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| Books on the life of Mao Zedong line the shelves of a Xinhua Bookstore in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, on the eve of the 30th anniversary of the Chairman's death.(Photo: China Daily) |
BEIJING, Sept. 9 -- Time passes. The relevance of
contemporary life pushes the events of the past out of the spotlight and into
the shadows.
But when the people lose their historical
perspective, it falls to historians and other academics to make sure the candle
of great contributions continues to burn.
Saturday is the 30th anniversary of the death of Mao
Zedong, who founded the People's Republic of China on October 1, 1949 and led
the nation for 27 years after that.
Mao born on December 26, 1893 in Shaoshan village of
Xiangtan County, Hunan Province is often lauded for uniting China after decades
of misrule and internecine warlord rivalry, defending China's independence, and
promoting sexual and social equality.
Some foreigners with more exposure to China view Mao
in that broader historical context.
"My view now is that Mao had an exceedingly
penetrating understanding of Chinese society and very high ideals for the
creation of a self-sufficient nation with a spirit of co-operation," said Judy
Polumbaum, a journalism professor at the University of Iowa, who first came to
China in spring 1975.
"He was more farsighted than he is given credit for
today."
Nancy Jervis, a cultural anthropologist who first
came to China in the 1970s, said: "I still credit the socialist era with
building a stable economy and an infrastructure upon which the present economy
is taking off. Not enough people understand this."
Sidney Rittenberg Sr, an American interpreter and
scholar who lived in China from 1944 to 1979 and worked closely with Mao, said
the key to his relevance lies with some of his ideas that are still critical to
China's well-being.
"I believe that studying China during Mao's lifetime,
carrying forward what was valid in his teachings (like his powerful philosophy
of 'Seek truth from facts,' and 'Investigation and study') and eliminating the
influence of what was wrong," he said.
"This is essential for the continued flourishing of
China and for the new life and new culture that China will create out of the
lessons of the past and the confusion of the present."
But Tom McGrenery, a writer from London based in
Beijing, said: "I didn't know it (Saturday) was the anniversary."
McGrenery said his impression is that to the Chinese
of today, "he (Mao) is a hero, but in a very vague sense."
Richard Baum, a professor of political science at the
University of California, Los Angeles, said: "Most expats in Beijing these days
are young professionals and entrepreneurs who came of age long after Mao
Zedong's death."
"For these latecomers, Mao's memory and mystique are
not very potent no more than a vague historical curiosity while the post-Mao
reforms are a 'given,' which they take for granted."
In an economic sense, he said, "the new culture of
entrepreneurship and self-enrichment has crowded Mao and Maoism out of the
marketplace of relevant ideas."
(Source: China Daily)