Bangkok Post

TRAILBLAZE­R OR TERROR?

Revisionis­t views of Empress Dowager Cixi as a feminist carry little weight with Chinese.

- By Jane Perlez in Beijing

“She had one of the most ruthless, savvy political minds; she was liske a gangster” JEREMIAH JENNE Historian

She entered the world of an ancient empire as a teenage concubine, chosen by the emperor to share his bed for her good looks, immaculate comportmen­t and, above all, her ability to sing.

The male-dominated court was a swirl of intrigue, forced suicides and poisonings. Eunuchs assigned to the emperor prepared her for sex with the ruler, undressing her and carrying her to his bed. After the Emperor Xianfeng’s death, she governed in the name of young male heirs — from behind a screen.

Perhaps as an escape from these oppressive restrictio­ns, Empress Dowager Cixi, the de facto ruler of China in the final decades of the imperial dynasty, rebuilt a fantastic wonderland, the Summer Palace. It is an extended estate of glittery lakes, luxurious gardens and elaborate wooden pavilions on the edge of Beijing, attracting up to 100,000 visitors a day.

Most of them are curious Chinese from across the country who read in their Communist Party-authorised schoolbook­s that Cixi was a harridan who stole the nation’s wealth and was responsibl­e for China’s humiliatin­g defeat by the Japanese in 1895.

But was she? Cixi, a peer of Queen Victoria and apparently iron-willed, has invited revisionis­t interpreta­tions that view her as a feminist, at least in the context of the late 19th century, when women in China were treated little better than spittoons.

Strong women in China are often portrayed as power-hungry, and sometimes irrational, and are notably absent from the highest ranks of government. There is no Hillary Clinton figure in contempora­ry China (the real Clinton is vilified by the government for talking about human rights in the country), or an Angela Merkel, who has stood up to China on trade.

When Bo Xilai, a rival to the current ruler Xi Jinping, was put on trial for corruption, he described his wife as “insane” in an effort to lessen his sentence.

So harking back to the pre-communist era for a feminist trailblaze­r makes sense. And to search for feminist ideals in a woman who ruled for nearly 50 years, from 1861 until her death in 1908, is understand­able.

But the case of Cixi — who was isolated, undereduca­ted and never made a break for personal freedom — is a hard argument to make.

A Chinese historian, Jung Chang, began the re-evaluation of Cixi with her biography,

Empress Dowager Cixi. Chang, who lives in exile, argues the empress brought mediaeval China into the modern age, calling her an “amazing stateswoma­n”.

But Chang’s damn-the-man portrait of Cixi is a tad too generous even for some sympathise­rs. How could the empress dowager have ushered in groundbrea­king innovation when much of her career was devoted to her drive to preserve the imperial family that crumbled three years after her death?

And Cixi did undermine a bold reform programme begun by her adopted son, Emperor Guangxu, who favoured a constituti­onal monarchy, not an absolute one. She then supported the Boxer rebellion, an anti-foreign, anti-Christian uprising that cost China dearly, a move she later blamed on her bossy male advisers.

A Chinese scholar, Zhang Hongjie, recently took up the cause of the empress in a sympatheti­c essay, “Woman Cixi”, featured in an anthology about Chinese women and men who have struggled against the odds.

He argued that she was held back by her lack of education, a given at the time because she was a woman, and that she should be given credit for trying to make amends for her mistakes at the end of her rule. But Zhang said his positive portrait made little impact. “Cixi is still a negative character,” he said. Her endeavours to preserve the imperial family above all else make for comparison­s with Michael Corleone, the fictional Mafia boss in The Godfather.

“She had one of the most ruthless, savvy political minds; she was like a gangster,” said Jeremiah Jenne, a historian who leads visitors on walking tours around the Summer Palace, where he points out 500-year-old juniper and cypress trees, and paint-faded pavilions like the Hall for Dispelling Clouds, which was renovated in 1895 for her 60th birthday extravagan­za.

Cixi had the Summer Palace rebuilt after an invading European army looted and burned the original, which, with its jewel-encrusted furniture and over-the-top silks, was said to be on par with Versailles.

Despite the scholarly rumination­s about Cixi, many Chinese tourists seem more interested in her extravagan­t lifestyle and come to see what is left of the loot, much faded because of neglect by the Communist Party’s cultural administra­tors.

A favourite is the “marble boat” officially known as the Boat of Purity and Ease, a two-storey wooden pavilion with wide verandas built into the side of the lakeshore and painted to resemble pale marble.

The official school curriculum says Cixi stole funds from the imperial navy to renovate the boat just two years before the outbreak of war with the Japanese. Because of her thievery, the textbooks say, China lost the naval battles against Japan in 1894.

In the gift shops, there are no images of Cixi, just a few pieces of pink silk emblazoned with her calligraph­y, sold as wall hangings. Commemorat­ive coins with the portrait of Mao Zedong, cheap bangles, tea sets and hand fans do a brisker trade.

“No one likes her,” one of the young saleswomen said. “In history she is bad. Who would buy souvenirs of Cixi?”

Young Chinese tourists showed more sympathy.

“As a woman, she couldn’t make decisions in politics like the men,” said Xiao Yangchuan, 18, a first-year university student. “I think we should see her as a real person. She has her own flaws, and we should understand her era.”

In the last decade of her life, the empress dowager tried to polish her image by making herself more accessible, especially to Western diplomats. But in the end, she could barely overcome the impression that, like many royals in the West, she was most interested in her dogs, gardening and fancy clothing, wrote Sterling Seagrave in his empathetic biography, Dragon Lady.

Pictures of her are relegated to a pavilion near the exit of the palace grounds, where a large sepia photo shows her, surrounded by ladies in waiting, dressed in an embroidere­d gown with pearls said to be the size of canary eggs, and long talon-like fingernail­s.

The day before she died, the young emperor, Guangxu, was found dead — of natural causes, imperial records show. In 2008, Chinese medical investigat­ors found extraordin­arily high levels of arsenic in his remains, leading to a popular conclusion that the Empress had killed him to try to stop him from introducin­g political reforms after her own death.

Did she do it? “I am going with Cixi,” said Jenne, the historian.

In her final years, she was known as the “old Buddha”, a term that friendly biographer­s say was a term of endearment. Others see it as an appropriat­ely scornful term for a woman who was barely literate, left little for other women to emulate and led the bankrupt Qing dynasty to its downfall in a country whose government remains as male-dominated as ever.

 ??  ?? Empress Cixi appears in the centre of this photograph taken in the Wengchang Gallery of the Summer Palace.
Empress Cixi appears in the centre of this photograph taken in the Wengchang Gallery of the Summer Palace.
 ??  ?? BELOWA visitor takes a selfie in front of the “marble boat” built by Empress Cixi at the Summer Palace in Beijing. Chinese children have been taught that Empress Cixi stole money from the imperial navy to renovate the “marble boat” just two years before a war with the Japanese, which China lost.
BELOWA visitor takes a selfie in front of the “marble boat” built by Empress Cixi at the Summer Palace in Beijing. Chinese children have been taught that Empress Cixi stole money from the imperial navy to renovate the “marble boat” just two years before a war with the Japanese, which China lost.
 ??  ?? The Hall of Dispelling Clouds at the Summer Palace in Beijing.
The Hall of Dispelling Clouds at the Summer Palace in Beijing.
 ??  ?? ABOVETouri­sts walk through the Long Corridor of the Summer Palace in Beijing.
ABOVETouri­sts walk through the Long Corridor of the Summer Palace in Beijing.

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