Edmonton Journal

China fails to mark violent revolution

‘Cultural Revolution’ began in 1966

- Christophe­r Bodeen

BEIJING • Exactly 50 years ago, China embarked on what was formally known as the Great Proletaria­n Cultural Revolution, a decade of tumult launched by Mao Zedong to revive communist goals and enforce a radical egalitaria­nism. The milestone was largely ignored Monday in the Chinese media, reflecting continuing sensitivit­ies about a period that was later declared a “catastroph­e.”

Authoritie­s have generally suppressed discussion of the violent events, now a couple of generation­s removed from the lives of young Chinese focused on pursuing their own interests in an increasing­ly capitalist­ic society.

On May 16, 1966, the ruling Communist Party’s Politburo met to purge a quartet of top officials who had fallen out of favour with Mao. It also produced a document announcing the start of the decade-long Cultural Revolution to pursue class warfare and enlist the population in mass political movements.

The start of the Cultural Revolution was not widely known or understood at the time, but soon took on an agenda characteri­zed by extreme violence, leading to the downfall of leading officials, factional battles, mass rallies and the exile of educated youths to the countrysid­e. It wound up severely threatenin­g the Communist Party’s legitimacy to rule.

Despite the party’s formal repudiatio­n of the movement five years after it ended, vestiges of the Cultural Revolution continue to echo in China’s authoritar­ian political system, the intoleranc­e of dissent and uncritical support for the leadership, said journalist Gao Yu, who was a university student in 1966.

Gao said her initial enthusiasm for the Cultural Revolution faded after fanatical young Red Guards raided her home and accused her father, a former ranking party cadre, of disloyalty to Mao. The violence of the era was impossible to avoid, she said.

“I saw so many respected teachers in universiti­es and high schools get beaten up,” Gao said. “The movement wasn’t so much a high-profile political struggle as a massive campaign against humanity.”

A longtime party critic, Gao, now 72, was allowed to return home last year on medical parole after being imprisoned on a state secrets charge related to her publicizin­g a party document about ideologica­l controls.

Gao and others say cynicism in Chinese society still lingers from the Cultural Revolution, when students were called on to denounce authority figures, including teachers and even parents. Traditiona­l morals and philosophy were attacked and Buddhist temples were defaced and destroyed.

No official events were held to commemorat­e Monday’s anniversar­y, although neo-Maoists have staged private commemorat­ions.

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