Bangkok Post

An overview of China’s Cultural Revolution

Decade was a dark time and a crucible that tested the nation

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Monday marks 50 years since the declaratio­n of China’s Cultural Revolution, a decade that plunged the country into chaos, leaving millions dead and transformi­ng its political landscape.

Here is the background to this critical period in Chinese history:

It was partly a political power struggle. In the early 1960s, China’s paramount leader, Mao Zedong, found himself losing control. Many of his ideas had been disproved by the failure of the Great Leap Forward, an effort to rapidly industrial­ise the country that led to a massive famine and the deaths of tens of millions.

In response, he fomented a national movement to discredit political rivals, encouragin­g young people and workers to rebel against the social order and “bombard the headquarte­rs”. Through skilful manipulati­on of public sentiment, Mao and his allies destroyed many top leaders and cultivated a cult of personalit­y around Mao that gave him near-total control of the government.

It was also a struggle for ideologica­l purity, pitting neighbour against neighbour and even child against parent as each sought to prove their leftist credential­s. Participan­ts rejected traditiona­l Chinese values, calling for true Communists to “smash the ‘four olds’”: old customs, old culture, old habits and old ideas.

Many of the country’s most valuable relics and buildings were destroyed, and, as the ‘cultural revolution’ rejected foreign influence, China entered a period of extreme xenophobia.

The “Circular of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China on the Great Proletaria­n Cultural Revolution” was issued on May 16, 1966 setting up a leadership group of Mao, his wife Jiang Qing and other key supporters.

It aimed to weed out supposed capitalist infiltrati­on of the communist cause — and Mao’s own rivals — in the culminatio­n of a push that began in 1962 when he panned a play he thought critical of his rule.

Students and schoolchil­dren formed into Red Guards, devoted to rooting out “capitalist roaders” and promoting Mao Zedong Thought. Mao encouraged them to criticise their elders, their teachers and the government. By mid-June, schools were closed. Mao and his allies encouraged revolution­ary fervour and invited students to spread the movement countrywid­e, letting them ride trains free. Mao’s call for “permanent revolution” soon got out of hand, with students’ attacks on “counter-revolution­aries” and “class enemies” turning violent.

The Red Guards split into rival factions, like gangs, sometimes fighting each other in the streets. Historians believe millions died in the ensuing violence, ranging from street battles to public denunciati­ons, or even torture and executions. Others killed themselves as a result of intense criticism.

Concerned by t he chaos he had unleashed, Mao in 1968 sent troops to stop the Red Guards, forcing millions of young urbanites to move to the countrysid­e.

As a result, an entire generation of China’s “sent down youth” largely missed out on formal education.

By 1969, the army had restored a modicum of order in the country, helped by the looming threat of war with the Soviet Union.

Many of Mao’s followers were disillusio­ned by the mysterious death in 1971 of his hand-chosen successor Lin Biao, who was accused of plotting to assassinat­e the leader. Mao’s wife Jiang Qing and her associates, known as the Gang of Four, struggled with more moderate elements in the Communist Party for control.

But by the time Mao died in 1976, there was little appetite for the Gang of Four’s radical leftism. The group was thrown out of power and replaced by Deng Xiaoping, who began the slow process of reforming China’s economy and opening it to the outside world. In 1981, the Communist party declared that Mao was 70% correct and 30% wrong. Opinions on the ‘Cultural Revolution’ are similarly mixed. While many look back on it as a dark time, others see it as a crucible that tested the nation.

The hard lessons of the era produced today’s leading figures, from President Xi Jinping to succesful businessma­n Wang Jianlin. But it also created deep scars on both the country’s landscape and national psyche that still exist today.

 ?? AFP ?? Red Guards, high school and university students wave copies of Chairman Mao Zedong’s ‘Little Red Book’ as they parade in Beijing in June 1966.
AFP Red Guards, high school and university students wave copies of Chairman Mao Zedong’s ‘Little Red Book’ as they parade in Beijing in June 1966.
 ?? AFP ?? Mao Zedong on August 18, 1966, at the Tiananmen Gate rostrum.
AFP Mao Zedong on August 18, 1966, at the Tiananmen Gate rostrum.

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