{"id":27334,"date":"2012-05-12T18:05:00","date_gmt":"2012-05-12T18:05:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/127.0.0.1:10081\/?p=27334 "},"modified":"2012-05-12T18:05:00","modified_gmt":"2012-05-12T18:05:00","slug":"27334-revision-v1","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/minzhuzhongguo.org\/?p=27334","title":{"rendered":"That Holy Word, \\&#8221;Revolution\\&#8221;"},"content":{"rendered":"<div><p>In Communist China, there is no word more sacred or richer in   righteous indignation and moral force than &#8220;revolution.&#8221; In the   name of revolution, one-party despotism and individual autocracy   have been carried out. Again and again, in the name of   &#8220;revolution, inhumane political movements have been launched. In   the name of revolution, individuals have been stripped of all the   rights that they ought to enjoy. In the name of revolution, the   economy has been destroyed and historic culture has been   extinguished. The name of revolution has even been used in the   service of hygiene-in the elimination of the &#8220;four pests,&#8221; which   sacrificed flies and sparrows at the altar of revolution.   Contemporary Chinese are too enthusiastic about revolution, too   worshipful of revolution. Each and every one of us is both victim   and carrier of that word, revolution: &#8220;The Paris Commune   Revolution&#8221;; &#8220;The October Revolution&#8221;; &#8220;The Revolution of 1911&#8221;;   &#8220;The Old Democratic Revolution&#8221;; &#8220;The New Democratic Revolution&#8221;;   &#8220;The Socialist Revolution&#8221;; &#8220;The Communist Revolution&#8221;;   &#8220;Continual Revolution Under the Dictatorship of the Proletariat&#8221;;   &#8220;The Great Cultural Revolution&#8221;; &#8220;Reform is a profound   revolution.&#8221; Contemporary Chinese call every social change either   a &#8220;revolution&#8221; or a &#8220;counterrevolution.&#8221; (For example, the 1989   protest movement was referred to by the students as &#8220;The Great   Revolution For Democracy and Against Dictatorship&#8221;; the   government, however, referred to it as a &#8220;counterrevolutionary   rebellion.&#8221;) Whether to express gratitude or resentment, everyone   borrows the name of revolution to speak with the force of   justice. It has even reached the point where people will say:   &#8220;the family revolution,&#8221; &#8220;the marriage revolution,&#8221; &#8220;revolution   erupting in the depth of one&#8217;s soul,&#8221; as well as &#8220;revolutionary   heroism,&#8221; &#8220;revolutionary romanticism,&#8221; &#8220;revolutionary realism,&#8221;   &#8220;revolutionary writing,&#8221; &#8220;revolutionary couple,&#8221; &#8220;revolutionary   descendants,&#8221; &#8220;revolutionary successor.&#8221; Revolutionary   righteousness of itself requires no precondition; on the   contrary, revolution is a precondition for the righteousness of   any other thing. Whoever the person or whatever the thing, all   that is necessary is to give it the name &#8220;revolution&#8221; and it   becomes progressive and full of righteous sentiment. No one   suspects or even asks: What in fact is revolution? There is no   use in asking and no need to ask. All that we do and all that we   think is for the sake of &#8220;carrying forth revolution to the very   end!&#8221;   <br \/>    <br \/>     Regardless of whether we consider its etymological root and   modern meaning or the sociological, cultural, and   mass-psychological relevance of its practical, concrete   application, geming (revolution) cannot be translated, as a   complete equivalent, into the English &#8220;revolution.&#8221; In English,   &#8220;revolution&#8221; has three levels of meaning: (1) revolve; (2) a   large, fundamental social change; and (3) the use of violence to   effect a transfer of political rights.1 It is noteworthy that, in   English, the word &#8220;revolution&#8221; does not carry much of its Chinese   counterpart&#8217;s connotation of sacred righteousness. In Chinese,   however, &#8220;revolution&#8221; in its original ancient sense is the   mandate of heaven that a sovereign borrowed or accepted in order   to usher in a new dynasty; the word carries a sense of the   sacredness and justification associated with carrying out the   will of heaven. In the modern era, whether in Sun Yatsen&#8217;s &#8220;the   revolution has yet to be completed&#8221; or in Mao Zedong&#8217;s &#8220;carry the   revolution through to the end,&#8221; the term &#8220;revolution&#8221; connotes a   supreme sense of the sacred and an exaggerated righteousness.   Particularly since the Communist Party took power, &#8220;revolution&#8221;   has become a pure, holy word. For example, &#8220;the proletarian   revolution was the greatest, most profound, most just socialist   revolution in human history.&#8221; &#8220;Revolution&#8221; possesses an inherent   justice, as sacrosanct as &#8220;natural rights&#8221; in recent Western   history. When we examine the composition of the word, we find   that    <em>geming<\/em>     is a verb-object combination. &#8220;Ge&#8221; is the verb, meaning &#8220;change,   eliminate, revoke, strip.&#8221; As for &#8220;ming,&#8221; it means &#8220;heavenly   mandate, law, life.&#8221; Together, &#8220;ge-ming&#8221; has the sense of &#8220;social   transformation&#8221; or &#8220;taking a man&#8217;s life.&#8221; For example, &#8220;ge-zhi&#8221;   implies &#8220;revoking an occupational duty&#8221; or &#8220;stripping away   rights.&#8221; Thus, the word &#8220;revolution&#8221; in Chinese, even when one   merely examines the component characters, possesses a   not-to-be-doubted quality of righteousness and a   not-to-be-blasphemed sacredness. It is one of the most frequently   used words in the Communist Party lexicon.   <br \/>    <br \/>     The term &#8220;revolution,&#8221; considered from its sociological,   cultural, and mass-psychological angles, has in post-1949 China   implied justice, correctness, kindness, virtue, good fortune, and   holiness. It also has implied supreme authority; to lay claim to   it is to make a bid for what Tony Saich refers to (Chapter 12) as   &#8220;symbolic capital.&#8221; It is not possible to express suspicion or   opposition to &#8220;revolution.&#8221; &#8220;Revolution&#8221; implies devotion,   sacrifice, daring, fearlessness, idealism, and romantic feelings.   It implies longevity and flourishing vitality. All you have to do   is say &#8220;for the revolution&#8230;.&#8221; It always indicates an iron will,   a willingness to &#8220;die nine deaths without regret.&#8221; &#8220;Revolution&#8221;   implies the justice and reasonableness of &#8220;profound hatred from   great bitterness,&#8221; violent bloodshed, and cruel struggle. Hatred   and poverty are driven by &#8220;revolution.&#8221; If there is to be   revolution, there must be hatred. Whoever is the poorest is also   the most revolutionary. All members of the working class are the   most revolutionary. That is why Mao Zedong called the revolution   that he led &#8220;a movement of ruffians.&#8221; &#8220;Revolution&#8221; implies   unyielding, uncompromising, intolerant, uncooperative qualities-a   radical justice that shows no forgiveness; the more radical, the   more extreme; the more absolute, the more revolutionary. It is   not possible for one&#8217;s faith to be shaken in any way.   &#8220;Revolution&#8221; implies that to rebel is just; that individual   actions pale in the sight of heaven compared to actions done in   the name of revolution. No matter how cruel the behavior, how   blind and unconsidered the action, how absurd the movement-if it   can be termed &#8220;revolutionary,&#8221; it becomes reasonable and can be   carried out unscrupulously.   <br \/>    <br \/>     In the education system of the Communist Party, an obsession   with &#8220;revolution&#8221; caused us to lose our humanity and rationality,   to lose our social conscience and tolerance, to lose the most   basic standards of right and wrong, and even to lose the   distinction between good and evil. We have been driven mad by   &#8220;revolution.&#8221; We have been suffocated by &#8220;revolution.&#8221; We have   been spoiled by &#8220;revolution&#8221; so that we have lost any capacity   for feeling awe, fear, or humility. The 1989 protest movement   once again showed that &#8220;revolution&#8221; prevailed. The venom of   &#8220;revolution&#8221; is too deep within us, with the result that we   continually become unconscious sacrificial items for the cause of   revolutionary justice. We still are infatuated with &#8220;revolution.&#8221;   <br \/>   <\/p>   <br \/>   <div>Revolutions Are the Festivals of the Oppressed   and the Exploited<\/div>    <br \/>       <p>Although we have experienced the unprecedented cruelty of the   &#8220;Anti-Rightist Movement&#8221; and the &#8220;Great Cultural Revolution,&#8221; we   still are not truly aware of the horror and cruelty of   &#8220;revolution.&#8221; Although ten years of reform have attenuated the   sacred quality of &#8220;revolution&#8221; and weakened the political culture   built upon class struggle, we still worship &#8220;revolution&#8221; in our   bones. We are still the &#8220;revolutionary successors.&#8221; As soon as we   meet with a large-scale political movement, our enthusiasm for   &#8220;revolution&#8221; swells; as soon as the kindling of revolution is   lit, it burns-the fire rapidly becoming flames that reach to   heaven, consuming everything. It does not matter whether the   movement is of the extreme Right or the extreme Left, autocratic   or democratic, progressive or regressive; &#8220;revolution&#8221; supersedes   all. From within any tendency, it is possible to excite our   frenzied worship of &#8220;revolution.&#8221; The 1989 protest movement was   once again the &#8220;great revolution&#8221; of the army advancing toward   democracy. In spite of its tragic, bloody end, the revolutionary   enthusiasm that had lain dormant for nearly ten years once again   ruled us; finally, it again revealed its vigor and dynamism. It   was an earthshaking opportunity. Everyone wanted to take   advantage of this opportunity to perform a great deed, a great   achievement to impress the generations that would follow.   <br \/>    <br \/>     The events in May 1989 in Tiananmen Square were a reminder of   that famous statement of Lenin&#8217;s: &#8220;Revolutions are the festivals   of the oppressed and the exploited.&#8221;2 The crowds that came to   Tiananmen Square to demonstrate and parade at first arrived on   foot; later they came in squadrons of bicycles, three-wheeled   vehicles, and finally motorcycles and cars. The roar of the   motors, the unfurled flags, the banners raised in great numbers,   the slogans chanted one after another, the ubiquious &#8220;V&#8221; (for   &#8220;victory&#8221;) signs, and the wide smiles on the faces of the   people-all of these elements created a celebratory atmosphere as   though it was a show. The gigantic banner, several dozen meters   long, that hung from the Revolutionary History Museum, displayed   but one word: &#8220;Awake.&#8221; The fasting students kept on collapsing;   doctors in white uniforms shuttled back and forth, and the sirens   of the ambulances wailed. The tragic sense of a righteous advance   to death heightened the already intense, showlike atmosphere of   the Square. The celebratory events on the Square, in which the   university students were the principal actors, attracted farmers,   workers, soldiers, cadres, merchants, entrepreneurs,   intellectuals, and even a silver-haired old professor making his   way with a walking stick past the ranks of people expressing   their support for the students. An old retired woman, her face   all wrinkled, rode on a three-wheeled vehicle pulled by her son.   She, too, made the &#8220;V&#8221;-for-victory sign. High-school and   elementary students carried banners supporting their elder   brothers and sisters and raised their fists in show of support.   Innocent kindergarteners, waving colored triangular flags, led by   the teachers they called &#8220;aunties,&#8221; joined the celebration. There   were also robed, shaven-headed monks, chanting their prayers   amidst the sounds of their &#8220;wooden fish.&#8221; All of these diverse   elements joining together gave people the mistaken impression   that this was a revolution that was about to succeed. All of this   deepened the atmosphere of celebration. It was like the joyous   Square on every National Day or May Day-even more like a square   where exuberant crowds throng in the midst of &#8220;revolution.&#8221; The   1989 protest movement did really make every participant dance   with joy in high-spirited celebration. Beginning on October 1,   1949, when Mao Zedong led the state-founding ceremony, every year   similar events have taken place at Tiananmen Square. Forty years   ago, Mao Zedong, brimming with confidence, announced the success   of the revolution; forty years later, young university student   leaders and prominent intellectuals, too, full of confidence,   awaited the success of the &#8220;newest&#8221; revolution.   <br \/>    <br \/>     We thought that Deng Xiaoping&#8217;s dictatorship could really come   to an end in the midst of this earthshaking revolution; a   government of one-party despotism really could fall among that   &#8220;forest&#8221; of arms. How many heroes of the moment set their hearts   on the roles they wanted to play after they attained fame? The   celebratory, revolutionary atmosphere made it impossible for us   to face China&#8217;s political reality and the stability of Communist   Party rule. It was not simply that the Communist Party held in   its grip all of the national government machinery as well as an   army of several million men; it was also the case that Deng   Xiaoping had, through ten years of reform and liberalization, won   popular support. We mistook the popular dissatisfaction over some   problems associated with reform for a complete loss of hope in   the Deng Xiaoping regime. We were of the opinion that-with the   support of the masses-Zhao Ziyang would replace Deng Xiaoping.   However, we were unable to reasonably assess the successes and   failures of ten years of reform and liberalization. We prominent   intellectuals, based on our own interests (the depreciation of   knowledge in the rising tide of commodities; the relative decline   in living standards of intellectuals, and so forth), took popular   rejection of the regime&#8217;s &#8220;eliminate corruption&#8221; and   &#8220;antiliberalization&#8221; campaigns and exaggerated its significance   so that it seemed a rejection of all of Deng Xiaoping&#8217;s   administrative policies. In reality, although people were   dissatisfied with some problems related to reform and although   the &#8220;eliminate corruption&#8221; and &#8220;antiliberalization&#8221; campaigns   somewhat lessened the credibility of Deng Xiaoping, the people   nevertheless recognized that in the Deng Xiaoping era (in   contrast to the Mao Zedong era of class struggle) every effort   was being made to develop the economy and raise the standard of   living. This resulted in widespread and deep popular support and   a solid, practical legitimacy. The weakening of this popular base   and practical legitimacy due to the &#8220;eliminate corruption&#8221; and   &#8220;antiliberalization&#8221; campaigns was mainly limited to   intellectuals. The masses demanded only that there be money to   earn and that their standard of living be gradually raised. With   these demands being met, the masses were unwilling either to   completely abandon the current administration or to thoroughly   reject the governing policies of Deng Xiaoping. Objectively   speaking, compared to the Mao Zedong era, the changes in Deng   Xiaoping&#8217;s China-the progress of the ruling Party itself and the   awakening of the consciousness of the masses-have amazed the   world. The enormous changes and progress that ten years of Deng   Xiaoping rule have brought to China are greater than those that   ten Mao Zedongs could have produced. We cannot, just because of   Deng Xiaoping&#8217;s dictatorship, completely deny the achievements of   reform. The despotism of the Party, gunning down people,   dictatorship-all of these are evils that must be rectified, but   when we face the realities of China, we recognize that this   rectification must be gradual, peaceful, and long term. We must   not only rely on political pressure from the people but also rely   even more on the self-reform of the Communist Party. If the   popular political pressure exceeds the actual capacity of those   in power to bear this pressure, the reaction that it will cause   will not speed up the Communist Party&#8217;s self-reform and   democratization process. To the contrary, it will interrupt or   delay this process. The lesson from the blood of June 4 has made   this clear already. Moreover, after June 4, Deng Xiaoping rapidly   restored social order. The Communist Party again gained solid   control of the situation. This shows that Deng Xiaoping&#8217;s   authority does not rely only on violent oppression and bloody   terror. It also depends on the accumulated popular support of ten   years of reform. The blood of June 4 by no means completely undid   this popular support. Deng Xiaoping need only continue to persist   in the reforms and develop the economy. If the Communist Party   persists in improving itself, Deng Xiaoping&#8217;s rule will not   topple overnight. The pre-June 4 reality, the fact of the June   Fourth Massacre, and the fact of the steadfast implementation of   post-June 4 reforms all manifest a truth that we participants in   the June Fourth movement are emotionally unwilling to accept but   that intellectually we must accept: In today&#8217;s China, the least   costly way to democratization and modernization is self-reform of   the Communist Party. Political pressure from civil society can   only moderately promote this kind of self-reform. A little   imprudence could even lead to a greater tragedy than that of June   Fourth.   <br \/>    <br \/>     Now that we have seen the Chinese political reality for what it   is, let us return to the 1989 protest movement. We have come to   see how, tempted by revolutionary righteousness, we abandoned our   rationality. We have no way of objectively knowing how many of   the nearly one million who gathered in Tiananmen Square were   completely dissatisfied with the reforms. How many knew that   these forty years of tragedy in China were because of the wild   excesses of despotism? How many participated guided by a clear   and certain concept of democracy? The illusion created by the   dynamism of the moment caused us to ignore the horrible   consequences that would result from the continual escalation of   the movement and caused our confidence in democratic   righteousness to grow far from political reality into a wild   presumption that was on the verge of dominating China.   <br \/>    <br \/>     The June Fourth Movement found itself in an environment that,   created by ten years of reform, was the most liberal since 1949,   and the movement was both inspired by the global democratization   trend and thought itself protected by the human rights demands of   the Western democratic nations; it opposed despotism and called   for democracy in an excessively righteous way. The tragedy lay in   the fact that we were only aware of the pursuit of democratic   righteousness, aware of the fact that democratization was a   global trend and was the future direction of China, aware of the   popular opinion expressed by the tumultuous crowds in the Square,   aware that our encirclement by countless foreign journalists   demonstrated the entire globe&#8217;s support for us; we were once   again overwhelmed by the righteousness of our romantic idealism.   We were too righteous, too bold, and too assured. We were   completely intoxicated. Therefore, we completely overlooked the   fact that Chinese reality lacks the conditions for putting in   place overnight a democratic society. We were not aware that,   although political democratization is a prerequisite to China&#8217;s   modernization, it is by no means the only prerequisite. Without   political democratization, the current reforms in China cannot be   carried forward and deepened. But if the focus is skewed too much   toward only political democratization, it is not possible to   effect a change in direction toward reform and modernization. In   the China of today, democratization is not a miraculous   prescription, for China lacks the appropriate conditions. Not   only is it the case that the Communist Party, which has a firm   grasp on political power, is unable to accept a political system   that involves multiparty rule (or pluralism, for that matter); it   is also the case that the masses still do not understand   democratic rights well enough and are incapable of using legal   measures to protect themselves in their struggle for individual   rights. What is even more telling as to the failure of the   movement is that we university students and intellectuals, who   have been called &#8220;soldiers of democracy,&#8221; and &#8220;stars of   democracy&#8221; only understand democracy on paper and in theory and   do not have a &#8220;working&#8221; knowledge of real, operating democracy.   We do not understand how to establish and implement democracy as   a political system or as a comprehensive set of legal procedures.   Professor Fang Lizhi, who has been called China&#8217;s Sakharov,   abandoned a great opportunity to use legal measures to protect   his own basic human rights even before the 1989 protest movement.   The incident-in which he was prevented from attending a banquet   to which he had been invited by U.S. President Bush-passed almost   completely unnoticed. The famous Liu Binyan, who has been called   China&#8217;s conscience, holds different political views from those of   the movement. Prior to the 1989 protest movement, he still   persisted in upholding Marxism and socialism and continued to   champion the concept of &#8220;A Second Kind of Loyalty.&#8221;3 Therefore,   the chance that there would arise-from this mixture of   intellectuals who still needed to learn the ABC&#8217;s of   democracy-the force of popular opposition was extremely slight.   The 1989 protest movement produced by these combined factors   could only be the symbolic representation of a formalized   consciousness. The democracy that we sought during the movement   was too empty, too emotional, and did not go beyond the exciting,   romantic stage of hollow slogans and idealism of our newly formed   consciousness. Most of the resources and methods we made use of   to mobilize the masses were ones that the Communist Party itself   had used many times before. We were pursuing a large-scale, yet   hollow, sensational effect and were unwilling to make   point-by-point, concrete requests as well as unprepared to   actually implement the vision. This is to say that we still did   not understand that democratization is not only an ideal, not   only a grand spectacle; it is also the actual, concrete,   detailed, even tedious process of setting up and applying   democratic procedures. With respect to the specific task of   actually creating a functioning democratically governed society,   we are just like the Communist Party: We both must begin from   scratch.   <br \/>    <br \/>     The revolutionary celebration, which shook the world and which   was supported by our great yet empty democratic righteousness,   led us down the wrong path. To us, the prominent intellectuals on   whose lips is always found democracy, it was discovered to be a   more complex undertaking than we had anticipated.   <br \/>   <\/p> <br \/>   <div>Altar of Righteousness-Sacrifice<\/div>    <br \/>           <p>The pursuit of spectacular, astonishing effects necessarily   leads to a radical stirring of the emotions. The climax of   radical emotional excitement is the collective giving up of lives   to heroic undertakings. For the race, for democracy, for freedom,   we were willing to march to the altar of righteousness-and   consequently of sacrifice. In May 1989, the students organized a   period of collective fasting involving more than one thousand   persons. The movement was not led by the ideals of any one person   but by an emotional radicalism. Whoever was radical became the   object of everyone&#8217;s attention. Everywhere-in the pronouncements   of the fasting students and in the pronouncements of each group   supporting the fast, in the &#8220;forest&#8221; of banners and in the   slogans, on the T-shirts of the students wearing the white cloth   headbands of the fast-one could see these words: &#8220;We are making   history with our lives&#8221;; &#8220;We are using our fresh blood to launch   a new era for the Chinese people&#8221;; &#8220;I will have no regrets with   respect to future generations&#8221;; &#8220;Blood spattered on the gate of   the nation, tears sprinkled on the fertile earth&#8221;; &#8220;Without   freedom, I prefer to die.&#8221; At the students&#8217; command headquarters   in the Square, they again and again broadcast the oath: &#8220;Heads   may be chopped off, blood may flow, but democratic liberty may   not be lost.&#8221; The sad strains of the official song of the Chinese   Communist Party, the &#8220;Internationale&#8221;; the increasingly heavy   atmosphere of martyrdom; and the spirit of sacrifice blended   together perfectly. Writing letters in their own blood and   writing wills, the students evaluated their own commitment to the   cause by means of fabricated deaths. This image of giving one&#8217;s   life for righteousness infected everyone on the Square. The   mournful wailing of the ambulances cut through the sky,   indicating that at any moment a death might occur. By way of the   &#8220;lifeline&#8221; that was maintained by members of the public order   squads (their hands linked), the ambulance hurried, red lights   flashing, never stopping for a moment. The faces of those near   death on the stretchers, doctors in white overcoats, nurses   shouting and gesticulating for the crowd to &#8220;clear the way&#8221;-all   demonstrated the tragedy of the collective sacrifice of lives.   The pathos of the twelve students from the Central Drama College   who abstained from water exceeded that of even the fasters, and   the twelve, as a matter of course, became idols on the Square.   Through every means of propaganda, and by the watching crowds,   they were raised high and placed on the altar of righteous   sacrifice to highlight this scene of martyrdom. This most   majestic and most moving image of China at the end of the   twentieth century satisfied the people&#8217;s long-quiescent martyrdom   complex. If those several students who demanded self-immolation   had not been persuaded against such an act, the fires of   martyrdom would really have been lighted on the Square, and the   ancient Confucian morality of &#8220;killing oneself to attain virtue&#8221;   would have had its contemporary expression.   <br \/>    <br \/>     This fanaticism of giving lives and this spirit of sacrifice   came from the lofty sense of mission that society bestowed on the   students. Young scholars, supported by what they perceived to be   the entire society, felt themselves to be incarnations of   righteousness. Moreover, people of every level of society revered   them as incarnations of righteousness. As this sense of   righteousness became more and more radicalized, no one, except   for the heartless government, rationally asked: what will be the   result of this radicalism? It was as if the whole society had, by   means of their actions, affirmed that the young students should   bear upon their collective shoulders the enormous, heaven-sent   responsibility of saving China from the grip of despotism. The   exaggerated sense of mission and the grandiose sense of   history-in-the-making caused the students to lose their ability   to control themselves and to know themselves. They did not know   that their young shoulders were simply incapable of bearing such   a heavy burden. Drawn by the increasingly strong attraction of   righteousness, the students, putting their lives on the line,   engaged in a continually escalating and futile resistance against   the government. It was as though only by giving up one&#8217;s life   could one move the government, only by sacrificing could one   awaken the masses, and only by dying could one accomplish   righteousness or become qualified to represent righteousness. No   wonder that Chai Ling, who was commander in chief of the Square   and who successfully fled overseas, replied in a matter-of-fact   manner to some people who criticized the students for being   overly passionate and brave at the expense of wisdom and reason:   &#8220;On the Square at the time, courage was simply the standard.&#8221;   That is, do not consider reality; abandon reason, we need only be   brave, need only be willing to devote and sacrifice ourselves; we   are the heroes of the 1989 protest movement. What is regrettable   is that, after the 1989 protest movement was repressed with   bayonets and tanks, the people scanned the list of the leading   persons in June Fourth and failed to find a single contemporary   Tan Sitong. Those who were regarded as heroes during the   climactic moments of the movement as well as those leading   persons who regarded themselves as heroes were, following June   Fourth, one after another tried in the court of morality and   justice. The people cannot bear the fact that the entire nation   awaited a martyr and yet not a single one was produced. Our   passion was wasted. Our blood was shed in vain.   <br \/>    <br \/>     In this pursuit of sacrificing lives and in the mass-psychology   of awaiting a martyr, one can see the enormous success of   Communist Party socialization. Seeing the heroic bearing of those   walking in the tracks of martyrs, people could not help thinking   of those Communist Party members who, for the birth of the new   China, remained underground for long periods. The defenses   written in jail by Wang Juntao and Chen Ziming both mention that   the awe-inspiring acts in the cause of justice that the previous   generation of the Communist Party carried out before the   executioner&#8217;s knife might be called models for this generation.   Beginning from the time we enter elementary school, we hear the   stories of Liu Hulan and Dong Cunrui;4 we know Mao Zedong&#8217;s   statement: &#8220;Born great, died glorious.&#8221; The team song of the   avant-garde youth is titled &#8220;Always Preparing.&#8221; Preparing for   what? Preparing to give one&#8217;s life for the Communist Party.   Altogether, too much teaching that warm blood be willingly   spilled for the revolution has caused us to believe that one need   only be willing to give one&#8217;s life and bravely sacrifice oneself   and then justice can be accomplished (and it is this justice that   can ensure immortality). We simply have not considered that all   that this fresh blood and death have established is a barbarian,   despotic government. Mao Zedong, who promoted the spirit of   sacrifice and who made everyone &#8220;first, not to fear hardship,   second not to fear death,&#8221; was none other than a murderous   despot. We have not become aware that this righteousness-formed   precisely from rashly giving one&#8217;s life and fearlessly   sacrificing oneself-has caused us to believe that to carry out a   revolution, all that is needed is courage and not wisdom; all   that is needed is passion and not reason; radicality and not   compromise; a majestic spectacle and not attention to the mundane   facts. Chai Ling&#8217;s remark that &#8220;courage is the standard&#8221; can be   understood as meaning that bravery is righteousness or, more   exactly, that it is the kind of self-righteousness that causes us   to believe that we can carry forth democracy without   understanding the attendant responsibilities of democracy; that   we can demand freedom without understanding the responsibilities   of freedom. In other words, it causes us to understand democracy   as the passion for giving one&#8217;s life and the bravery of   sacrifice; to understand it as a lot of soaring passion, a grand   spectacle of large crowds, a profusion of slogans. We simply were   not wont to know that democracy is the design, implementation,   and operation of a rational system. Democracy has its cold side.   Democracy is not at all romantic like the ideal we extol;   democracy is mundane, even mediocre. Perhaps only by having   learned the lesson of blood can we be aware that courage is not   righteousness and resistance is not democracy.   <br \/>   <\/p>  <br \/>   <div>The Righteousness of Doing as One Pleases<\/div>    <br \/>           <p>For forty years, we have not had any democratic political   experience; our eyes and ears have been full of nothing but the   cruel struggles and devious plots of despotic government. As soon   as we began our revolution, we became extremely conceited-just as   if we had reverted to the time of the Cultural Revolution and   felt ourselves to be the most revolutionary. As soon as we joined   into the 1989 protest movement, we considered ourselves to be the   most democratic. After all, had we not fasted for democracy and   devoted ourselves to it and made sacrifices for it? This made us   even more certain that our conduct was of the highest   righteousness. Our voice became the only truth. We felt as though   we possessed absolute power. Truth became an absolute that would   tolerate no questioning; righteousness became doing as one   pleases; democracy became privilege; the Square became a   miraculous place in which truth was judged, commitment was   tested, sentiment was tempered, justice was extended, and rights   were exercised. Whoever did not come to the Square or criticized   the Square was an antidemocratic, unjust coward. The movement   transformed the Square into a touchstone by which everyone was   judged. &#8220;I spent some time at the Square&#8221; and &#8220;I&#8217;ve been to the   Square&#8221; became passwords of a democratic consciousness and of a   social conscience.   <br \/>    <br \/>     &#8220;There&#8217;s been a revolution; now there&#8217;s democracy.&#8221; So now we   can do as we please. Student management replaced the social order   of a political party. The public order squads became traffic   police. The student identification card became an all-purpose   card-with it, we could ride without paying any fare, eat a meal   without paying, intercept a vehicle as we pleased, frisk or   interrogate any suspicious pedestrian, arbitrarily squander and   waste the money that citizens donated, disregard hygiene, spit   anywhere, litter at will, defecate or urinate anywhere, even   smear feces on the windows of public buses and ignore legal   procedures. With only the seal of the Square headquarters, we   could declare ourselves married-this was called a &#8220;democratic   wedding on the Square.&#8221; We could arbitrarily destroy public   property, release the air from the tires of public buses, and   self-assuredly declare that this was to smash the government&#8217;s   plots. The Democratic Square was the Square of doing as one   pleased. It was a Square from which the odor of feces and urine   rose and spread; it was the Square where garbage was piled sky   high.   <br \/>    <br \/>     &#8220;There&#8217;s been a revolution; there&#8217;s now democracy.&#8221; So now we   cannot compromise or cooperate but can form factions as we   please, create organizations, anoint ourselves kings, dub our   groupings as the Supreme Autonomous Federation, the Fasting   Group, the Dialogue Group, the Foreign Supreme Federation, the   Federation of Autonomous Unions, the Federated Association of   Intellectuals, the Journalists&#8217; Alliance, the Dare-to-Die Squad,   the Flying Tigers Squad, the West Route Army, the Children&#8217;s   Army, and so on. No one gave into anyone else, and no one could   manage anyone else. The ancient saying &#8220;Everyone can become Yao   Shun&#8221; became &#8220;Everyone can become a politician.&#8221; Everyone had a   different political philosophy. The Square, which on the surface   seemed to be where the multitudes were united as one, was in fact   the scene of many divisions, where everyone regarded themselves   as separate, sovereign governments. Even if an agreement was   reached, it could be abrogated at will. Even if one raised his   hand and cast a vote to approve a policy decision, he could   personally reject it just as soon as he left the meeting site and   then, in the name of righteousness, carry out the decision after   all. Between schools and between organizations, there were   impassable walls. This frame of mind-in which one thinks oneself   the wisest in the world-made everyone in the movement extremely   conceited. A right-of-way permit became a mark of privilege.   Those who had the right to distribute right-of-way permits seemed   to have the right to decide who could join the revolution and who   was qualified to participate in democracy. Our movement mobilized   so many people and excited passions to such heights, yet we could   not make reasonable policy decisions; we found ourselves in a   policymaking limbo. If it had not been for the fact that the   government repeatedly made incorrect policy decisions, which   provided us with points to rally around, we might really have   become a directionless, blind crowd.   <br \/>    <br \/>     &#8220;There&#8217;s been a revolution; now there&#8217;s democracy.&#8221; So now we   could fill our hearts with hatred, holding a bloody shirt and   denouncing the wicked Communist Party; gnashing our teeth and   berating them; mocking the character of others; engaging in   unscrupulous personal attacks. We could berate so-and-so as an   idiot, so-and-so as a dwarf, so-and-so as a fool. We could   announce the execution of so-and-so, that so-and-so was to be   boiled in oil, so-and-so was to be buried alive, so-and-so was to   be made to commit suicide, so-and-so was to be made to return   home to his family; we could speak even more nastily of those who   did not belong to our race. Our attitude was rude and   unreasonable, even to the point that we came to blows; we could   borrow the name of righteousness to give expression to our   personal gripes; we could choose not to accept any mediating   force; regardless of the place or the person, we could adopt a   hard-line attitude of noncompromise, intolerance, and   noncooperation-blindly radical, blindly antagonistic-with the   result that the protest movement escalated from concrete demands   for redress to an antagonism that sought to bring down the   government and throw out Deng Xiaoping. At the same time that we   forced ourselves into a situation from which there was no backing   out, we forced the government, whose position was at first one of   dialogue and compromise, into the predicament of suppressing the   peaceful movement with military force. In addition to the   government, which has responsibility for the crime of opening   fire and killing people, was it not also we, the &#8220;warriors of   democracy&#8221; who were so sure of our righteousness, who had moral   responsibility for the making of the final bloody tragedy?   Hatred, radicalism, intolerance-these are precisely the   revolutionary qualities that Mao Zedong had boldly called for;   these were precisely where the essence of the political culture   of class struggle is located. Revolution must be unwaveringly   carried out to the end. Whoever argues for eliminating hatred or   reaching agreements by means of compromise and tolerance is a   coward, a traitor, or an academic bandit. The result is that our   oath to die defending Tiananmen-our resolve to live or die with   the Square-became the final negotiation, compromise, and peaceful   retreat when the threat of death actually arrived.   <br \/>    <br \/>     &#8220;There&#8217;s been a revolution; now there&#8217;s democracy.&#8221; Now we   could, with our eyes open, speak lies; in broad daylight,   manufacture rumors; face those concerned and claim that our lying   was justified; irresponsibly announce: &#8220;Deng Xiaoping has died&#8221;;   &#8220;Li Peng has fled&#8221;; &#8220;Yang Shangkun was injured&#8221;; &#8220;Zhao Ziyang has   returned&#8221;; &#8220;Wan Li organized a new government in Canada&#8221;; &#8220;Twelve   cadres of the State Council have declared their departure from   the current government&#8221;; &#8220;Guangzhou and the minority autonomous   regions have declared independence&#8221;; &#8220;The Twenty-seventh and   Thirty-eighth Armies have started fighting&#8221;; and so on. Tiananmen   Square, the symbol of the democratic movement, became a place   where lies and rumors were gathered and dispersed. Lies that grew   larger the more they were told and rumors whose sources grew   increasingly uncertain suddenly became a driving force of the   movement. They made radicalism seem more reasonable, raised   people&#8217;s unrealistic hopes of victory, and made it impossible for   us to know what, in fact, was happening in China. After June 4,   the &#8220;warriors for democracy&#8221; who fled overseas wantonly twisted   the facts so as to exaggerate the cruelty and wickedness of the   Communist Party and form the heroic image of themselves as having   climbed out of a bloodbath; they stained the bloody surface of   Tiananmen Square and misled international opinion. The ebb and   flow of time has gradually returned the original scene to   history, and after people are able to rationally understand the   1989 protest movement, the evil consequences and tragedy created   by the lies and rumors will dissipate.   <br \/>    <br \/>     &#8220;There&#8217;s been a revolution; now there&#8217;s democracy.&#8221; We could   choose to value only our own freedom of speech, while stripping   this freedom of speech from others. We were like Mao Zedong used   to be, not permitting any different opinions to exist. As for our   own actions, we could only envision support for them on the part   of others; our actions could not be criticized. We were like the   Communist Party police, forcing journalists not to take pictures   that were not to our advantage or that might damage our image.   When the journalists shouted out &#8220;freedom of the press&#8221; and still   took pictures, we savagely grabbed the cameras from the   journalists&#8217; hands, opened them, and exposed the film to light.   We sometimes even smashed the journalists&#8217; photographic equipment   to pieces. We only considered our own rights and safety. Any   behavior that threatened our safety and rights, regardless of   whether it was justified or legal, was determinedly put to an end   by us. In order to keep the government from using an act of   vandalism as an excuse for crushing our movements, we escorted   the men who defiled Mao Zedong&#8217;s portrait to the public security   bureau, with the result that they were sentenced by the Communist   Party to imprisonment for 20 years, 18 years, and 15 years. Were   they not exercising their own rights? Should they really remain   in prison?   <br \/>    <br \/>     What is even more tragic is that the self-righteousness of the   1989 protest movement was a kind of threat to everyone. People   with different opinions fell silent under the pressure of this   self-righteousness. Those who did not dare to speak differently   and did not want to participate in the movement took to the   streets because they feared being called a coward or a scab. The   fast transformed the university students into revolutionary   saints who could not be criticized. It might be said that, to a   certain degree, the students&#8217; fast not only presented the   government with a difficult issue; it presented society with a   difficult issue. When people saw young students paying the price   of their lives to oppose the government, who could say the word   &#8220;no&#8221;? Whoever could have said &#8220;no,&#8221; whoever&#8217;s heart was not moved   by such a commitment, did not have a conscience. Whoever doubted   the absolute sincerity of the students was an accomplice of the   despotic government. The fast caused most people to temporarily   forsake their reason and caused the very small minority who   retained their reason to fall silent. The rational few even   suspected that their own calmness might show a lack of basic   sympathy.   <br \/>     The democracy that was extolled during the 1989 protest movement   possessed only the smallest amount of realistic, rational   righteousness. During the movement, we madly sought blind,   abstract righteousness and abandoned actual, rational   righteousness.   <br \/>   <\/p>    <br \/>    <div>Would That June Fourth Were the Last of Blind   &#8220;Righteousness&#8221;<\/div>    <br \/>        <p>The failure of the 1989 protest movement lay not only in the   shedding of blood, the consequent deaths, and the violent   suppression of a large-scale, spontaneous mass movement; the   failure lay also in the fierce antagonisms that grew out of the   continual escalation of the movement. This escalation led to the   delay of the reform process and weakened the people&#8217;s trust in   Deng Xiaoping&#8217;s rule. It also interrupted the process by which   the ruling Party was gradually democratizing and reforming   itself, thereby causing China to suffer a total reversal of the   Party&#8217;s self-reform. The relaxed atmosphere of early 1989 was   gone, replaced by an atmosphere of antagonism, tension, and   terror. After June 4, 1989, the reorganization of political rule   caused the economy to stagnate. The return to an emphasis on the   concept of class struggle made political reform a highly   sensitive issue. The murderous air of the Mao Zedong era once   again hovered over the vast land of China. The hatred buried in   the hearts of the masses as a result of this bloody event will   erupt as soon as the opportunity arises. Although Deng Xiaoping   still upholds the reform line and his Southern Tour gave rise to   an upsurge in economic development, the tight political control   in the wake of the events of June 4 has resulted in abnormal   development of the Chinese modernization process, and Zhao   Ziyang&#8217;s fall from power has ensured that the power struggle   after Deng Xiaoping&#8217;s death will be most dangerous. Because of   the fall from power of Zhao Ziyang-a man with a strong   conscience-crisis has emerged around what should have been a   smooth and stable transfer of power. A kind of crazed &#8220;end of the   century&#8221; psychology has driven people to think of nothing but   getting the most that they can (out of the remaining reform)   before calamity strikes. The masses are acutely aware that in   Deng Xiaoping&#8217;s health lies the last chance. If it is missed,   they will become meaningless sacrificial pawns in the chaotic   world that will follow Deng Xiaoping&#8217;s death. This &#8220;end of the   century&#8221; phobia cannot be eliminated simply through economic   development. At the same time, dispelling the political fears of   the ruling Party itself and assuaging the hatred of the masses   cannot be accomplished through social stability or a prosperous   economy or by raising the standard of living. The political fears   of the ruling Party and the &#8220;end of the century&#8221; phobia of the   masses have made it very unlikely that China can move smoothly   and steadily toward a modernized, democratic society. Unless the   ruling Party and all the people end their antagonism right now   and attain social cooperation,5 it will be impossible to dispel   the hatreds and fears on both sides. As the date of Deng   Xiaoping&#8217;s death approaches, those hatreds and fears will become   more and more intense, leading to social upheaval sooner rather   than later.   <br \/>    <br \/>     Therefore, ending the hostility, dispelling fears, attaining   social cooperation, and smoothly and steadily leading China to a   modern, democratic society cannot simply depend on the ruling   Party resolutely carrying out self-reform and revising its public   image; realizing these goals also depends on the cooperation of   opposition groups among the people. With this cooperation,   self-reform can be gradually accomplished. The current stability   in China is perhaps our last chance. The ruling Party must   recognize that (1) its own political democratization is not only   the direction favored by popular conscience but also by the   general trend of world events and that (2) rather than be forced   by external factors, it is best to consciously make the changes   oneself. The only one who can save the Communist Party is the   Communist Party itself. If it gradually, step by step, reforms   itself and moves toward democratization, the Communist Party will   survive. But if it continues to uphold one-party despotism, the   Communist Party will perish. At the same time, opposition groups   among the people should not drive the Communist Party from its   ruling position; instead, while the Communist Party is carrying   out self-reform, these groups should encourage changes under   Party rule. For the ruling Party and for the masses, this would   be China&#8217;s wisest choice during a period of rapid transformation.   <br \/>    <br \/>     During this process, the ruling Party should seriously consider   playing a political card-the June Fourth card. No one can avoid a   re-evaluation of the June Fourth Massacre. The June Fourth card   must be played. The critical question is-how is it to be played?   And when should it be played? As a sudden redress following the   death of Deng Xiaoping? Or by the ruling Party, beginning now,   gradually relieving the accumulated dissatisfactions and hatreds   of June Fourth? Should the investigation into criminal   responsibility for the bloodshed be pursued urgently? Or should   the investigation be put off? I think that the wise choice would   be the latter. There is no need to make social commentaries, no   need to hold a big meeting, and no need to make public   proclamations. All that needs to be done is to privately   compensate the kin of the June Fourth victims; release all June   Fourth political prisoners; restore to their former positions   those who, because of June Fourth, were unfairly treated;   gradually remove and demote those who rose to power on the blood   of June Fourth; and allow those who fled overseas because of June   Fourth to safely return. All of this is, I believe, a necessary   part of the changing of the ruling Party&#8217;s image, part of its   democratization, part of what will win the hearts of the people.   If the ruling Party does not begin now, if after Deng Xiaoping&#8217;s   death some politician relies on a sudden redress of June Fourth   wrongs to gain power, it will likely be a catastrophe not only   for this politician, but for China. The explosive consequences of   a sudden redress are beyond anyone&#8217;s control. The flood of hatred   will drown all who want to have a piece of the June Fourth pie.   In the China of the future, those people who, as it were, come to   the battlefield with the flash of cold steel might, for the sake   of righting the wrongs of the June Fourth bloodshed, cause an   even larger scale, even crueler bloodshed. It might even be a   bloodbath.   <br \/>    <br \/>     In today&#8217;s China, five years after the June Fourth bloodshed   (and after nearly three continuous years of June   fourth&amp;shyp;inspired retrenchment throughout China), in a   China filled with the fear of the end of the century-much remains   to be reconciled. I don&#8217;t know if we university students and   intellectuals who played the role of revolutionary saints and   democratic stars for two months can reasonably, calmly, justly,   and realistically reevaluate what we did and thought in 1989; I   don&#8217;t know if we can face the Chinese reality of crises emerging   on all sides and find within ourselves the courage and wisdom to   pursue patiently a feasible plan for lasting reform beginning   with the smallest details. If we can, then even if we have only   the slightest strength, the blood of June Fourth will not have   flowed in vain-it will still be thicker than water. If we can&#8217;t,   then the blood of June Fourth will at most be able to nurture   those shameless bloodsuckers.   <br \/>    <br \/>     Would that June Fourth were China&#8217;s last government by the   people in which every person believes himself a politician.   <br \/>    <br \/>     Would that June Fourth were China&#8217;s last grand spectacle of   blind revolutionary self-righteousness.   <br \/>   <\/p> <br \/>   <div>Notes<\/div>    <br \/>       <p>1. Very insightful but quite differently structured accounts   to Western understandings of the term &#8220;revolution,&#8221; and the way   these understandings have changed over time, are provided in   Raymond Williams, Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society   (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1983), revised edition, pp.   270-274; Mona Ozouf, &#8220;Revolution,&#8221; in Fran&#231;ois   Furet and Mona Ozouf, eds., A Critical Dictionary of the French   Revolution (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1989), pp.   806-817; and John Dunn, &#8220;Revolution,&#8221; in Terrence Ball   et al., eds., Political Innovation and Conceptual Change   (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), pp.   333-351. Ed.   <br \/>     2. Stephan T. Possony, ed., The Lenin Reader (Chicago: Henry   Regnery, 1966), p. 349. Ed.   <br \/>     3. See Jonathan D. Spence, The Search for Modern China (New   York: Norton, 1990), p. 726, for a concise description of Liu   Binyan&#8217;s notion of loyalty. Its main feature is a belief that   supporters of the Party should be able to criticize specific acts   of official misbehavior without being branded disloyal; such   criticisms, the journalist claimed, actually served to strengthen   rather than weaken the CCP. Ed.   <br \/>     4. Liu Hulan was a 14-year-old girl. The KMT executed her prior   to 1949. She died in quite a heroic manner. Mao Zedong said of   her, &#8220;A great life, a glorious death,&#8221; thereby calling all of the   nation&#8217;s people to learn the spirit of revolution from her. Dong   Cunrui was a young soldier in the Liberation Army. During the War   of Liberation, he used his body as a supporting frame for   explosives in an attack on the KMT army positions. He destroyed   himself as well as a KMT army pillbox. After 1949, the movie Dong   Cunrui proclaimed his revolutionary heroism.   <br \/>     5. The one who called for social cooperation was my friend, Zhou   Duo. In 1989, when we jointly drafted &#8220;The June Second Fasting   Manifesto,&#8221; he pointed out that one of the main points of the   manifesto was a call for an end to hostilities and for total   social cooperation.   <br \/>   <\/p>    From    <strong>     <a href=\"http:\/\/tsquare.tv\/links\/Popprotest01.html\">Popular Protest and Political     Culture in Modern China, Second Edition<\/a>   <\/strong>    <br \/>     edited by Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom and Elizabeth J. Perry   <\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&lt;div&gt;In Communist China, there is no word more sacred or richer in   righteous indignation and moral force than &quot;revolution.&quot; In the   name of revolution, one-party despotism and individual autocracy   have been carried out. Again and again, in the name of   &quot;revolution, inhumane political movements have been launched. In   the name of revolution, individuals have been stripped of all the   rights that they ought to enjoy. &lt;div&gt;From    &lt;strong&gt;     &lt;a href=&quot;http:\/\/tsquare.tv\/links\/Popprotest01.html&quot;&gt;Popular Protest and Political     Culture in Modern China, Second Edition&lt;\/a&gt;   &lt;\/strong&gt;    &lt;br \/&gt;     edited by Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom and Elizabeth J. Perry   &lt;\/div&gt;&lt;\/div&gt;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":24,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[14],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-27334","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-ChinaHumanRights","et-doesnt-have-format-content","et_post_format-et-post-format-standard"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/minzhuzhongguo.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/27334","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/minzhuzhongguo.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/minzhuzhongguo.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/minzhuzhongguo.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/24"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/minzhuzhongguo.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=27334"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/minzhuzhongguo.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/27334\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/minzhuzhongguo.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=27334"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/minzhuzhongguo.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=27334"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/minzhuzhongguo.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=27334"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}