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- <text id=93TT2329>
- <title>
- Jan. 18, 1993: Unspeakable Crimes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CHINA, Page 35
- Unspeakable Crimes
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A dissident provides compelling evidence of the most shocking
- atrocities committed during the darkest days of the Cultural
- Revolution
- </p>
- <p>By BARBARA RUDOLPH - With reporting by Sandra Burton/Hong Kong
- and Oscar Chiang/New York
- </p>
- <p> Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution was an eruption of
- ideological fervor, mass hysteria and outright brutality that
- left an estimated 10 million Chinese dead and ruined the lives
- of millions more. Now tales of even more horrible excesses from
- the years between 1966 and 1976 are coming to light: allegations
- of cannibalism, involving hundreds of men and women who violated
- mankind's most powerful taboo in the name of revolutionary
- purity.
- </p>
- <p> Evidence that cannibalism was not only practiced but
- condoned and even encouraged by some Communist Party officials
- emerged last week with the arrival in the U.S. of Zheng Yi, a
- dissident novelist who has been on Beijing's most wanted list
- since the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. Zheng, now 45, spent
- three years hiding in China before escaping to Hong Kong nine
- months ago. On the run as a fugitive, he managed to recover a
- number of the secret government reports that he had collected
- over the years. He used them to document two books, which he and
- his wife eventually smuggled out of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Prepared in the mid-1980s and suppressed by the
- authorities, the documents reveal that cannibalism was widely
- practiced in the late '60s in the Guangxi Autonomous Region in
- southern China. Acting without the sanction of national party
- authorities, the documents reveal, several party leaders in
- Guangxi incited followers to kill "class enemies" and then eat
- their flesh in public ceremonies. Zheng also conducted his own
- extensive investigation into the reports of cannibalism. He says
- he interviewed relatives of victims and spoke with dozens of
- people who confessed to having eaten human flesh. He insists
- that his case is persuasive.
- </p>
- <p> There is no evidence that Mao Zedong knew cannibalism was
- being practiced during the Cultural Revolution. When Premier
- Zhou Enlai heard about the crimes in Guangxi, he ordered party
- officials to put a stop to them. Nonetheless, according to
- Zheng, amid the anarchy of the times cannibalism apparently
- persisted in Guangxi. "I believe Zheng's story," says Perry
- Link, a professor of Chinese at Princeton. "He's a writer of
- integrity, and the rich detail has the ring of authenticity."
- Chinese officials now disclaim any knowledge of the practice.
- Said a Public Security official in Beijing: "I've never heard
- of this."
- </p>
- <p> The atrocities took many forms, according to documents.
- One report refers to "eating people as an after-dinner snack...barbecuing people's livers...banqueting on human meat."
- The same document matter-of-factly relates specific tales of
- depravity. "On May 14, 1968," it says, "a group of 11, led by
- the Wei brothers, captured a man named Chen Guorong and killed
- him with a big knife before cutting out his liver. They shared
- the human meat with 20 participants." The same month Wu
- Shufang, a teacher at the Wuxuan Middle School, was beaten to
- death; her liver was roasted and eaten. During 1968, 91 members
- of the Communist Party in Guangxi were expelled on charges that
- they were involved in cannibalism, but none was severely
- punished.
- </p>
- <p> Rumors about cannibalistic practices began to surface
- shortly after the atrocities occurred, but they were squelched
- by the authorities. Zheng heard the first stories in 1968, when
- he was a Red Guard in Guilin, in northeastern Guangxi. He was
- skeptical, but 16 years later, established as a novelist, he
- asked Liu Binyan, a dissident journalist who now lives in the
- U.S., if the stories might be true. "Liu told me they were,"
- Zheng recalls, "but he had not wanted to write about them
- because the subject was so nasty."
- </p>
- <p> The exchange spurred Zheng to try to bring the sordid
- story to light. Visiting the county of Shanglin, north of
- Nanning, Zheng found that cannibalism was openly discussed years
- after the fact. An old man named Yi Wansheng told Zheng, "Yes,
- I confess everything," and proceeded to describe how he had
- killed one victim, a landlord's son. "I used a knife to cut him.
- The first knife was dull, so I threw it away. With another knife
- I was able to open his chest. But when I tried to pull out his
- heart and liver, the blood was too hot for my hand and I had to
- bring some water to cool it. When I took the organs out, I cut
- them to pieces and shared them with the people of the village."
- </p>
- <p> In the two decades since the end of the Cultural
- Revolution, most of the great upheaval's excesses have been
- publicized as part of senior leader Deng Xiaoping's campaign to
- discredit Maoist orthodoxy. Why have the stories of cannibalism
- remained under wraps? "Many of the people involved are still in
- power in Guangxi," Zheng suggests. "Some of those people told
- me to beware or I might get myself killed." Equally important,
- he feels, any revelation of the atrocities would be profoundly
- embarrassing to the Beijing government. "Top leadership has
- known about it all along," Zheng charges, "but it has not
- wanted anyone else to know."
- </p>
-
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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