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- Communist China and Mao Tse-tung
- "A look into it's introduction to Communism and the Man who led them"
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- DONNY CAMPBELL
- Dr. UMOETTE
- HISTORY OF THE FAR EAST
- MAY 3rd 1996
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- The Roots of Communist China
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- To say that the Chinese Communist revolution is a non-Western revolution is more
- than a cliché. That revolution has been primarily directed, not like the French Revolution
- but against alien Western influences that approached the level of domination and
- drastically altered China's traditional relationship with the world. Hence the Chinese
- Communist attitude toward China's traditional past is selectively critical, but by no means
- totally hostile. The Chinese Communist revolution, and the foreign policy of the regime to
- which it has given rise, have several roots, each of which is embedded in the past more
- deeply than one would tend to expect of a movement seemingly so convulsive.
- The Chinese superiority complex institutionalized in their tributary system was
- justified by any standards less advanced or efficient than those of the modern West. China
- developed an elaborate and effective political system resting on a remarkable cultural
- unity, the latter in turn being due mainly to the general acceptance of a common, although
- difficult, written language and a common set of ethical and social values, known as
- Confucianism. Traditional china had neither the knowledge nor the power that would have
- been necessary to cope with the superior science, technology, economic organization, and
- military force that expanding West brought to bear on it. The general sense of national
- weakness and humiliation was rendered still keener by a unique phenomenon, the
- modernization of Japan and its rise to great power status. Japan's success threw China's
- failure into sharp remission.
- The Japanese performance contributed to the discrediting and collapse of China's
- imperial system, but it did little to make things easier for the subsequent successor. The
- Republic was never able to achieve territorial and national unity in the face of bad
- communications and the widespread diffusion of modern arms throughout the country.
- Lacking internal authority, it did not carry much weight in its foreign relations. As it
- struggled awkwardly, there arose two more radical political forces, the relatively powerful
- Kuomintang of Sun Yat-sen and Chiang Kai-shek, and the younger and weaker
- Communist Party of China (CPC ). With indispensable support from the CPC and the
- Third International, the Kuomintang achieved sufficient success so it felt justified in
- proclaiming a new government, controlled by itself, for the whole of China. For a time
- the Kuomintang made a valiant effort to tackle China's numerous and colossal problems,
- including those that had ruined its predecessor : poor communications and the wide
- distribution of arms. It also took a strongly anti-Western course in its foreign relations,
- with some success. It is impossible to say whether the Kuomintang's regime would
- ultimately have proven viable and successful if it had not been ruined by an external
- enemy, as the Republic had been by its internal opponents. The more the Japanese exerted
- preemptive pressures on China, the more the people tended to look on the Kuomintang as
- the only force that prevent china from being dominated by Japan. During the Sino-
- Japanese war of 1937, the Kuomintang immediately suffered major military defeats and
- lost control of eastern China. It was only saved from total hopelessness or defeat by
- Japan's suicidal decision to attack the United States and invasion of Southeastern Asia.
- But military rescue from Japan brought no significant improvement in the Kuomintang's
- domestic performance in the political and economic fields, which if anything to get worse.
- Clearly the pre-Communist history of Modern China has been essentially one of weakness,
- humiliation, and failure. This is the atmosphere in which the CPC developed its leadership
- and growth in. The result has been a strong determination on the part of that leadership to
- eliminate foreign influence within China, to modernize their country, and to eliminate
- Western influence from eastern Asia, which included the Soviet Union. China was
- changing and even developing, but its overwhelming marks were still poverty and
- weakness. During their rise to power the Chinese Communists, like most politically
- conscious Chinese, were aware of these conditions and anxious to eliminate them. Mao
- Tse-tung envisioned a mixed economy under Communist control, such as had existed in
- the Soviet Union during the period of the New Economic Policy. The stress was more
- upon social justice, and public ownership of the "commanding heights" of the economy
- than upon development. In 1945, Mao was talking more candidly about development, still
- within the framework of a mixed economy under Communist control, and stressing the
- need for more heavy industry; I believe because he had been impressed by the role of
- heavy industry in determine the outcome of World War II. In his selected works he said
- "that the necessary capital would come mainly from the accumulated wealth of the
- Chinese people" but latter added "that China would appreciate foreign aid and even
- private foreign investment, under non exploitative conditions."
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- After Chiang Kai-shek broke away from the CPC they found themselves in a
- condition that they were not accustom to, they had no armed forces or territorial bases of
- its own. It had no program of strategy other than the one that Stalin had compromised,
- who from the Sixth World Congress of the Comintern in 1928 to the Seventh in 1935
- insisted, largely because the disaster he had suffered in China that Communist Parties
- everywhere must promote world revolution in a time of depression. The CPC was ridden
- with factionalism; the successful effort to replace this situation with one of relative
- "bolshevization" or in layman's term this means imposed unity, which was ultimately
- made by Mao Tse-tung, and not by Stalin.
- Parallel with the Comintern-dominated central apparatus of the CPC in Shanghai,
- there arose a half dozen Communist-led base areas, each with a guerrilla army, in Central
- and South China. These bases existed mainly by virtue of the efforts of the local
- Communist leadership to satisfy the serious economic and social grievances of the local
- civilians, often violently, through such means as redistribution of land at the expense of
- landlords and the reduction of interest rates at the expense of moneylenders. Of these base
- areas, or soviets, the most important was the one led by Mao Tse-tung and centered in the
- southeastern city of Kiangsi. Correspondingly, in return for such service Mao was elected
- chairman of a Central Soviet Government, who supposedly controlled all the Communist
- base areas in 1931.
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- Before I tell about Mao Tse-tung, I will tell you about Maoism. By Maoism or
- "the thought of Mao Tse-tung" as the CPC would put it is the entire evolving complex of
- patterns of official thought and behavior that CPC has developed while under Mao's
- leadership. It was very difficult to unscramble Mao's individual contribution while not
- confusing it with other thinkers of this time period as many have done and are still doing
- to this date. It is also difficult to separate the pre-1949 and the post-1949 aspects and the
- domestic from the international aspects. The first basic and most important characteristic
- that I believe is a deep and sincere nationalism that has been merged with the strictly
- Communist elements. Then closely resembling nationalism was his populism approach so
- full of strain that the CPC saw itself not merely as the Vanguard of the common people,
- plus as the progressive side of the middle class, but as representative of the people. This
- was important as it played the opposite position of the " three big mountains"
- (imperialism, feudalism, and bureaucratic capitalism) and still yet accept the passively the
- leadership CPC. Maoism still possessed two other points that are significant in
- understanding this ideology, it recognizes the decisive importance in history of conscious,
- voluntary activity and of subjective forces in more detail than the sometimes compared
- Leninism which was opposed to deterministic, objective forces. The last point it brings out
- is that Maoism stresses contradictions and struggle, or what might be called the power of
- negative thinking, to the point where it invents enemies of all types and comments on their
- size and calls them "paper tiger" as he did in a speech in 1950.
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- Mao Tse-tung
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- On December 26th 1893 in a small village about twenty-eight miles to the west of
- Hsiangt'an, Hunan in Shaoshanch'ung, Mao Tse-tung was born. He was born during a
- time of widespread suffrage, his father Mao Shun-sheng had left his family to join the army
- hoping to return and be able to take care of his family. He soon returned with ample funds
- to purchase land and livestock, so was the background of his childhood and one of the
- reasons why he cared so much about the agricultural growth of his people and the need to
- end their suffering..His mother was a modest individual who cared about the less fortunate
- and believed heavily in prayer to gods for guidance and best wishes to the needy. Since he
- started working at the early age of five he learned and developed his tendency for
- thoroughness, paying close attention to what and how his father operated the farmland.
- His father eventually brought him a tutor to teach the business side of life and learned to
- read and write also. Learning to read opened his mind to books such as, The Water
- Margin, The Romance of the Three Kingdoms, and The Monkey, but the first book was
- his most favorite. Because it told of a rebels desire and the spirit of rebellion, what a
- symbolic meaning that would play in his future. He would eventually go to school in
- Ch'angsha the Capital city where his life took a path he would never be able to leave from
- again. The Empire was full of discontent with the leaders role in the political realm. China
- was in political chaos and the leaders new of nothing that could save them. During these
- times many disasters would take place such as the Russo-Japanese war, and the Boxer
- Rebellion which directed the Chinese government to construct a shaky, but
- authoritative constitution to hope these problems would not destroy their monarchy. At
- this time Mao had been in school learning as much as he could about the political agenda
- and about the revolution that was going on. He read many books about the causes of the
- revolution and the many theories that authors portrayed that could end this revolt. He
- himself started to write his feelings down into what would be his "life works" on what he
- believed could halt the problem or really give the Republic back to the people. This is one
- of the reasons why China is now called THE PEOPLES REPUBLIC OF CHINA. From
- this point of his educational advance, he would be in close contact with future leaders of
- the revolution, his classmates. He helped them take papers and documents around the city
- that told of plans of attacking the government. With the help of his classmates the formed
- a student society that was a front for the revolution to reach the students, where they read
- works and newspapers such as Hsiang River Weekly, this paper would subsequently print
- some of his beliefs. This paper was eventually snubbed by the present leader Chang Ching-
- yao. This is when his name became familiar with the government and they wanted him
- stopped and suppressed. He would soon leave to go Peking where he started to issue his
- views statements about the current government. This is where he started to learn more
- about Marxism and read the book the Communist Manifesto. When he returned he learned
- of the Hunan Armies seizures of citizens who they believed where threats to the society.
- From this point on, Mao new it would be his job and role in life to take charge and assert
- the necessary precautions to see that his people were treated the way that they needed to
- be treated.
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- Bibliography
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- 1. Mao Tse-tung, Selected Works, Manchuria Publishing House, 1948, Translated By
- Stuart Gelder.
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- 2. Jerome Chen, Mao and the Chinese Revolution, Oxford University Press, 1965.
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- 3. Stuart & Schram, Mao Tse- tung, Simon and Shuster - New York, 1966.
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- Cf. Conrad Brandt, Stalin's Failure in China, 1924-1927, Harvard University Press, 1958.
- Mao Tse-tung, Selected Works, Manchuria Publishing House, 1948, p. 336. Translated by Stuart
- Gelder.
- Mao Tse-tung, Selected Works, Manchuria Publishing House, 1948, p. 428. Translated by Stuart
- Gelder.
- Mao Tse-tung, Selected Works, Manchuria Publishing House, 1948, p. 104. Translated by Stuart
- Gelder.
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