Insight: Children of Mao's wrath vie for power in China
DaisyCecil on 22 Jun 12
[[6dd593d6da31c6c44a2750545ca21f07:112.140.185.253]]Forty five years before ambitious Chinese politician Bo
Xilai fell from power
accused of flirting with Cultural Revolution extremism, he stood as a teenager
in front of a baying crowd that accused him of defying Mao Zedong's campaign.
Bo's divisive rise and
downfall has kindled debate about how the chaotic Cultural Revolution (1966-76)
shaped him and his generation, which will assume power at a ruling Communist
Party congress later this year.
At the start of the Cultural Revolution, the man at the centre
of China's worst political
scandal in decades was a student at the Number
Four High
School in Beijing,
an elite cradle for "princelings",
Womens
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had risen to power with Mao.
The school became a
crucible for conflicts unleashed with Mao's call to rebel in the name of his
unyielding vision of communism. The era paralyzed the country politically,
trigpicturgering social upheaval and economic malaise.
One day in 1967, Bo and two brothers were paraded at the
school by an angry group of student "Red Guards", and accused of
resisting the Cultural Revolution just as their father, Vice Premier Bo
Yibo, had been toppled along with dozens of Mao's former comrades and accused
of betraying their leader.
Their persecutors
twisted their arms behind them and pressed their heads nearly to the ground
while pulling back their hair to expose their faces, Duan Ruoshi, a fellow
student at the Number Four school, wrote in a memoir published last year.
"Despite the
shouts of condemnation from all sides, Bo Yibo's sons exuded defiance and
twisted their bodies in defiance against their oppressors," Duan wrote in
the memoir published by "Remembrance", an online magazine about the Cultural Revolution.
The ordeal was a lesson
for Bo in the capricious currents of Communist Party power, which only a few
months before seemed to promise him and other princelings a bright future as
inheritors of the Chinese revolution.
Now the effects of the Cultural Revolution on Bo and his generation are in
question.
In mid-March, Bo, who
had ambitions to be elevated this year to China's top decision making body, was
dismissed from his post as party secretary of Chongqing, a crowded municipality
in southwest China.
Critics, including
Premier Wen Jiabao, have suggested that Bo, 62, flirted with reviving the
extremes of the Cultural Revolution, a decade of zealotry
and violence etched in the memories of tens of millions of Chinese.
Yet the era was a
formative one for many Chinese leaders now poised to rise to power in a
Communist Party leadership transition later this year. President Hu Jintao is
due to retire as party leader and hand power to a generation including many
leaders who were Red Guards - student-militants fighting for Mao's vision of a
communism purged of compromise.
At many schools, gangs
of the loosely organized Red Guards marched into a vacuum of authority in the
summer of 1966, when officials were toppled and police retreated. Across Beijing in August and
September that year, nearly 1,800 people died in attacks instigated by Cultural
Revolution radicals, according to official estimates published in 1980.
A Reuters investigation
based on interviews with 10 former students and recent memoirs from the Number
Four school shows that Bo, his brothers and many fellow princelings experienced
theCultural Revolution as both enforcers and victims of Mao's
wrath - a double legacy key to understanding its influence.
"They experienced
both attacking others and being attacked by others, and then counter-attacking.
Their role underwent a massive reversal," said Zhu Jingwen, another
student at the Number Four school during the Cultural Revolution.
Some see parallels
between what Bo did or saw at his school and his controversial policies in Chongqing, where he
encouraged "red" choirs exuding nostalgia for Mao's time and an
anti-crime gang crackdown that critics said revived elements of Maoist
mobilization which trampled on legal protections.
"Bo Xilai is
one example of the effects of growing up in the Cultural Revolution," said
Yang Fan, a professor at the University
of Political Science and
Law who was a student at Number Four at that time and knew the Bo boys.
"He's the negative
side of that experience," said Yang.
THE ATTACKERS ARE
ATTACKED
Many princelings who
studied at the Number Four school in the 1960s remain powerful in politics or
business. They include Chen Yuan, president of the China Development Bank; Yu
Zhengsheng, the party chief of Shanghai;
and Liu Yuan, a military commander who stayed close to Bo.
The Cultural
Revolution-era elite alumni of Number Four are part of a generation marked by
chaos that has made them less conformist than their predecessors. While Bo's
brash ambition was rare among Chinese politicians, his sense of destiny and
pragmatism are seen by some as shared princeling traits.
"Overall, I think,
their experience has made them more independent-minded and less trusting of
central authority," Yin Hongbiao, a student at Number Four at the start of
the Cultural Revolution, said of politicians from Bo's generation.
"At a time when
they should have been studying, they were embroiled in political turmoil,"
said Yin, who is now an historian of the Cultural Revolution at Peking University.
At Number Four and
other elite high schools, children of party officials were the core of students
who threw themselves into Mao's initial movement and formed gangs of "Red
Guards".
The Number Four
students paraded teachers around the sports ground. Some mocked students
lacking their "red" revolutionary pedigrees as "bastards."
They built a jail, with a slogan written in blood on one of its walls,
"Long live red terror".
Yet princelings often
became victims of the next phase of the Cultural Revolution, when Mao turned on
their parents. Bo's father was toppled. His mother killed herself in the hands
of Red Guard radicals. Bo and two brothers spent years in jail.
"They experienced
the Cultural Revolution from the very top to the very bottom," said Zhu,
the former student, who is now a law professor at Renmin
University in Beijing.
"But I don't think
they ever lost their belief that they are privileged and deserve to have
power," he added. "There was never any reflection on their misdeeds,
they chose to dwell on only their own suffering."
THE RED AND THE BLACK
Fighting for his
political survival in March this year, Bo challenged opponents of his campaign
against organized crime by quoting a poem from the first years of the Cultural
Revolution.
"We'll dare to
fight for the high-ground with these devils. We'll never give an inch to the
overlords," Bo told a news conference at China's parliament, citing words
from a verse that in the mid-1960s was widely but wrongly believed to be by
Mao.
Those words recalled an
era when a young Bo and other students wore spare blue and green clothes at
Number Four, a collection of squat brick buildings near the walled Zhongnanhai
compound where Communist Party leaders worked and often lived.
Another large group of
students included children of intellectuals, professionals and engineers, some
of whom had worked under the Nationalist government before 1949.
"Number Four was
special among Beijing schools because of the number of cadre children, so the
school students formed into two camps," said Wang Zu'e, a former student
and Red Guard at the Number Four school who became a Beijing government
official.
As Mao placed growing
emphasis on ideological struggle and class into the mid-1960s, "children
of senior cadres began to feel like they were different from the rest of us and
began to enjoy more privileges and higher status", said Yang Baikui, a
former student at Number Four whose father was a translator.
Nowadays the widespread
impression of the Cultural Revolution is a convulsive revolt against all
authority. Initially, however, its most fervent supporters in high schools were
the children of officials, who saw Mao's call as a test of their mettle, said
former Number Four students and staff.
"At the start, to
become a Red Guard, you virtually had to have a red family background,"
said Zhou Xiaozheng, a former Number Four student who is now a professor of
sociology at Renmin University in Beijing.
At the school from June
1966, fervent students turned on teachers and the principal, accusing them of
hiding "bad" and "reactionary" class backgrounds and
failing to heed Mao's demands.
They searched homes and
patrolled the streets, forcing youths to get rid of John F. Kennedy-style
haircuts, sharp shoes, denim trousers and other signs of deviance, recalled
former student Yin.
The sense among
officials' children that they boasted proud revolutionary pedigrees - and
futures - passed from their fathers inspired a slogan that spread among the
children of officials at Number Four and other high schools.
"If the father is
hero, the son is a real man. If the father is a reactionary, the son is a bastard,"
ran the slogan painted on a wall at the Number Four school, former students
said.
On August 4, 1966,
students paraded the 20 or so teachers around the school sports ground, the
victims' heads bowed and weighed down with high "witch" hats and
placards that declared them to be "cow-ghosts and snake-demons" - the
phrase used to describe people deemed beyond the revolutionary pale.
"Their clothes
were spattered with ink, and their faces showed scars from beatings,"
ex-student Duan Ruoshi wrote.
"LONG LIVE RED
TERROR"
In the middle of this
uproar, Bo Xilai was a shy, gangly boy squeezed between two lively brothers,
schoolmates recalled. His older brother, Bo Xiyong, was a star athlete who
became a deputy head of the school's Cultural Revolution committee. His younger
brother, Bo Xicheng, was a boisterous junior secondary student.
Bo Xilai "was the
shy one among the Bo family boys", said Yang Fan, the professor and former
schoolmate, who later kept in touch with Bo's brothers. "His face would go
red when he spoke."
"He was there as
an old Red Guard, but he followed others, including his big brother," a
former official who grew up as a near neighbor to Bo's home. The ex-official
spoke on condition of anonymity.
"Old Red
Guard" is the term for the first wave of such activists, mostly from
politically privileged families.
But Bo Xilai was no
mere bystander, said Song Yongyi, a historian of the Cultural Revolution who
works as a librarian at California State University
in Los Angeles.
Bo joined in the rallies and home searches that spread in 1966, said Song,
citing an interview with a classmate of Bo.
"One day they had
an argument about family background, or the blood lineage theory, and Bo Xilai
slapped him on the face two times, and also Bo Xilai called him a son of a
bitch," said Song,
Mens
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to disparage students from "bad" class backgrounds.
At Number Four, the Red
Guards turned a teachers' canteen into a jail, or "labor re-education
team", to hold teachers deemed foes of the revolution, and then
"riff-raff" and "counter-revolutionaries" rounded up from
nearby neighborhoods.
Some ex-students from
Number Four take pride in pointing out that none of the school's teachers were
killed, and students rarely brutalized each other, unlike at other schools.
But four Number Four
teachers killed themselves, according to the memoirs of Wang Xingguo, an
ex-teacher, published by "Remembrance." Two or three people detained
from outside the school died in its jail, said former students.
Some of the young
guards used blood to write "Long live red terror!" on one of the jail
walls, and inside they used thick belts to whip inmates, one of the students
who was in charge, Liu Dong, wrote in an essay for "Remembrance".
"The jail reeked
from blood," said Zhu, the law professor at Renmin University.
"There were some things done there that were unforgivable. People had skin
flayed off their backs so the bones showed."
BO'S FIRST DOWNFALL
As Mao's campaign
escalated, however, Bo and other princeling students experienced what it was
like to be a victim.
Mao had become
convinced that top officials, including President Liu Shaoqi, the officer Liu
Yuan's father, were seeking to hobble the Cultural Revolution.
Students from
"bad" class backgrounds, spurned and criticized during the first
months of the Cultural Revolution, now had their chance to counter-attack.
By 1967, Bo Xilai's
family was engulfed in Mao's fury. His father, Bo Yibo, was a veteran of the
revolution who after 1949 took up a job as a senior financial official.
On January 1, 1967, Bo
Yibo was seized by Red Guards while he was in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou and taken back to Beijing where he was jailed for eight years.
Bo Yibo's wife, Hu
Ming, was taken back on another train two weeks later but died before she
arrived. An official account said she "committed suicide for fear of
punishment", said Warren Sun, an historian at Monash
University in Australia.
Since Bo Xilai's
downfall, some online accounts have repeated allegations that he beat his
ousted father in a bid to protect himself. But former Number Four students,
including several critical of Bo, said they doubted the story was true.
Glimpses of Bo and his
siblings in 1967 suggest a rootless existence on the margins. His older brother
Xiyong and younger brother Xicheng were caught after stealing a car and
colliding with a mule, said Yang Baipeng, a former schoolmate.
Bo Xilai was caught
stealing a book from a store on Beijing's main
shopping street, according to "Memories of the Storm", a collection
of memoirs about the Number Four school during the Cultural Revolution
published in Hong Kong this year.
In 1967, radicals at
the Number Four school rounded up Bo, his brothers and other sons of officials,
said Yang Baikui, a former student and a brother of Yang Baipeng.
"They were targets
not just because of what they did, but because of who their fathers were,"
said Yang Baikui.
"The struggle
meeting went on for two or three hours. They weren't hit, but we shouted
slogans and demanded that they admit their errors."
In late 1967, Bo Xilai
and two of his brothers were jailed, and later sent to Camp 789, a prison for
children of disgraced senior officials. They were released in 1972, and Bo
later became a worker.
He now risks another
stint in jail. He was suspended from the party's top ranks in April, when his
wife Gu Kailai was named as a suspect in the murder of Briton Neil Heywood, a
long-time family friend. Both Bo and Gu could later face trial.
After Bo's dismissal,
his wife's sister told friends not to worry about him, said a retired academic
who said she overheard their comments at a funeral in March of a fellow
princeling.
"Don't worry about
Bo Xilai, he's been through much worse than this," the academic said,
citing the sister's words. "He's been through the Cultural Revolution.
This is nothing."
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