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Thousands queue to see Mao on anniversary (Has it been 30 years already?)
Reuters on Yahoo ^ | 9/8/06 | Emma Graham-Harrison

Posted on 09/09/2006 10:01:11 PM PDT by NormsRevenge

BEIJING (Reuters) - Thousands queued at Beijing's Mao Zedong Mausoleum on Saturday for a glimpse of the embalmed corpse of the former Great Helmsman on the 30th anniversary of his death but Chinese state media kept coverage of the event low-key.

Police and undercover agents infiltrating crowds outside the squat building on Tiananmen Square were a reminder of government sensitivity about how the man who founded "new China" -- but then plunged it into bouts of famine and chaos -- is remembered.

Five years after his death the Communist Party, which uses Mao as an ideological prop to help govern an increasingly materialistic country, officially declared him "70 percent right and 30 percent wrong." It has discouraged further discussion.

"Their legitimacy still relies upon his enormous legend. Khrushchev denounced Stalin knowing they could fall back on Lenin. but Mao is both," said Roderick MacFarquhar, Mao scholar at Harvard University.

For the hundreds of millions of rural poor in particular, often left behind by the vast economic changes of recent years, he represents a government that cared about their plight.

"We adore Chairman Mao. We are farmers like him and have endured a lot of hardship," said 45-year old Guo Xin, who had taken an overnight bus from neighboring Hebei province to lay three yellow chrysanthemums at the Mausoleum at dawn.

But officials who use Mao's image to shore up their authority are also wary of stirring up memories of his increasingly autocratic leadership and ruthless political campaigns, which claimed millions of lives.

The low-profile cover of the anniversary was a stark contrast to the extravagant bombast of tributes at the height of Mao's personality cult.

A memorial gala with the throwback title "The reddest sun -- Chairman Mao is the most beloved" was held at the cavernous seat of parliament, the Great Hall of the People, on Friday.

But its program of famous names from the 1960s and 1970s performing songs based on Mao's works and reciting his poems got just a brief write-up buried in the pages of the Beijing Daily.

Only the English-language China Daily, a government paper aimed mostly at foreigners, put the anniversary on its front page, but the article relied on foreigners' comments, leaving out Chinese scholars' views of their former leader.

MIXED FEELINGS

The government's mixed assessment of Mao's legacy is echoed by many who lived through first the famine caused by his Great Leap Forward and then the decade of chaos and persecution Mao sparked in 1966 when he launched the Cultural Revolution.

"Life is better today, we have a lot more opportunities and choices. In Mao's day everything was rationed, from food to oil," said supermarket worker Zhan Jingsheng, 50, standing beneath the huge Mao portrait on the Tiananmen gate that gazes across the square to his own mausoleum.

"But we have more worries. In Mao's day the state took care of us and we couldn't be fired. We did not have a lot, but we didn't starve," Zhan said.

But for many of the younger generation, Mao's relevance as anything more than an abstract figurehead is fading.

Strolling on the vast square to enjoy a rare day of sunshine in the pollution-clogged capital, Li Xin, a 24-year-old clerk in a sports goods store, was oblivious to the day's significance.

"What is it today? Teachers' day?," he said when asked if he was outside the Mausoleum to commemorate the anniversary.

(Additional reporting by Benjamin Kang Lim and Lindsay Beck)


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: anniversary; china; mao; queue; thousands; worstmassmurderer

Thousands of visitors, including Buddhist monks, queue outside the mausoleum of the late Chairman Mao Zedong in Beijing September 9, 2006. Thousands queued at Beijing's Mao Zedong Mausoleum on the 30th anniversary of his death but Chinese state media kept coverage of the event low-key. (Claro Cortes IV/Reuters)


1 posted on 09/09/2006 10:01:12 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
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To: NormsRevenge; mikrofon; Charles Henrickson

It's a
MAOSOLEUM!


2 posted on 09/09/2006 10:11:34 PM PDT by martin_fierro (Little Dead Book)
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To: NormsRevenge
Mao killed over 50 million people and is still honored even by some in the US? Unbelievable!
3 posted on 09/09/2006 10:31:09 PM PDT by ncountylee (Dead terrorists smell like victory)
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To: ncountylee

To publicly renounce Mao is to renounce the entire Commie Revolution. They won't and can't do that and have the regime survive. So the Mao Myth persists.


4 posted on 09/09/2006 10:34:11 PM PDT by Hannibal Hamlin
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To: NormsRevenge

I've read somewhere that the Chinese completely messed up the preservation of Mao's corpse and had to call in Russian experts to do what they could. I wonder just much of Mao's face is really his and how much is wax? 70/30 perhaps?


5 posted on 09/09/2006 10:41:39 PM PDT by Nateman
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To: Nateman

Eeeewww ...


6 posted on 09/09/2006 10:43:15 PM PDT by BunnySlippers
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To: Nateman
hard to say.. fwiw, wikipedia has a bit of info, sounds like the russians provided some assistance crystal coffin-wise but it was too small for Mao, so the chinese had to make do..


7 posted on 09/09/2006 10:51:10 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ......Help the "Pendleton 8' and families -- http://www.freerepublic.com/~normsrevenge/)
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: NormsRevenge

oops


9 posted on 09/09/2006 10:51:29 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ......Help the "Pendleton 8' and families -- http://www.freerepublic.com/~normsrevenge/)
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To: NormsRevenge

RIP Mousy Dung.


10 posted on 09/10/2006 12:14:46 AM PDT by dc-zoo
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