Claude Arpi
Since the beginning of the year, China has started celebrating 100 years of the Communist party of China.
For the occasion, Xi Jinping has decided to teach the history of Modern China to everyone in China; every citizen should ‘learn about a century of party history and write a new great legend for the Party.’
An article in Xinhua states: ‘General Secretary Xi Jinping attaches great importance to the party history study and summarises the main content of party history study into 16 words, namely, ‘Learning history to be clear [about the role of the party], learning history to increase credit points, learning history to respect morality, and learning history to practice Communism.’
The ‘credit points’ refer to the way the totalitarian regime is keeping a tab on its citizens, by crediting (or debiting) each and every Chinese for his/her actions; even the most seemingly insignificant deed is recorded into the Communist party’s mega computers’ memory.
Xinhua added: ‘…The new journey of a modern socialist country has started well.’
On March 1, 2021, Xi addressed the young cadres at the Central Party School in Beijing; he told them that they were the successors of the old comrades. ‘The glory of the party is in your hands,’ Xi said, and exhorted them to be the ‘faithful successor of the tradition and fine work-style of the Communist party, constantly enhancing willpower, perseverance and self-control and making contributions in the new journey of comprehensively building a modern socialist country in the New Era!’
And, of course, ‘loyalty to the party is the primary political quality of Communists,’ Xi ; he added.
But there is another side to it; there are black (or ‘bloodied’ red) holes in the official history.
One of the ‘red’ holes occurred 32 years ago at Tiananmen Square from June 4, 1989.
If Beijing has forgotten, the world has not.
In 1997, French scholar Stephane Courtois, along with other European academics, published Le Livre noir du communisme, which was later translated in several languages under the title The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression.
The Black Book sold tens of millions of copies; it is still considered by many as one of the most influential publications written about the history of Communism in the 20th century.
The authors documented the history of political repression by Communist States, including genocides, extrajudicial executions, deportations, killing populations in labour camps as well as artificially-created famines.
In the first chapter, The Crimes of Communism, Stephane Courtois, quoting Plato’s Republic and Thomas More as Communist examples of ‘utopian philosophy’, explains, ‘We must make a distinction between the doctrine of Communism and its practice. As a political philosophy, communism has existed for centuries, even millennia.’
Courtois gave figures of people killed by Communist governments as amounting to more than 94 million, including 65 million in the People’s Republic of China, 20 million in the Soviet Union, 2 million in Cambodia, 2 million in North Korea, 1.7 million in Ethiopia, 1.5 million in Afghanistan, 1 million in Vietnam.
In China alone, there is no doubt today that the Great Leap Forward resulted in 40 million to 50 million deaths.
According to Frank Dikotter in his masterly Mao’s Great Famine: The History of China’s Most Devastating Catastrophe, 45 million people died unnecessarily.
Yang Jisheng in Tombstone: The Great Chinese Famine, 1958-1962 put the tally between 43 million and 46 million.
In the past, Hong Kong used to commemorate the Tiananmen Square events. Today, the former British colony has been banned doing so.
A historical event is worth recalling.
Dr Zhisui Li, Mao Zedong’s private physician, recorded the death of Zhou Enlai, the Chinese premier, and Mao’s reactions to it in 1976. Dr Li wrote: ‘Beginning in mid-March, knowing that the Qing Ming festival for honouring the dead would be celebrated on April 4, the citizens of Beijing began going to the Monument to the Revolutionary Heroes in Tiananmen Square to place mourning wreaths for Zhou.
‘The movement was spontaneous, and the crowds grew larger by the day. The country had not witnessed such an outpouring of popular sentiment since before the Communists came to power in 1949.’
As April 4 approached, Dr Li visited Tiananmen clandestinely: ‘The Square was filled with tens of thousands of people singing, making speeches, and reading poems. The mourning wreaths stretched from the Monument to the Revolutionary Heroes in the centre of the square all the way to Changan Avenue just in front of the Gate of Heavenly Peace. …It was impressive and moving.’
A similar event occurred in 1989, 13 years later.
Though Hu Yaobang had been sacked as secretary of the Chinese Communist party in January 1987, he was still a member of the politburo and entitled to attend important meetings.
On April 9, 1989, after uttering some strong words on the Communist party’s failures, the respected Hu Yaobang had a stroke.
A week later he passed away (similarly, the Panchen Lama had a ‘stroke’ when he mentioned the misdeeds of the party in January 1989 in Shigatse, Tibet).
Hu Yaobang’s death was the beginning of the largest spontaneous student revolution since 1919.
During the following days and weeks, the students demanded freedom of speech and the press, democratic elections, greater transparency in government dealings.
