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- <text id=89TT2543>
- <link 90TT1241>
- <title>
- Oct. 02, 1989: Free To Fly Inside The Cage
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Oct. 02, 1989 A Day In The Life Of China
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- Cover Story
- Free to Fly Inside the Cage
- Page 64
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A visitor discovers a country still scarred by Tiananmen but
- looking beyond the bars
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> A beautiful day for a wedding -- crisp, clear and, for
- China in midsummer, relatively cool. The latest typhoon's high
- winds have swept away the air pollution, and under a brilliant
- blue sky the guests are chatting in the hollow of a terraced
- field beside a single spindly tree -- symbolic decoration in a
- country whose scant arable land continues to disappear. Arranged
- neatly alongside the makeshift altar, the gifts intended for the
- bride's parents include a new refrigerator, a 24-in. color
- television set and a jet black Yamaha motorcycle. The presents
- are ogled, but atop the TV a photograph of Margaret Thatcher
- creates the greatest buzz, a reaction the bride, and perhaps the
- groom too, would undoubtedly have enjoyed. Were they still
- alive.
- </p>
- <p> As the other guests prattle on about the British Prime
- Minister, some even in English, the new language of the New
- China, I am transfixed by the marriage of the two coffins in
- front of me. The groom died in an automobile accident five days
- earlier at the age of 23. The body of his bride, dead of cancer
- for five months, cost $3 to exhume. They had never met.
- </p>
- <p> After exhausting their fascination with Margaret Thatcher,
- a few of the guests allow as how, yes, one might think that
- marrying dead people is bizarre. But as an occasional feature
- of life in these parts for longer than anyone can remember,
- "ghost marriages" are just another relic of ancient China,
- another relatively harmless superstition for a billion people
- struggling to jerk themselves toward the 21st century.
- </p>
- <p> Strange, surely, but about the only truly odd tradition I
- encounter during five weeks in China. By plane, train and car,
- from the prospering coastal provinces to the country's
- heartland, where the agricultural reforms initiated by Deng
- Xiaoping ten years ago began a miraculous economic
- transformation, to Beijing and a village not far from the
- capital that is infinitely poorer than towns a thousand miles
- farther inland, I find little that is charming or especially
- exotic. Just a mostly drab and dusty country, a perfect backdrop
- for the tedious and too often unrewarding nature of daily life.
- Still, the people seem energetic, if fitful; a fifth of the
- world's population in a cage. Good, hardworking people who
- deserve better than the suffocating Communism that limits their
- enterprise.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, the place still looms, as it always has. China
- is the stuff of our earliest memories, the faraway land where
- children were starving (or so our parents told us when we were
- young), so we had better finish our dinners. The place we could
- reach by digging deep in our sandboxes; a measure of size ("I
- wouldn't do that for all the tea in China"); a country whose
- mere name conjured mystery and intrigue.
- </p>
- <p> Over the past decade, we rooted for a successful conclusion
- to China's long march away from a Communism that sometimes
- seemed even more menacing than Nikita Khrushchev's -- he of the
- take-no-prisoners promise to "bury" us. We suspected that real
- success might produce an economic giant capable of dwarfing
- even our ally Japan, but we rooted anyway. And of course, since
- Tiananmen Square, we have wondered what went so drastically
- wrong. How could any regime shoot unarmed citizens in its own
- capital, an action violative of a rule of governance so obvious
- that not even Machiavelli felt compelled to write it down?
- </p>
- <p> It is impossible, after just five weeks "inside," to say
- what China is like. It is possible only to meet some people,
- sketch some scenes, let some voices tell their stories. And if,
- up close, childhood impressions fade, enough incongruities and
- paradoxes survive to concentrate the mind. Like the newspapers
- that urge "bitter struggle" against "bourgeois liberalism" while
- trumpeting the pleasures of disco dancing on the same page. Like
- the never ending loop of music in the lobby of a hotel in
- Sichuan province that alternates between a Rod Stewart oldie
- (Sailing) and a socialist goody (Without the Communist Party
- There Would Be No New China). Like the young man break-dancing
- to a blaring Madonna album amid a few hundred elderly tai chi
- practitioners at a Shanghai park. Like the reserve and civility
- evident in personal relations that rarely translate to civic
- responsibility. Like the more intractable tensions of
- incorporating the best of capitalism while preserving socialism
- -- tensions that have arisen because of, rather than in spite
- of, Deng's economic reforms. Like everything about the ghost
- marriage and those who celebrate it. All this and more reflect
- the clash of modernity and tradition and the exquisite balancing
- acts required when a nation persists in pursuing contradictory
- notions of culture, economics and politics at the same time.
- </p>
- <p> Even the dead bride's Thatcher fixation tells a larger
- tale. The young woman, it seems, idolized Thatcher, not because
- she shared her politics but because with a single phrase
- Thatcher once captured her own world view: "If you want anything
- said, ask a man. If you want anything done, ask a woman."
- </p>
- <p> An exchange of business cards at the wedding, as common in
- China as saying hello, establishes that one of the guests has
- more than a nodding acquaintance with cremation. "Yeah," says
- a middle-aged man proudly, "I burn stiffs for a living." Only
- I smile. Everyone else knows what's coming, a recitation of the
- state's official line against using precious land for burials.
- "This is ridiculous," says the man, arcing a wad of spittle
- behind him, a small measure of civility indicating that China's
- famous antispitting campaign has done little more than improve
- the people's aim. "Zhou Enlai once said that China's greatest
- contribution to world peace was simply feeding its own people.
- To keep doing it we need the land -- all of it, every square
- meter. Earth burials are an incredible waste of space. Cremation
- is the future."
- </p>
- <p> "Earth burial honors our ancestors," says a guest.
- </p>
- <p> "Give me a break," says the man. (My hip translator is a
- Berkeley graduate.) "Despite our tradition of filial piety,
- most of us treat our elderly relatives like crap when they are
- alive. Then, when they die, we feel guilty and build shrines to
- their memory and use valuable land to bury them. It's all
- nonsense. It's all hypocrisy -- as hypocritical as this
- wedding."
- </p>
- <p> He has a point, and everyone knows it, even those guests
- who admit to having hired geomancers to locate and orient their
- homes, or those who keep black fish in aquariums in order to
- absorb "bad rays," or those who believe their country's former
- greatness was attributable to a national qi (vital energy) that
- even now is moving inexorably from the West to Japan on its way
- back to China, a shift that will once again confirm the Middle
- Kingdom as the center of the world. All these people know that
- the man is right because they know that the logic behind
- marrying dead people, to ensure them a peaceful afterlife, is
- dead wrong. The real if equally fanciful reason is that the
- unmarried dead are feared capable of becoming angry spirits who
- may disturb their living relatives. "Face it," says the
- stiff-burner, gesturing to the coffins now set in a common
- grave. "This thing we call a wedding is something we are doing
- for us, not for them."
- </p>
- <p> "Enough!" shouts the mother of the groom. "This is their
- wedding day. I don't want to hear anymore. Let us leave
- quietly." Then, apropos of nothing more than the increasingly
- common disdain many Chinese appear to feel for the army they saw
- as their great protector before it marched on Tiananmen, this
- small, fine-boned woman with searing brown eyes and a complexion
- Margaret Thatcher would compare to a rose recites some lines of
- Du Fu, the 8th century poet famous for decrying the gulf between
- ruled and ruler in China: "So it is better to abandon a daughter
- at birth than to see her later married to a soldier."
- </p>
- <p> The guests are stunned. Everyone realizes that the
- sentiment just expressed -- as well as the wedding itself --
- could easily cause this gentle woman's expulsion from the
- Communist Party, a "home" she later says she "entered out of
- love and idealism" 32 years earlier. The guests glance about
- nervously. Has the woman gone too far? Is someone in the crowd
- an informer?
- </p>
- <p> Oblivious to any danger, the woman stands stiffly and
- stares at the matching coffins. The silence puts on a little
- weight and becomes fat before she stoops to her handbag and
- takes out a small transistor radio. She carefully places it on
- the pine box of her daughter-in-law, in the grave that is the
- dead bride's new home. "What can it hurt?" she says, looking
- daggers at the stiff-burner. "Maybe they'll want to listen to
- some music."
- </p>
- <p> Bi is a 32-year-old English teacher in a small town not far
- from Shanghai on China's eastern coast. He could have taken
- Russian in college but chose English because "there is no one
- to talk to in Russian and no one interested in learning it." Bi
- speaks English so well that only a careful listener might guess
- that it is his second language. He pays particular attention to
- his consonants, and the effect is riveting. It seems that
- everything he says has been carefully weighed and thought out.
- </p>
- <p> A strapping six-footer, Bi "got into the weight-lifting
- craze about two years ago, when it was big." He still pumps iron
- each morning before breakfast, which he takes at a local
- restaurant with four colleagues. Eating out is actually cheaper
- than cooking at home for Bi, since coal is very expensive.
- Besides, Bi is saving for new eyeglasses. He hates his thick
- lenses and believes he would not need them if he had grown up
- in the West. "Until about five years ago, we didn't have
- electricity," he says. "I read by candlelight till then. My eyes
- had gone to hell by the time I was eight."
- </p>
- <p> Bi, his wife and two children live in a spare, two-room
- apartment of about 30 sq. yds. provided by his school. The
- bathroom is down the hall. In the smaller room the kids share
- a bed under a Michael Jackson poster. On the wall above the sink
- and the small stove are a calendar and a photo of the New York
- City skyline. "It's not much," says Bi, but the subsidized rent
- is only $4 a month.
- </p>
- <p> The place of employment for most Chinese, called a work
- unit, or danwei, is usually responsible for providing housing
- and other essentials. "We used to get medical care for free
- too," says Bi, "but my danwei can't afford it now that the
- economic reforms have let doctors' fees rise."
- </p>
- <p> Bi's seniority entitles him to a salary of about $38 a
- month -- less than a factory worker, taxi driver, guide and just
- about every other employed Chinese receives. Even so, for the
- next four years Bi must get by on $12 less each month. Five
- dollars is deducted automatically because the cash-starved
- government insists that state employees buy bonds. The other $7
- represents a fine for the second child he and his wife had three
- years ago -- one child over Beijing's limit.
- </p>
- <p> None of Bi's personal problems are on his mind this day.
- Instead he is incensed about work. "Meiyou," he says once, and
- then again. Meiyou (pronounced may-o) means "No, it cannot be
- done," or "No, we don't have it" -- a word foreigners learn
- quickly. "Too few primers," says Bi. "One hundred eighty-two
- students and 15 English books. Bad enough, right? But look at
- the books. They're about 40 years old, and boring. We can barely
- get by the first story."
- </p>
- <p> Bi would like to ignore the texts entirely, but the college
- entrance exams test the books' content. "They can actually ask
- you how exactly Marx learned English," he says. (By writing for
- American newspapers, it turns out.) "So we have to go through
- them. But we also try to come up with exercises that get to the
- real questions of English grammar. Now, which word do you think
- belongs in the blank?"
- </p>
- <p> The sentence on Bi's crumbling blackboard reads, "He has
- corn and other things -----------in his fields."
- </p>
- <p> "O.K.," says Bi, "which word belongs in the blank, grown or
- growing?"
- </p>
- <p> "Growing," I answer.
- </p>
- <p> "What I said too," says Bi triumphantly to the three other
- teachers standing at his side.
- </p>
- <p> "But what if it's a causative sentence?" asks a student who
- has wandered into the room. "What if the man who owns the
- fields employs workers so that all he does is give orders? Then
- the owner could be causing those crops to be grown in his fields
- even though he isn't doing the actual work. Then you could use
- the word grown."
- </p>
- <p> "What?" says one of the teachers.
- </p>
- <p> "Like in Tiananmen," says the student. "Deng wasn't
- actually there, right? He didn't actually kill any of us
- himself. But he gave the orders to have us killed. He caused
- it."
- </p>
- <p> After a few moments, Bi breaks the silence. "Don't worry,
- we are all friends here," he says, pointing to the school clock.
- It says 3:30. This time I am the one who is lost. "We are now
- supposed to be on daylight saving time, which is an hour ahead,"
- Bi explains. "But we keep to Hong Kong time as a sign of our
- sympathies. So you see, in this place you can say what you
- want. Just remember to be careful outside." As we leave Bi's
- classroom, he turns out the lights and, without even a faint
- smile, sets the clock ahead an hour. Like many Chinese, Bi is
- expert at concealing his feelings behind a facade of impassivity
- and self-control. "You never know who may come by and see the
- clock," he says. "It is crucial to go through the motions. Be
- subtle even in protest."
- </p>
- <p> The same don't-make-a-big-thing-of-it, be-subtle manner is
- present in Shanghai, one of three Chinese cities directly under
- the national government's jurisdiction. There, a lobby notice
- in the Hilton hotel duly conforms to official policy: WESTERN
- NEWSPAPERS ARE UNAVAILABLE. But upstairs, there they are. The
- hotel's televisions air the supposedly banned daily news shows
- of ABC, NBC, CBS and CNN -- all broadcasting press conferences
- by Chinese dissidents who have escaped Beijing's dragnet.
- </p>
- <p> Similarly, everyone I speak with who has attended a
- "re-education" session designed to promulgate the government's
- version of the Tiananmen tragedy professes to have listened
- stonily to the government's lies. Those forced to respond claim
- to have merely parroted the official line verbatim -- a
- transparent but unpunishable form of dissent.
- </p>
- <p> "A lot is still possible as long as you are careful not to
- gloat," says a low-level government official in Beijing.
- "That's where I think the students went too far. They forced a
- crackdown by causing the leaders to lose face when Gorbachev
- visited. Problem is, the students weren't up on their Mao." Had
- they been, they might have come upon a 1927 essay in which the
- future Chairman identified atrocity as a desirable power-holding
- tactic. "To right a wrong," Mao wrote, "it is necessary to
- exceed the proper limits, and the wrong cannot be righted
- without the proper limits being exceeded . . . To put it
- bluntly, it is (sometimes) necessary to bring about a brief
- reign of terror."
- </p>
- <p> "I guess the main reason I was surprised that the
- demonstrators rubbed the leaders' noses in it," says a professor
- of Chinese literature in Guangzhou, "is that their actions were
- so uncharacteristic of the way in which most smart Chinese
- operate. The emperors and their policies change rapidly in
- China. As the old proverb says, `In the morning, welcomed as the
- guest of a high official; in the evening, held as a prisoner
- under the steps.' To survive in China, you must keep your head
- down and be ready to change your allegiances and enthusiasms
- quickly -- or at least appear to. The elements are simple
- enough. Trust the papers only for sports. In politics, believe
- nothing until it is officially denied. Report your own opinions
- by saying things like `I heard it on the bus,' or `The rumor is
- . . .' Learn to recognize euphemisms."
- </p>
- <p> As we walk in Guangzhou, the professor notices an old woman
- with a broom made of twigs and straw methodically sweeping dirt
- from one side of the street to the other. "You see that?" he
- says. "That's what it is all about. Is the street really clean?
- Of course not. But she is making it look clean, right? That's
- the important thing in China. Everything here is appearance.
- Everything here is pretend."
- </p>
- <p> Feigned compliance is the term used by Lucian Pye, a
- political scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of
- Technology, to describe such self-protective make-believe and
- the obedience it spawns. As a trait central to the Chinese
- character, feigned compliance has distinct Confucian roots, and
- Confucius is very much in vogue in China today. Not for that
- part of his philosophy that extols good-heartedness and
- broad-mindedness, but for his celebration of authority,
- hierarchy and anti-individualism. For the purposes of China's
- leaders, what counts is that Confucius presumed the ruler's
- right to rule.
- </p>
- <p> The Chinese believe it is never too early to teach children
- that their elders should be respected as models of benevolence
- and sobriety. Children are dissuaded from expressing hostile
- feelings toward authority of any description. The concept of
- self exists only as it is expressed in terms of the other,
- usually the group. Even if taught at home, such discipline is
- inculcated most strikingly at school.
- </p>
- <p> The typical Chinese nursery school combines day attendees
- and quan tuo (literally "whole care") students. From Monday
- through Saturday, with the exception of Wednesday evenings, a
- quan tuo student lives at his school around the clock, a
- situation no one seems to think the least bit odd. For despite
- filial devotion and the supposed centrality of family life, long
- separation is common in China. It is not rare for spouses to
- work in different cities and see each other infrequently.
- Similarly, far from signaling neglect, paying to deposit a
- three-year-old in another's care for a week away from home is
- often taken as a sign of affluence. In fact, since the economic
- reforms have raised the living standards of so many Chinese, a
- complaint about quan tuo is that without guanxi -- connections,
- a word I was to hear repeatedly -- no amount of wealth can
- secure a coveted sleep-away space.
- </p>
- <p> I visit two schools, one near Guangzhou, the other in
- Beijing. At both places, two teachers handle a class of
- approximately 40 four-year-olds. Instructive slogans adorn the
- walls: THE NAIL THAT STICKS OUT GETS HAMMERED DOWN and THE LONG
- POLE GETS SAWED OFF. Creativity, experimentation, even simple
- play are discouraged. Handed blocks, the children erect
- structures pictured in workbooks; once completed, the buildings
- are torn down and put up again and again until the time allotted
- for block-building expires. And "No talking, while you're
- building," a teacher scolds. Or while you're eating, for that
- matter, or while you're going to the bathroom. "Sit upright,
- with hands clasped behind your backs," says another teacher.
- "That is correct behavior."
- </p>
- <p> Later, over lunch with a psychologist, I try connecting the
- phenomenal spread of television in China with the West's
- greatest contribution to childhood education. "What about Sesame
- Street?" I ask. "You must be kidding," says the psychologist.
- "Sesame Street is about individualism, about accepting
- differences. Don't you get it about Communism?"
- </p>
- <p> I get it, finally, when I chance on a hot seller at a
- bookstore in Xi'an, the capital of Shaanxi province, deep in the
- heart of China. Buried in A Guide to U.S.A., The Visitor's
- Companion, is a section titled "Individualism." A sample
- observation: "People in the United States generally consider
- self-reliance and independence as ideal personal qualities. As
- a consequence, most people see themselves as separate
- individuals, not as representatives of a family, community, or
- other group . . . Visitors from other countries (read China)
- sometimes view this attitude as `selfishness.'"
- </p>
- <p> I get the point again in Shanghai, the city called the
- "Paris of the East" during the Roaring Twenties; a place made
- famous forever when, in the 1932 film Shanghai Express, Marlene
- Dietrich drawled, "It too-oo-k more than one man to change my
- name to Shanghai Lily." Shanghai is no longer trendy, modern or
- even cosmopolitan, but its streets are still tops for infant
- watching. Sadly, though, the toddlers I see seldom cry or laugh
- or even suck their thumbs. Most seem sullen. And in the
- beautiful Jing an Park, which used to be a cemetery before the
- bodies were exhumed for cremation (the old story about the
- land's being too valuable for the dead), the kids ride around
- in bumper cars in careful circles and don't wave and don't smile
- and stare straight ahead and never once smash into one another
- -- which by now even I know is the whole point.
- </p>
- <p> Most Chinese nursery schools display a mural of young,
- cherubic children riding a dragon. The dragon represents China;
- the well-fed kids symbolize a prosperous future. But outside a
- primary school in Kai Kong, a factory town in Guangdong
- province, the traditional mural is decidedly modern. There isn't
- anything special about the dragon, but the fat children are
- carrying cameras, videocassette recorders and boom boxes.
- </p>
- <p> As a metaphor for Xinhua (New China), the Kai Kong mural is
- perfect. And no area in New China has taken more readily to
- Deng's economic freedoms than Guangdong, the province on the
- southeastern coast that borders Hong Kong. Famous for being
- shrewd businessmen, Guangdong's residents also have a long
- tradition of ignoring imperial edicts. Even today the province
- negotiates its tax remittances to Beijing, in part because the
- national government's ability to control various localities
- differs greatly depending on an area's wealth, strategic
- significance and the personal connections and acumen of its
- leaders.
- </p>
- <p> In a sense, Guangdong can be viewed like the Soviet Union's
- Baltic states, the province's relative wealth representing a
- willingness to stretch the rules to fit whatever works rather
- than restrain expansion to fit the rules. Left alone, which it
- may not be, Guangdong will continue to provide the nation with
- both hard currency and an example of entrepreneurship at full
- throttle.
- </p>
- <p> Not surprisingly, Guangdong's success has produced severe
- envy, what the Chinese call "red eye" disease. The neighboring
- province of Hunan feels particularly aggrieved by what it sees
- as Guangdong's economic warlordism. Faced with the migration of
- millions of its residents to Guangdong, Hunan on occasion has
- even gone so far as to establish border roadblocks to stem the
- flow of materials and people.
- </p>
- <p> Although Beijing has declared that the economic reforms and
- the opening to the outside world will continue despite its
- political crackdown, the capital appears torn between leveling
- the playing field and letting the laws of supply and demand run
- their course. Not that there is much evidence yet that a
- province like Guangdong would salute if Beijing insisted that
- it slow its rush to prosperity. As a Guangdong official says,
- "When the belly is fat, the emperor is far away." Which is not
- to say that Guangdong doesn't understand feigned compliance. A
- visiting Beijing big shot might not be accorded the kind of
- reception Rob Lowe would get in the girls' locker room of an
- American high school, but as this Guangdong cadre says, "When
- the leaders come, we are very careful to treat them very well."
- </p>
- <p> The Lun Feng stuffed-toy factory is one of about 1,000
- Guangdong manufacturing operations that together employ more
- than 2 million people. As one of approximately 10,000 joint
- ventures established since 1979, most along the coast, Lun Feng
- represents both the promise and the problems that have
- accompanied Deng's economic reforms.
- </p>
- <p> To upgrade Lun Feng for state-of-the-art stuffed-toy
- manufacture, which really means little more than loading an
- empty building with sewing machines, Lun Feng's Hong Kong
- joint-venture partner lent the factory's nominal owner, the town
- of Kai Kong, more than $1 million. (The national government got
- its cut by charging a fee for converting the Hong Kong dollars
- into Chinese currency.) Since then, Lun Feng has been on its
- own. Much of the fabric used by the factory comes from Taiwan.
- "No problem," says Lun Feng's operations manager, who happens
- to belong to the Communist Party. "This is business, not
- politics."
- </p>
- <p> It is possible for a non-Communist to be a factory manager
- in China, but most managers are still card-carrying party
- members. Even so, there is always a party secretary to enforce
- Communist discipline. Before Deng's reforms, there was no
- question that the Communist secretary dominated, even if he was
- functionally illiterate in basic business precepts. Since 1984,
- though, Beijing has directed that party secretaries leave
- operations to the factories' designated managers -- a direct
- slap at Leninist ideology, which holds that since the party is
- the only body capable of enforcing the will of the workers,
- factories must be under party control.
- </p>
- <p> On the ground, however, where nothing is ever simple, the
- power relationship varies from place to place. "It is nothing
- more than a normal battle for control," admits a factory party
- secretary in Jinan. "I don't know much about what my factory
- actually does, but that doesn't mean I don't want to be the
- boss." At Lun Feng, Deng's system works fairly well. Only after
- Tiananmen did the secretary actively meddle, but then just to
- direct that the radio be tuned to a mainland station rather than
- one in Hong Kong. The music the workers listen to all day is the
- same, but the news is different.
- </p>
- <p> There seem to be three keys to Lun Feng's success. The
- first is its location on the Kai Kong River, which allows the
- factory to ship its goods by sea and not by the country's
- notoriously awful roads. Even in Guangdong, many of the paved
- highways are narrow, and virtually impassable when travelers
- stop to shop at roadside stands.
- </p>
- <p> Lun Feng's second ace is electricity. Across China,
- electric power is in such short supply that even favored
- state-owned operations must routinely shut down for two or three
- days a week. Lun Feng beat the power problem with money. For
- about $3 million, the factory installed five auxiliary diesel
- generators. With eleven workers maintaining the equipment 24
- hours a day, eight seconds is the longest Lun Feng has been
- without electric power.
- </p>
- <p> Then there are "the girls," about 3,000 of them, who work
- from 7:30 in the morning until 11 at night six days a week. None
- I speak with are over 19. Almost all are from Hunan province.
- Most stay no more than two years and then return home to marry.
- They earn close to $200 a month, an almost unheard-of wage in
- China.
- </p>
- <p> As troublesome as it can sometimes be to have a mercurial
- government as one's business partner, greater problems often
- arise from a mismatch of position and personnel. Most jobs are
- assigned by the government, often with little regard for a
- person's qualifications or preferences.
- </p>
- <p> At a Guangdong electronics factory, the quality-control
- officer concedes his own ineptitude. "I graduated in English
- from Fudan University (in Shanghai) and was immediately assigned
- here," he says. "I don't know anything about the work here, so
- I can't judge product quality very well. I wish I could go
- somewhere else, but I may be stuck here for the rest of my life.
- I could learn the job, but moving up is almost impossible
- without guanxi" -- that word again -- "which I don't have. If
- I had it, I maybe could have arranged it so I wasn't sent here
- in the first place."
- </p>
- <p> In part because of similar complaints, Beijing announced
- plans last year to scuttle the job-allocation system this
- November. But on April 13 the State Council rescinded the
- scheduled reform. The decision was understandable. Rather than
- work in state-run enterprises, which need talented help
- desperately, most college graduates would opt for private-sector
- jobs that offer more money, greater opportunities for
- advancement and the chance to travel abroad. But the
- government's about-face last April, combined with the death two
- days later of Hu Yaobang, the reform-minded Communist Party
- Chairman ousted in early 1987, contributed to the student
- demonstrations that culminated in the Tiananmen massacre on
- June 4.
- </p>
- <p> Not far from the Lun Feng factory, on the main road to
- Guangzhou, is an example of how economic freedom can energize
- a population. Shops full of sofas, chairs and beds stretch as
- far as the eye can see. "Furniture Mile" began several years ago
- when a few local farmers decided that after meeting their
- government- mandated crop quotas, they would rather augment
- their income by making furniture than by growing more
- vegetables. Soon, farmers throughout the area followed suit.
- Today anyone with wheels stops to load as much furniture as he
- can carry, then resells his wares later in whatever market he
- can find.
- </p>
- <p> Individuals are not the only ones eager to earn extra
- money. Under Deng's reforms, most state-run businesses and
- government agencies are expected to turn a profit. An aircraft
- factory in Xi'an runs a marriage-introduction center that does
- a booming business serving the needs of hundreds of
- well-educated women who by their late 20s are desperate for
- husbands because men with less schooling are reluctant to marry
- them. In Chengdu the Xinhua bookstore owns a flower shop, a hair
- salon and a clothing boutique whose manager gets his goods from
- "a guy in Shanghai who has good guanxi." In Shanghai itself the
- city's world-famous acrobats attract bigger audiences by
- sponsoring fashion shows between tumbles. A university in
- Guangdong has branched out to invest in a three-story bar in
- Shanghai whose top floor, called Lovers' World, features 15
- banquettes where couples can smooch in privacy. Even the
- People's Liberation Army has got into the act. Knowing that
- swank hotels are truly the country's most exotic tourist
- attractions, the P.L.A. is a co-owner of Beijing's poshest, the
- Palace, where two gold-colored Rolls-Royce Corniches are
- available for special guests.
- </p>
- <p> But the tensions generated by the scramble for money are
- never far from the surface. Orthodox executives of China's
- state-run enterprises are very much like the Soviet Union's
- permanent bureaucracy, the nomenklatura. They have coasted for
- years under the old system, and they dislike Deng's perestroika
- because it asks them to compete like capitalists, and capitalism
- has losers. "Keeping their jobs is their No. 1 priority," says
- Sinclair Choy, a marine engineer from Hong Kong, who in
- partnership with a coastal town on the mainland runs a fishing
- boat-repair business. "Order, stability, calm," says Choy.
- "That's what these Chinese officials want. Anything that
- threatens to upset the applecart sets them off."
- </p>
- <p> Choy and I are speaking on the ferry from Hong Kong to the
- mainland, where he hopes finally to convince his Chinese
- partners that the incentive system should be introduced at their
- business. "Everyone is paid the same at our place, even though
- many are willing to work harder for more money," says Choy. "But
- my Chinese government partners don't want to upset those who are
- lazy by allocating bonuses according to merit. They have their
- own version of the iron rice bowl, and they don't care if
- incentives will result in greater productivity and more profit.
- To a businessman their attitude is insane. But they are happy
- if they turn just a little profit, because they know that that
- will satisfy their higher-ups and that everyone will then be
- covered. Probably the only thing left for me to try is straight
- corruption."
- </p>
- <p> Which is exactly the conclusion reached long ago by many
- other joint-venture businessmen. Perhaps the most typical piece
- of underhanded dealing involves the corruption of customs agents
- by hotels. "The law says customs can take up to 10% of an
- imported shipment of perishable items to test for disease," says
- a Chinese American who co-owns a Sichuan province hotel. To beat
- the delay and spoilage that can result from complying with such
- rules, hotel owners regularly pay off customs officials with
- "free samples."
- </p>
- <p> "You think it's not the same everywhere? Of course it is.
- Corruption is endemic. It's bad in China, sure, but I still say
- the mainland people are like Chinese everywhere else in the
- world: turn 'em loose and they'll earn trillions." A
- capitalist's faith expressed by a true capitalist. The speaker
- is Tommy Quan, 55, a millionaire Chinese American from Seattle
- known as the "orange king" of Guangdong's Taishan County.
- </p>
- <p> Taishan bills itself accurately as the "home of the
- overseas Chinese." The county's 960,000 residents have about 1.2
- million relatives living abroad, and much as American Jews send
- money to Israel in lieu of actually moving there, Taishan's
- "overseas compatriots" have sent millions home. Since 1982
- foreign funds have built 500 new schools, 50 hospitals and an
- indoor soccer stadium.
- </p>
- <p> Rather than send money, Tommy Quan decided to send himself.
- Until the Communists took over in 1949, Quan lived in a small
- village of 160 people not far from the Taishan County seat.
- Then at age 15, Quan and his family immigrated to Seattle.
- Eventually, Quan owned two thriving restaurants, a ski resort
- and "more real estate than I can keep track of."
- </p>
- <p> Leaving behind a wife and four children, two of whom are
- Seattle cops, Quan returned in 1982 to "do something for China
- -- and myself." But certainly not because of any romantic
- longing for his roots. "You know what they say about the good
- old days," he says. "They are the product of bad memory."
- </p>
- <p> Short and powerfully built, Quan can outswear a gale of
- wind -- and outtalk even the most talkative Chinese. He reminds
- me of Robert Strauss, the former Democratic national chairman;
- Quan too, I am convinced, could talk a hungry dog out of a pork
- chop.
- </p>
- <p> On his way back to China, Quan stopped in California to
- pick up some orange-tree saplings. "You know the Chinese were
- the first to grow orange trees," he says. "But like a good deal
- else that the Chinese invented first, they had forgotten how to
- do it." Today almost all the villages around Quan's 300-acre
- farm, which may be the largest private landholding in China, are
- growing oranges.
- </p>
- <p> Quan spends most evenings in his new two-story home
- "drinking beer and watching my Rambo tapes, because it's so damn
- boring here." Many of those who remember Quan and his family
- from before the revolution think he was crazy to return, despite
- his roots in Taishan. "Most of my friends here thought I was on
- the lam when I showed up." Others thought Quan could not
- possibly have anything to offer. "The Chinese have an incredible
- superiority complex," he says. "They're backward as hell, but
- they still believe the world revolves around China. They take
- great pride in their civilization simply because it is old. It
- is almost impossible to teach them anything. You have to do what
- I have done. You show by example, and they pick it up as if they
- were the ones who had the idea all along. You can't even get
- them thinking about why, if China was so far ahead of the rest
- of the world 2,000 years ago, it is so far behind today."
- </p>
- <p> Quan has another claim to local fame: in the middle of his
- orange groves he has erected a 6-ft. shrine to Zhao Ziyang, the
- Communist Party leader whose tacit support of the student
- protesters in Tiananmen Square contributed to his ouster in
- late June. Near the top of the tiled column is a photograph of
- Zhao -- with Tommy Quan standing at his side in his Seattle
- Seahawks cap. "Zhao made it all possible," says Quan. "He showed
- people that incentives can turn China around. Now that he is out
- of favor, my friends think I should tear my monument down. No
- way. I am keeping the faith. Eventually, Zhao will be
- vindicated. There's no turning back over the long run. The
- emperors in Beijing won't change the label. They'll still call
- China Communist. They'll have to do that to keep themselves in
- power. But we're heading toward capitalism, no matter what they
- will call it, because finally China is going to opt for what
- works."
- </p>
- <p> Quan's admiration for Zhao may be a bit too public, but
- many of the Chinese I meet seem to share it. About 1,000 miles
- from Quan's farm, in Guanxian, a group of excited Chinese
- tourists is visiting the Dujiangyan irrigation system -- another
- marvel of China's ancient genius -- built 2,200 years ago. On
- a misty morning the tourists can barely make out an aging,
- abandoned hydroelectric plant about a mile upstream. Like much
- of what was built by the Soviets during the heyday of
- Sino-Soviet cooperation in the 1950s, this power station too is
- crumbling. In fact, the plant had been little used; the Soviet
- advisers had sited it improperly.
- </p>
- <p> "Zhao would have done it right," says one.
- </p>
- <p> "Great man," says another.
- </p>
- <p> "Quiet," says a retired railroad conductor. "Someone might
- hear us. Hush up."
- </p>
- <p> "You hush," says an elderly woman. "Zhao will return.
- You'll see."
- </p>
- <p> Everywhere I go in China, most of the people I encounter,
- including those aware of what happened in Tiananmen Square,
- express perfectly understandable human sentiments grounded in
- fatalism. "As the old proverb goes," says a middle-level
- government official in Guangdong who holds a master's in
- political science from an American college, `Happiness and
- sorrow flow along the same river.' Do we deplore what the army
- did in Tiananmen? Of course. Do we wish the government were
- different, more democratic, more humane? Of course. But what
- would you have us do? Take to the streets? For what? We have had
- ten relatively good years of economic growth and domestic
- tranquillity. Yes, there is some retrenchment now. But consider
- the previous ten years, the time of the Cultural Revolution,
- when everything was at its worst. Do we want to return to that?
- Take to the streets against those with the guns and risk all
- that we've gained? Who but the hotheads can honestly say such an
- action would be worth it?"
- </p>
- <p> Three hundred miles south of Beijing, the view from Zouping
- County is different. Not all Zouping's citizens are true
- believers, but they appear to revere the army and seemingly
- remain loyal to the government. Zouping has come far in the Deng
- era -- it even has a local beer, Hupo, that someday may rival
- the popularity of Tsingtao in the U.S. (The word on the street
- has Tsingtao's springwater supply running out in the early
- 1990s.)
- </p>
- <p> But for all its progress, Zouping represents what can be
- called an altered sequence of development. Like much of the rest
- of the country, Zouping is experiencing the telecommunications
- and electronics revolution before agricultural mechanization.
- It is possible to stand in a field in Zouping and watch wheat
- harvested exactly as it was 2,000 years ago, by sickle, and then
- to look up and see the giant satellite dish that links the town
- with Beijing's Central Television -- as incongruous a sight as
- that of Chinese businessmen furiously pedaling their bikes
- through the capital as they speak on cellular phones.
- </p>
- <p> In the midst of Zouping is a village of 1,100 where Wu
- Baohua, 57, has been Communist Party secretary for 25 years. Wu
- is soft-spoken and polite, and his face expresses a sanguine
- dignity without a trace of self-importance. Then there are his
- teeth, big strong Jimmy Carter teeth. Separately, each one could
- win a prize. Taken together, the effect is electric. You could
- read fine print at the bottom of a well by his grin.
- </p>
- <p> Unlike Guangdong, where Deng's injunction to "seek truth
- from facts" has led provincial officials to cite "unique local
- conditions" as a way of drifting as far from Communism as
- Beijing can tolerate, Wu's village represents the opposite
- tendency. In many ways it is still a collectivist town. The
- village employs doctors and covers all medical costs -- a
- practice no longer common in China, where many must pay for
- health care out of their own pockets. Land is privately owned,
- but much of its cultivation is accomplished by group effort.
- </p>
- <p> The neighborhood committees that exist almost everywhere in
- China -- watchdog groups that keep an eye on everyone and
- everything -- are unnecessary in Wu's village. In tone and in
- fact, he controls almost every aspect of village life -- and
- the villagers have prospered thanks to his wisdom. When income
- from the local ice-cream factory fell short of projections, Wu
- converted the plant to a successful cotton-fabric operation in
- six months. When this summer's drought threatened to devastate
- the village's wheat and vegetable crops, Wu proposed that water
- from the Yellow River -- unused previously because it was so
- muddy -- be tapped immediately. Within 36 hours, 4,000 Chinese,
- including Wu, were digging a new irrigation ditch two miles
- long. The entire job was completed in twelve hours.
- </p>
- <p> On the wall of one of the newest buildings in Wu's village
- is a saying widely heard during the Cultural Revolution two
- decades ago: PREPARE FOR WAR, PREPARE FOR NATURAL DISASTERS,
- SERVE THE PEOPLE. Wu makes no apologies. "Of course I know the
- slogan's origins," he says. "But there is nothing wrong with
- those words. We should use more of what Mao taught. His themes
- were self-reliance and sacrifice. I say to our leaders, more of
- that and less riding around in fancy cars.
- </p>
- <p> "What we have today is a lot of talk about ending
- corruption and nepotism," Wu continues. "Just like we've heard
- before. But unless we finally get serious about such things, we
- will never build our New China. We will watch Chinese on the
- outside rise in even white societies because of their industry
- and intellect. We will never catch up."
- </p>
- <p> If Beijing is not serious about its anticorruption campaign
- -- and given the regime's track record, there is little reason
- to believe it is -- it means only that, like leaders
- everywhere, China's rulers reflect their culture's values. So,
- just as the people engage in pretense when dealing with the
- government, the leadership in turn expends considerable time and
- energy of its own in going through the motions.
- </p>
- <p> The Cultural Revolution's aftermath makes the point. Very
- little effort has ever been spent investigating the question of
- why so many followed so dastardly a design. Personal accounts
- of the period's horrors have been written ("scar literature" it
- is called). But unlike the Germans, who have collectively
- wrestled with the Holocaust's blackest implications for 40
- years, the Chinese appear content to let the past rest.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps because the Chinese are historically indifferent to
- introspection (as befits a culture where family rather than
- self is the core of an individual's identity), I never hear a
- coherent analysis of the Cultural Revolution, an event that so
- inverted the natural order that parents were shamed, beaten and
- in some instances even killed by their own children. All I pick
- up is a line or two about the traditional absence of
- psychological study in totalitarian societies, and some bits and
- pieces, mostly about the worship of Mao as a semidivine figure,
- and tales of the Chairman's senility.
- </p>
- <p> No matter why Mao initiated the Cultural Revolution, what
- is most interesting today is that the Chairman's successors
- appear totally uninterested in the question. For the party's
- present leaders, so expert at rewriting history that they
- regularly crop from official photographs whoever is currently
- out of favor, it has been enough to blame a few scapegoats for
- a decade of chaos and leave it at that.
- </p>
- <p> Those eager to delve further have been rebuffed. When some
- Shanghai writers proposed a Cultural Revolution museum in 1986,
- Beijing said no. The leadership apparently fears that any
- thorough investigation would quickly run to criticism of the
- current regime and so must be prohibited. The outer boundaries
- of permissible complaint in China have been set. Anything may
- be criticized except that which really matters: the right of the
- party to rule. To today's leaders, the experience of the past
- demands a straitjacket on political dissent and helps explain
- why Deng so feared accepting the Tiananmen demonstrators' demand
- for free expression.
- </p>
- <p> Since bureaucratic sadism is familiar to everyone
- everywhere, I was somewhat prepared for the denial of a simple
- request during the 600-mile, 18-hour train trip to Beijing. But
- I was not prepared for the sheer delight visible on the
- conductor's face when she said, "Meiyou, the rule does not
- permit turning on the lights before 7 p.m. and it's only 6:30.
- You will just have to wait 30 minutes."
- </p>
- <p> "But it's storming outside, it's dark, and it's hard to
- read."
- </p>
- <p> It is impossible to describe the complete pleasure her
- smile conveyed. Perhaps she gets a bonus for being a
- particularly petty bureaucrat. Perhaps she resents foreigners
- and their privileges. A Chinese train's best accommodations, the
- "soft sleeper" compartment, in which two bunk beds actually
- sport linen, are reserved for foreigners and high party and
- government officials. I could understand her hating such
- preferential treatment, but then again, she and her colleagues
- do pretty well because of it. For notwithstanding my status as
- a foreigner, the "soft sleeper" car was "sold out" until a kind
- official laid a carton of cigarettes and a small cash "bonus"
- on the ticket agent. "Funny to you, isn't it?" said the
- official. "Here I am from one bureau of the government, and I
- have to help you pay off another bureau to get what the
- regulations say is yours by right."
- </p>
- <p> Funny? Maybe. But not unexpected. By now, even I understand
- the role of guanxi in China. I only wonder how the whole system
- works nearer the throne.
- </p>
- <p> Despite its vast gray Soviet-style tenements and the
- absence of the imposing wall that enclosed it for a thousand
- years, Beijing strikes me as China's prettiest and most livable
- large city. Staggered work shifts are common, and vehicles from
- outside the city are banned during the day. The avenues are
- broader, the streets are cleaner. There are even more trees.
- </p>
- <p> To me, Beijing appears normal, not only in the sense that
- people go about their business apparently oblivious of the
- martial-law troops who stand at rigid attention under the cover
- of multicolored beach umbrellas, but because Beijing too
- exhibits the limits of governmental control. For example, China
- has strict residency rules. Identity documents guarantee that
- a person who receives permission to move from his hometown to
- a new location is still eligible for ration coupons, housing
- allowances and other subsidies. But even without permission,
- people have been drawn by the economic reforms to the major
- cities, and the financial opportunities they have found there
- more than compensate for their lost stipends. In central Beijing
- it is estimated that a fifth of the 6 million residents are
- illegal transients.
- </p>
- <p> It is in the bookstores that one can best see how daily
- life has outgrown the political system's controls, how the
- campaign against "spiritual pollution," so rhetorically fierce,
- is flouted with such abandon. While elsewhere in China,
- government booklets like The True Story of Tiananmen Square are
- prominently displayed alongside issues of Vogue, Elle and
- Glamour, you have to hunt for the lies at Wangfujing, Beijing's
- largest bookstore. The section labeled "Ideology and Political
- Education" actually displays books titled Modern Woman, Smart
- Woman, Handbook on Love and Life and dozens of how-to monographs
- like Eighty-Eight Points on Developing Public Relations. In
- other cities the regime appears successful at banishing books
- and periodicals dealing with "pornography, bourgeois liberalism
- and feudal superstition." Here one can buy steamy romances,
- political biographies of discredited leaders -- and seemingly
- anything ever written by or about Richard Nixon, pro or con.
- </p>
- <p> On the surface, then, totalitarianism in Beijing seems no
- more oppressive than a constant low-grade fever. Underneath,
- though, the town seethes. Even the silence is telling. Herded
- by their supervisors to the military museum's "True Story of
- Tiananmen Square" exhibit, those I see viewing it are
- stone-faced. Politically reliable cadres are everywhere, but so
- are wry smiles, especially when people see a giant blowup
- photograph of the man who defied a column of tanks, with a
- caption saying he had been spared because of the army's
- humanity.
- </p>
- <p> At cinemas, free tickets are distributed for Baise
- Uprising, a new film extolling Deng's early military career, but
- even those who attend -- and most of the theaters are half empty
- -- talk through the movie or read. At work, employees protest
- by increasing their sick leave and slowing their production. At
- school, the results of an essay competition glorifying the
- army's role in Tiananmen are supposed to have been made public
- weeks ago. Perhaps too many entries reflect the view of an
- eleven-year-old girl whose grandparents I meet. Her short,
- three-page paper, reflecting the unpopularity of China's
- conservative Premier, has Li Peng resigning because he is "too
- stinking." Most significant of all, perhaps, few people seem to
- have become informers in spite of a well-advertised Ratters
- Anonymous network.
- </p>
- <p> While stories like these are everywhere in China, few
- people but the most emotional predict the regime's imminent
- collapse -- or even want it. Most who do so live in Beijing, but
- in this respect at least, the capital seems as representative
- of China as Manhattan is of the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> The most famous man in China this summer seems to be Xiao
- Bing, the "rumormonger" who was sentenced to ten years in prison
- for "exaggerating" the Tiananmen death toll in an interview with
- ABC News (he said 20,000 had died). Absolutely everyone knows
- the tale of Xiao. "Xiao Bing makes a point about the future,"
- says an economics professor in Chengdu. "The people in Beijing
- were there -- and so may be very willing to take to the streets
- again. But we elsewhere are more cautious. It's not that the
- propaganda campaign is working. Most of us know full well what
- went on -- if not the details, then the essence. It is that we
- have seen how far even Deng, who we thought was a good guy, will
- go to keep power. It may seem strange -- we are used to
- executions -- but ten years in jail just for talking sends a
- powerful signal."
- </p>
- <p> But maybe not powerful enough. My conversation with the
- professor takes place more or less publicly at a table for
- twelve in a teahouse in Chengdu, a drab city where the sun
- rarely shines more than 60 days a year. Instead of smoking and
- no-smoking sections -- almost everyone in China smokes -- this
- teahouse sets aside tables for those who want coffee.
- Unfortunately, we are at one of them. Drinking Chinese coffee
- is like drinking hot water with a distant memory of caffeine;
- there is an atavistic link somewhere, but it is not coffee.
- </p>
- <p> While the professor talks about the government's propaganda
- efforts, his face becomes heavy. His brooding eyes are cast
- downward, his mouth grows sulky. But not because of the coffee,
- which he insists is "quite good." What causes the professor to
- lower his voice to a drone is the presence, at the next table,
- of a local Communist official. "They say he is honest," says
- the professor. "They say that he doesn't have a crooked bone in
- his body. Maybe so, but I am certain those bones are held
- together by crooked fat."
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, the professor wants to make one final point.
- What resonates for most Chinese, he says, "is when Deng and the
- others argue that permitting Tiananmen to run its course could
- have led to chaos and disorder, to another Cultural Revolution.
- The Cultural Revolution is the benchmark against which
- everything looks better, the one thing above all that we do not
- want again."
- </p>
- <p> He is describing a social contract, abhorrent to an
- American but understandable, even comforting, to many Chinese.
- In exchange for letting the rulers rule, the subjects will be
- permitted by the regime to continue the economic progress they
- have enjoyed for ten years.
- </p>
- <p> But how exactly will the balance be struck? What is a
- controlled expression of opinion that does not threaten the
- party's authority? Thousands believed their criticism within
- bounds when Mao urged freethinking in the mid-1950s campaign
- known as "Let a Hundred Flowers Bloom." Then Deng, whom Mao had
- once described as "a needle wrapped in cotton," orchestrated a
- crackdown that sent many to prison for merely following the
- Great Helmsman's invitation to criticize.
- </p>
- <p> Most of those I meet seem to believe that despite the
- current retrenchment, China's economy is evolving into one not
- unlike South Korea's or Taiwan's. And while neither of those
- nations offers the political freedoms available in the West,
- both are light-years ahead of China economically. Is that really
- where China is going, or will the new resemble the old, a return
- to the Stalinist economic system that even Mikhail Gorbachev is
- trying to abandon? Will Deng succeed in anointing party chief
- Jiang Zemin as his successor, and would Jiang, in power, affirm
- continued economic liberalism?
- </p>
- <p> "If the retrenchment worsens and if the economy fails, if
- Premier Li stops Jiang's succession, then all bets are off for
- Deng and his cronies," says the Chengdu professor. "Deng got the
- point that Communism doesn't work, that it tries to change human
- nature. He got the point about incentive. The problem is that
- many of the other old guys don't like his views and never have.
- And right now they are trying to force a serious turn back, and
- they're using the ammunition of a faltering economy. Well, the
- macroeconomic numbers are indeed bad, but most people have
- conveniences they have never had and never dreamed they would
- have. The stores are full of goods, and you still see many
- people buying. But most want more, and having now been exposed
- to the outside world, they know very well what more means."
- </p>
- <p> Forty years ago this Sunday, Mao Zedong stood on a balcony
- overlooking Tiananmen Square and said, "The Chinese people have
- stood up, and the future of our nation is infinitely brighter."
- Infinitely messier is closer to the mark today. The economy's
- course is uncertain. Provincial and municipal governments will
- surely pursue their own interests despite efforts to restrain
- them. The party, with its ideology bankrupt, offers only order
- and is begging for faith -- and not getting it. How long can a
- government like that retain control and stay in power? "A regime
- that . . . is forced to fire on the young, who protest in the
- name of liberty," said French President Francois Mitterrand
- after Tiananmen, "has no future."
- </p>
- <p> Yes, but how long, exactly? The Chinese live in a cage.
- Some farsighted policies have expanded the cage beyond what
- anyone would have imagined a decade ago. But it is still a cage,
- and even if it continues to expand, how long will an
- increasingly modern nation be content to live behind bars?
- </p>
- <p> "I don't know," said an 88-year-old man in a Beijing park.
- It was early morning, and along with a score of others, the old
- man was exercising his birds -- by illusion. The men walked
- about and swung their birdcages. The movement is said to
- convince the birds inside that they are free. "We trick them,
- you know," he said. "How long can they stay fooled? Who knows?
- Maybe they hope. Like us. We hope. I hope. But you know, in
- China it is dangerous to hope. Your heart is always being
- broken." I said I knew.
- </p>
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-