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- <text id=89TT1659>
- <title>
- June 26, 1989: Portrait Of A "Hooligan"
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 26, 1989 Kevin Costner:The New American Hero
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 35
- Portrait of a "Hooligan"
- </hdr><body>
- <p>From Mao's Little Red Book to embracing democracy
- </p>
- <p>By Ted Gup
- </p>
- <p> Wuer Kaixi. 21. A Uighur with wavy black hair, big round eyes,
- high cheekbones. Shown last week on Chinese television on secret
- videotape from a Beijing hotel that falsely suggested he was eating
- when he was on a hunger strike in Tiananmen Square. Wanted by the
- Chinese government. His crime: he was a leader of the prodemocracy
- movement.
- </p>
- <p> Just a few months ago, Wuer was a handsome college freshman
- who listened to Beethoven, read classic Chinese novels and thought
- there was no greater adventure than riding horseback with cossack
- herdsmen in the cool mountains of his beloved Xinjiang autonomous
- region.
- </p>
- <p> But then Wuer found a more compelling cause in rallying
- discontented students to demand changes from the Chinese
- government. It was Wuer who, though wilting from hunger, sat across
- from Li Peng and chastised him for arriving late to the meeting
- accorded the protesters. "He talked with Li Peng as an equal," said
- a Beijing intellectual. His denim jacket and shaggy hair became a
- familiar sight in Tiananmen, where the charismatic Wuer barked
- directives from a bullhorn and bantered with demonstrators and
- journalists alike. Even after other student leaders voted him off
- the standing committee organizing the protests, in part for
- advising his fellow strikers to abandon the square the day after
- martial law was declared, Wuer remained devoted to the cause. "I
- deserved to be replaced," he conceded, for believing false
- information that the army was about to move in. After the army
- finally did appear two weeks later, Wuer vanished, and only last
- week's manhunt dispelled rumors that he had been shot to death or
- had taken his own life.
- </p>
- <p> China's hard-liners have vilified Wuer and other student
- protesters as counterrevolutionaries. But those who have known Wuer
- for years say he never sought to overthrow the government and that
- he hoped one day to join the Communist Party. During the protests,
- he told reporters his aim was to "form a nationwide citizens'
- organization, like the Polish Solidarity," able to deal "openly and
- directly" with the government. Though sometimes overconfident, even
- cocky, he had no history of troublemaking. "He's a good student,
- he's from a good family, he loves the people, and he loves the
- country," said a close friend. But like others in the protest
- movement, Wuer possessed a combustible mix of raw courage and
- naivete. Weeks before the Tiananmen massacre, he told an American
- reporter, "I knew that we needed an organizer who wasn't afraid to
- die."
- </p>
- <p> He was born Orkache (pronounced Wu-er-kai-she as transliterated
- into Chinese) Dawlat in Beijing on Feb. 17, 1968, a native Uighur,
- in the midst of the Cultural Revolution, when an aging Mao Zedong
- fomented social unrest in the name of class struggle. A family
- portrait shows Wuer, age 1, holding up a copy of Mao's Little Red
- Book. Throughout the rigors of the period, his father remained a
- loyal member of the party who spent years translating the works of
- Marx, Lenin and Mao from Chinese into Uighur. When thousands of
- China's intellectuals were forced out of the cities to work as
- peasants in the countryside, Wuer's father went willingly. The
- strain and exposure left his legs paralyzed for years afterward,
- but he neither complained nor criticized the party.
- </p>
- <p> A precocious child who read insatiably, Wuer often visited his
- grandparents in Xinjiang, near the Soviet border, to learn Uighur.
- But he spent most of his boyhood and school years in Beijing in an
- apartment adorned by a portrait of Mao put there by his father.
- </p>
- <p> In 1984 the family moved to Urumqi in Xinjiang. On Wuer's
- bedroom wall hung a portrait of the ancient poet Qu Yuan. Wuer
- began to write poetry, and took part in school affairs. He helped
- edit the school newspaper, an experience friends believe developed
- his interest in freedom of the press. In the summers he went on
- school field trips into the mountains to stay with the cossack
- herdsmen. That too left an impression. "He could tell the
- difference between the life of the ordinary people and the life of
- the leaders, and he got ideas from these people," said a friend.
- In 1988 he entered Beijing Normal University. He told friends he
- wanted to study Chinese literature but felt compelled to pursue an
- education degree because the Uighurs were in dire need of teachers.
- </p>
- <p> Last January his ideas seemed to flower into activism. He wrote
- a friend that inflation was "robbing the country," and he worried
- about its impact on workers. His political views grew out of his
- own experiences, not Western influence; he never went abroad, but
- his voracious reading exposed him to all sorts of modern concepts,
- Chinese and foreign. "He believed," said a friend, "the Chinese
- expression that the leaders should serve the people."
- </p>
- <p> During the pro-democracy demonstrations, Wuer headed the banned
- independent union of students, where his sophisticated ideas and
- brash irreverence won him considerable celebrity. But it was less
- easy for those who knew him well to think of him on a hunger
- strike. Since childhood he had suffered acute stomach trouble, and
- only a few days into the fast he collapsed and was carried to the
- hospital. His mother crossed the country from Xinjiang to plead
- with him not to resume his fast. He persisted.
- </p>
- <p> Said a friend: "He fears nothing; he was always like that."
- But now, with his face on wanted posters across the country, Wuer
- Kaixi has all China to fear.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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