits of Mao and Zhou
Enlai. This puzzled me at first, since I tended to assume that
the students were very much against the system Mao had created.
</p>
<p> But I recalled the reactions of some of my brightest
students when I was teaching, during the pro-democracy movement,
at a state university in Changsa, capital of Mao's native
province of Hunan. Some of these students thought very highly
of Mao, although close questioning revealed that they knew
practically nothing about him other than the official line. When
I told a group of male students that Mao kept a considerable
stable of young women, they shook their heads in disbelief. They
insisted he had three wives, but all in seriatim and legally.
Had not Mao ended multiple wives, foot-binding and concubinage?
When I explained that beautiful young women had been sent to Mao
from all over China, that they were even sometimes seen
marching together in a unit of the People's Liberation Army,
they still did not believe me.
</p>
<p>"Mr. Democracy"
</p>
<p> One of only three statues of Mao which I came across in
teaching and traveling in all the major regions of China stands
at Hunan University across the river from Changsa. During the
pro-democracy movement students hung a huge sign on this
imposing statue, reading, "Mr. Democracy, we welcome you." While
Mao may have been a reformer of sorts and called for "mass
participation" (meaning continuing revolution), he was certainly
never a proponent of democracy.
</p>
<p> One of the very few things the students really knew of the
real Mao was that he twice purged Deng Xiaoping, the current
Chinese leader. And since the students were against Deng, they
figured that Mao must have been alright, based on the old
principle that the enemy of my enemy must be my friend. An
idealistic school teacher turned tourist guide told a New York
Times reporter that she preferred Mao to the current
"grandfathers" in the Chinese government.
</p>
<p> On the evening of May 4, 1989, I sat around bonfires with my
Chinese students on the campus in Hunan Province, the occasion
being the celebration of "the May 4th Movement," a student-led
movement of 1919. Among the songs the students sang was
"Socialism is Good." Yet, many of these same students
immediately before and after this officially sponsored
celebration participated in the pro-democracy demonstrations.
</p>
<p>Hometown "shrine"
</p>
<p> When I first arrived in Changsha, I was puzzled as to why
this out-of-the-way provincial capital would have such an
imposing railroad station. I discovered that it was much bigger
and more impressive than the railroad station in the former
capital, Nanjing, or in Canton, or even in Shanghai. With its
central tower, symmetrical wings, and position blocking the view
at the end of the city's main drag, Wuyi Road, it reminded me
of the state capitol in Austin, Texas.
</p>
<p> Yet not only is Changsha no rail center, it is not even at
the intersection of main rail lines. Only later did I read that
some 20 trains a day used to depart from this station on a spur
to go to Mao's birthplace and boyhood home in the farming
village of Shaoshan, 75 miles to the west. The American
novelist, Paul Theroux, wrote in his travelogue of China, Riding
the Red Rooster, that no one went anymore to this village,
virtually a shrine to Mao. That is a little bit of an
exaggeration, but certainly before Mao's recent revival, not
many did, and I daresay no Chinese official or bigwig goes there
now.
</p>
<p> Close by, 20 miles farther into the boondocks, I saw hordes
of people and black, chauffeur-driven limousines with Chinese
officials visiting the birthplace and huge museum--20 times
larger than Mao's--of Liu Shaoqui. Liu was Mao's vice
chairman, until he began to question some of Mao's policies,
such as the break with the Soviet Union and the disastrous Great
Leap Forward. Mao framed him, arrested him, and let