Los Angeles Times

LIFTING A VEIL ON CHINA’S PURGE

Two academics help shed light on some of the 1.7 million deaths in Cultural Revolution.

- By Violet Law Law is a special correspond­ent.

BEIJING — For half a century, Cheng Zhangong has mourned his father’s passing but didn’t want to dwell on how he really died — at the hands of Cheng’s high school classmates.

To this day, Cheng still remembers finding his father, a high school vice principal, slumped over a sandbox steps away from his old office after being beaten with long sticks by his own students. “Almost overnight they turned against my father,” said Cheng, 69, whose dry eyes belied pain. “I understand they were under the influence of the political system.”

The purges that defined the Great Proletaria­n Cultural Revolution began 50 years ago, in August 1966. Youth mobs, buoyed by idolatry for Mao Tse-tung, threw themselves into a crazed campaign as Red Guards. In colleges and high schools throughout the country, they repudiated their teachers and principals as “capitalist­s” or “stinking intellectu­als” and pressed them into service as laborers.

On one oppressive­ly hot day in the month that the purges began, Cheng’s father was made to sweep the school grounds for hours without being allowed a sip of water. When he paused to rest, he took a beating from the Red Guards. When Cheng intervened, his classmates kicked him and chased him away.

The next morning his father collapsed into a coma after predawn cleaning duties and died. By the time the dark decade ended in 1976, the number who perished would exceed 1.7 million.

“For many years, my family didn’t dare talk about this,” said Cheng, who couldn’t bear to set foot on his high school campus, a few blocks from his home, let alone broach the subject of his father’s beating.

Not until a few years ago, when he chanced upon a website that said his father had committed suicide out of guilt. Under the name of the “Chinese Holocaust Memorial,” the site keeps a running list of victims of the purges in the academe.

Determined to set the record straight, Cheng reached out to Wang Youqin, the Chicago-based Chinese academic who founded the site.

Wang was the daughter of two college instructor­s in Beijing during the Cultural Revolution and became a “sent-down youth” — one of the millions of urban, educated teenagers who were exiled to far-flung regions to live and work with peasants during that period.

In 1966, Wang, then 13, and her sister were sent to the border with Burma to clear wooded areas; her left palm still bears a scar from a pickax.

When she returned to Beijing 13 years later to enroll at Peking University, Wang learned that several of her high school teachers, and a few professors from her university, had died. She set out to learn more about the circumstan­ces of their deaths, each of which was officially deemed a suicide.

She discovered that the classroom where she used to attend lectures over the chirpings of passing sparrows had been awash with the blood of a Russian-language lecturer, who slit his wrist with a razor to end the pain of persecutio­n. By day, he was subjected to humiliatin­g “struggle sessions.” By night, he was corralled with a dozen other faculty members into the classroom, where they slept on dirt floors covered with loose straw. Only by tracking down the faculty member who had slept next to this instructor did Wang learn how he had taken his life.

Among the first to perish in the purges was Wang’s high school principal, Bian Zhongyun. She was pummeled with baseball bats and table legs and scalded with boiling water. Even as she lay unconsciou­s on the steps outside a dormitory building, some students kicked her, accusing her of playing dead. By the time she was transporte­d to the hospital, her body was already in rigor mortis. Wang learned all this from Bian’s husband, who saved Bian’s blood-soaked clothes.

Over the years, Wang has expanded her inquiry to include several hundred more educators targeted during the Cultural Revolution.

In 2000, Wang launched the website and listed about 800 dead for whom she has names and family testimony, or any shred of informatio­n she had managed to glean. Every week she’d receive emails or letters from victims’ families — until the Chinese government blocked the site a year later. In 2004, she published a book in Hong Kong detailing the deaths.

So far, she has conducted more than 1,000 interviews with family members of the victims.

Her persistenc­e has pierced the official silence enforced by the Chinese government. As time goes on, the families of those who died are more willing to open up.

Cheng, for one, sent Wang a six-page witness account detailing his father’s demise down to his last breath. She previously had only the school’s official history to go by.

“While I can’t change anything, what I can do is to record the facts about the victims,” said Wang. “Because for so long they’ve been absent from official history, the Cultural Revolution has been sanitized into a political event and rendered as victimless.”

Two years ago, one of Wang’s schoolmate­s and the daughter of one of communist China’s founding generals, Song Binbin, apologized for her role in Bian’s beating death. But so far, she has proved to be the exception.

Even at the half-century mark, the central government has yet to give a public account of what happened. And the only museum that commemorat­es the victims, founded by retired local officials in a small southern Chinese town a three-hour drive from Hong Kong, has over the last few months been cloaked with banners of Communist Party slogans — apparently on government orders, according to media reports.

Even though the Cultural Revolution raged all over, the region of Guangxi, on the country’s southern border, saw the heaviest death tolls — 86,000 to 150,000 by some estimate — and is unique in having internal official accounts about what transpired there.

A historian at the library of Cal State Los Angeles, Song Yongyi, recently published those accounts online — all 7 million characters detailing county-by-county killings. Since the 1990s, he has been building a database on the Cultural Revolution by compiling any material he could find. In 1999, he was detained for five months in China on allegation­s of stealing state secrets. But he remains undaunted.

“What I want to do is to restore to the people in the People’s Republic the right to know,” the historian said.

Revealed in his recently published documents is a hilltop burial ground, a rare resting place for the Cultural Revolution dead that still exists. More than a dozen unmarked graves lie scattered across this partially cleared outcrop, which at the time was a cattle farm supplying a nearby high school.

Shielded by eucalyptus trees and waist-deep cogon grass, each grave is a dune-shaped pile of crushed rocks and caked mud about 3 feet tall. Nearly all are without a tombstone or any marker, and appear unattended.

Locals said rice paddies have fallen fallow to make way for roads. The clanging of a lone earthmover echoed in the air.

There is little doubt that these last physical markers of the Cultural Revolution dead will soon be flattened — and forgotten.

 ?? Jean Vincent AFP/Getty Images ?? YOUTHS waving Mao Tse-tung’s Little Red Book parade in Beijing in 1966. During the Cultural Revolution, Red Guards went after intellectu­als, some of whom died after abuse but whose deaths were ruled suicides.
Jean Vincent AFP/Getty Images YOUTHS waving Mao Tse-tung’s Little Red Book parade in Beijing in 1966. During the Cultural Revolution, Red Guards went after intellectu­als, some of whom died after abuse but whose deaths were ruled suicides.
 ?? Violet Law For The Times ?? WANG YOUQIN, who lives in Chicago, set up a website listing academic victims of the 1966-76 purge.
Violet Law For The Times WANG YOUQIN, who lives in Chicago, set up a website listing academic victims of the 1966-76 purge.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States