http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,26132334-25837,00.html

The dark side of Mao's rule was madness and suffering
Chris Patten | September 28, 2009 

Article from:  The Australian 
EVERY country is shaped by its history, but countries fabricate and rewrite 
their histories too. The story of how we became who we are needs to accommodate 
our sense of tribal solidarity and accomplishment. Our triumphs and virtues are 
exaggerated; our villains externalised; our failings covered up. All this makes 
the study of history potentially insurrectionary, but hugely valuable. Good 
historians encourage us to be honest about ourselves. They destroy our 
self-delusions.

This is especially true of our flawed heroes, as we see today with the Chinese 
Communist Party's treatment of Mao Zedong. Sixty years ago this October, Mao 
stood on the rostrum of Tiananmen, the Gate of Heavenly Peace in Beijing, and 
declared the founding of the People's Republic. 

That moment marked the end of years of war and terrible hardship; the 
revolution had been won through blood, sacrifice, heroism, the mistakes of 
enemies and the manipulative assistance of Joseph Stalin, who purported to be a 
friend. The decades of rapacious warlords, greedy imperialists and Japanese 
invaders were over; China could stand up - although much misery still lay ahead 
as Mao's tyranny put down its roots. 

Verdicts on Mao differ wildly. For hard-line communists, he was a hero three 
times over: historical, patriotic and world-class. For the charismatic 
dissident Wei Jingsheng, Mao "cast virtually the whole of China into a state of 
violence, duplicity, and poverty". 

The Communist Party's official verdict is that he was a great Marxist and 
revolutionary whose "gross mistakes" during the Cultural Revolution were 
outweighed by his contribution to China. "His merits," it argues, "are primary 
and his errors secondary." 

China's Communist Party will not tolerate any questioning of this assessment. 
Mao's establishment of authority over China, his injection of patriotic pride 
into a land that had been appallingly humiliated by external and internal 
forces for a century and a half, and his legend as a global revolutionary 
leader - all contribute to the legitimacy for which China's leaders search. 
What they cannot gain through democratic elections they acquire through the 
history of the revolution and today's economic triumphs. 

But the dark side of Mao cannot be totally expunged. Too many people remember 
what happened. It is an intimate part of their family stories. 

There was the Great Leap Forward, which led to mass starvation and perhaps as 
many as 38 million deaths. Then the madness of the Cultural Revolution, when 
millions suffered terribly, many died and many more behaved disgracefully as 
Mao sought to destroy those who had rescued China from his earlier follies. 

Mao is certainly a more interesting figure than were many tyrants - a poet, an 
intellectual, a student of history as well as a serial philanderer. 

I remember being told a story about China that gives credence to the communist 
leadership's generous verdict on Mao. The mother of a Chinese journalist (now 
living outside the country) had been one of those who returned after 1949 to 
her homeland with her husband and family from a comfortable life at an American 
university. They regarded returning as their patriotic duty. They sacrificed 
everything. 

They were hit by Mao's tyrannical campaigns against "Rightists", beginning with 
the silencing of critics after the Hundred Flowers Movement in 1956. They lived 
in penury. The father died from ill-treatment during the Cultural Revolution. 
But the mother never complained. She believed that her family's sacrifices were 
justified by the liberation and rise of China. 

Towards the end of her life, this mood changed. She saw in the 1990s the 
beginning of China's economic ascent - the early years of spectacular growth. 
She witnessed the return of the greed and corruption that she believed had 
destroyed the Kuomintang in the 1930s and 40s. Why, she asked herself, had her 
family suffered so much if it was only to prepare the way for this? 

Yet it is China's economic renaissance that has been the most remarkable event 
in recent world history. The economic turnaround began under Deng Xiaoping, who 
had survived Mao's purges to follow in his footsteps and become the architect 
of China's rise as a world power. The hundreds of millions of Chinese lifted 
out of poverty as a result of Deng's reforms will in time regard him as a 
greater hero than Mao. 

Maoism was a curious and unique mixture of class warfare and socialist 
levelling. This creed has clearly not survived its creator. Pragmatism with a 
Leninist face is the order of the day. The glories of getting rich have 
overwhelmed the deprivations of patriotic self-sacrifice. Mao made China proud; 
Deng made it prosperous. 

For all our sakes, I hope the future does not derail China's economic progress, 
although it will be a surprise if it does not challenge its arthritic and 
adamantine political system. 

Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong, is Chancellor of the 
University of Oxford Project Syndicate


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