by Gui Tao, Yuan Ye and Ming Xing
SHAOSHAN, Hunan, Sept. 3 (Xinhua) -- In a country he founded 60years ago,
Chairman Mao still has a great impact on the 1.3 billion Chinese people, who are
deriving strength, wealth and wisdom from the "Red Sun".
In Mao Zedong's birthplace, Shaoshan village in central China's Hunan
Province, Li Xing bowed and presented two 555 cigarettes in front of the 6-meter
statue of Mao. Then the retired man, aged 54,whispered his prayer: "Great
Leader, bless my son Pengpeng so that he might get a good job."
"To Chairman Mao, maybe the ongoing financial crisis is just a 'paper
tiger'," he said, referring to how the Great Helmsman described the powerful
United States and all reactionaries in the 1940s.
"No matter how hard it is, Mao's spirit of self-reliance and hard struggle
is always a panacea," he added.
The village's Communist Party secretary, Mao Yushi, said Shaoshan had
witnessed this year a big growth in pilgrims from Guangdong, the country's
worst-hit province in the global economic downturn.
Beside Li, Pengpeng, a senior finance major from Nanjing Education College,
bowed with his father but eschewed a prayer. In his opinion, the shrinking job
market and economic slowdown would be equally difficult for Mao.
"I respect him," he said. "But Mao may need to consult Warren Buffett if he
wanted to deal with things that never happened in his time."
Mao, who died a decade before his birth, is not unfamiliar to the country's
youngsters like Pengpeng. Every Chinese college student has to pass the
compulsory course of "An Introduction to Mao Zedong Thoughts" to get a diploma
before plunging themselves into the increasingly competitive job market.
"He may come hard down on corrupt officials and countries that harass us
the way he did it in his time," Pengpeng said. "In his time, Mao defeated the
almighty United States. There is nothing he is afraid of."
At a nearby parking lot, Liu Yili, 47, tied a pendant of Mao's portrait he
bought during his visit to Shaoshan onto the rearview mirror of his Mazda,
joining a string of Buddhist prayer beads put there earlier.
"I was shocked at his death 33 years ago since we used to chant 'Long live
Chairman for ten thousand years' every day," he recalled. "But gradually we
realized that he was nothing but a human being. Since to err is human, Mao also
made mistakes."
As a paramount leader, Mao is regarded to be liable for the Great Leap
Forward (1958-1960) and Great Cultural Revolution (1966-1976), which both
resulted in chaos and are believed to have hindered China's economic and social
development.
"Thirty percent of him is wrong. But that does not negate the fact that he
was a great man," Liu said.
Last year, two million pilgrims like Pengpeng and his father visited
Shaoshan. As of August, the sacred village has seen a year-on-year increase of
200,000 visitors.
"They want to derive strength and luck from Mao, a representation of an era
where people lived a hard life but had a stronger sense of togetherness and
belongingness, less disparity pressure," said Mao Yushi.
"The very mention of Chairman Mao gave them strength and comfort," he
added.
Mao left people in Shaoshan not only with a sense of pride but also a
source of wealth.
Almost all of the village's 450-plus households earn a decent income from
tourists in running restaurants or inns, or in selling Chairman Mao badges or
statuettes as souvenirs.
"He is not only a great leader, but also a family member," said Mao Yushi,
wearing a golden badge of Chairman Mao, like every other Shaoshan native.
"Every Chinese is enjoying his legacy," said Prof. Tang Zhouyan, director
of the Maoism Institute of the Party Literature Research Center of the Communist
Party of China's Central Committee.
"He created the underlying principles of the country and the Party, which
are still valid today. He laid a foundation for China's becoming a powerhouse in
the world community. He created the strong People's Liberation Army, which is
serving and defending the country. He has definitely changed China's history,"
he said.
"As a human being, Mao also makes mistakes," Tang said. "But we can learn a
lesson from his mistakes. In this sense, his mistakes are also his legacy."
Recent research topics at the institute, which studies how Mao's wisdom can
benefit the current government, included the Sino-Africa relationship in Mao's
era and the medical care system from that time.
"The more we study Mao, the more clearly we realize that most of the
essence of the Western civilization, such as democracy and legal system, could
be found in Mao's thoughts," said Li Wei, deputy director with the Academy of
Marxism of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. (Xinhua correspondents Zhang
Zhanpeng in Jiangsu Province and Li Dan in Hunan Province also contributed to
the story.)