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History, Mao Zedong - Chairman Mao Documentary

Mao Zedong - Chairman Mao Documentary

The man known to history as Mao Zedong or Chairman Mao, was born on the 26th of December

1893 in the village of Xiaoshan in the province of Hunan in southern China.

His father was Mao Yichang, who had been raised in a family of poverty-stricken peasants,

however after serving in the Xiang army for a few years in his youth, Yichang had returned

to his native region and begun working as a farmer, he soon acquired enough money to

become a lender in the district, and this, combined with his agricultural work, allowed

him to become one of the more prosperous farmers in the Xiaoshan area, eventually coming into

possession of about 20 acres of land.

Mao's mother was Wen Qimei, a devout Buddhist who had a troubled upbringing, her father

was a poor shoemaker who drank heavily and her mother had been his concubine.

Mao's childhood was less than ideal, his father was a strict disciplinarian, whose

method of parenting primarily involved beating Mao and his three siblings if they did not

do as they were told, their mother tried to temper his outbursts but with little effect,

Young Mao developed an interest in his mother's Buddhism when he was younger, though he soon

became disenchanted with religion, and when he was just eight years old, he was sent to

the local primary school in Xiaoshan, just as the twentieth century was dawning, his

education there was a mixture of traditional Chinese learning centred on Confucianism combined

with the centuries-old values of the Far East, along with a sprinkling of influences from

the encroaching Western world which could not be avoided in China by the 1900s.

Additionally, the young Mao developed an interest early on in history and politics, when he

was thirteen years old, his father arranged for him to be married to Liu Yixiu, the seventeen-year-old

daughter of another prosperous local farmer, but Mao demonstrated his rebellious streak

at a young age and refused to honour the arranged marriage, causing something of a controversy

in the Xiaoshan area, and as a result of this disagreement, the teenage Mao temporarily

left his father's farm, although he returned before very long.

Mao was growing up at a time when China was experiencing momentous change, like Korea

and Japan to the east, China had first come into contact with European traders and religious

missionaries in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, and like them, the Chinese had

quickly become wary of the newcomers and had restricted their contacts with them to

one or two ports in the south-east of the country, where a tiny amount of trade was

conducted.

It continued like this for nearly two centuries, with China remaining largely closed to a world

which was modernizing without it, it remained highly conservative in its religious, social

and political values, changing little, and continuing to be ruled by an emperor and a

closed government of imperial rituals and administrators, as it had been for centuries,

but by the mid-nineteenth century, China again, like Japan and Korea, could no longer prevent

the Europeans, with their modern warships, guns and industrial power, from interfering

in their countries, with the Opium Wars of 1839 to 1842, and 1856 to 1860, Britain forced

China to end its self-imposed isolation, following which, China experienced a flood

of European contact, and with it came not just British opium, but ideas about different

types of government, new economic developments and all manner of technological innovation.

Perhaps the most striking and revolutionary of these new ideas, which arrived into China

from the mid-nineteenth century onwards, was the knowledge that the Europeans and the Americans

were not ruled by powerful monarchs and emperors anymore, many lived under republics governed

by the people, and even where some of these countries still had emperors or empresses

such as Queen Victoria in Britain, she was essentially a figurehead, and it was Parliament

that actually ruled the British Empire, moreover, these democracies were not all alike, some

were very conservative, some were more liberal and some had different degrees of economic

development, and there were also competing ideas about how they should be reformed and

developed, with some wanting the wealthy to hold a great amount of power, and others who

believed that power and wealth should be distributed equally throughout society, and there were

more extreme ideas again, one of these, developed in particular by the German political scientist

Karl Marx in the mid-nineteenth century, argued that all wealth and goods should be held in

communal ownership, he called this communism, in early twentieth century China, these ideas

would soon lead to great change, as many began questioning why they were still ruled by the

emperor of the nearly three hundred year old Qing dynasty.

As Mao entered his teenage years, he was already reading about these political ideas, he was

particularly interested in calls for a democracy to be established in China to replace the

imperial government, and also the republican writings of Sun Yat-sen, who had become a

figurehead for the republican movement within China, he would soon see these desires confirmed,

just as Mao was starting at a new school in Changsha, the country was entering into a

period of rapid change, regional famines had struck parts of China in the late 1900s and

early 1910s, and this, combined with numerous regional uprisings throughout the country,

and growing calls for a more representative government, led to an army revolt in October

1911, at first the imperial government of Emperor Pu Yi, who was just a six-year-old

child, tried to address the grievances of the dissenters, but it soon became apparent

that a more drastic shift would be necessary, after weeks of negotiations it was determined

in February 1912, that the emperor would abdicate and a new republic of China would be established,

with the imperial officer Yuan Shikai serving as its first president of a national government,

thus an empire which had been in existence for centuries had ended, it was however, very

unclear in the mid-1910s, exactly in what direction China's politics would now head.

These were striking developments, and ones which Mao had not been entirely removed from,

when the conflict erupted late in 1911, he had enlisted in the rebel army as an 18-year-old

recruit, now in the spring of 1912, he simply returned to school, and it was around this

time that he first started reading about the idea of socialism and communism as more radical

forms of government, if he remained unconvinced that this was the best approach for China

at that time, meanwhile, his education continued, he determined at some point around 1913, that

he would become a teacher, and so he enrolled in the First Normal School of Hunan, widely

regarded at the time as the best in the province, here he became a popular and accomplished

student, reading widely, being elected secretary of the student society and eventually finishing

as one of the highest-ranked students in the school, more pivotally, in terms of his later

activities, Mao was increasingly exposed to the socialist ideas he had first encountered

a few years earlier, and over time, he began to find that he agreed more with what he read,

particularly so, as the environment of the First Normal School was one of radical political

thought, especially during China's first forays into representative government.

In 1917, Mao moved to Peking, now Beijing, where one of his main influences at this time,

Yang Changji, had taken a job at the Peking University, here Mao also took a job, as a

library assistant, but he was increasingly moving in circles of individuals who favoured

socialism and communism or Marxism as a solution to China's political woes, even with the

establishment of the Republic in 1912, the country had continued to experience turbulence

as conservative and liberal forces fought amongst each other and regional warlords and

power groups exercised quasi-regional independence throughout the country, Marxism appealed to

many at this time, because the Bolsheviks, a branch of Russian communism, had secured

control of the Russian government in the autumn of 1917, just months after the fall of the

autocratic Tsarist government there, perhaps, many thought, communism was also suitable

for China, which had just done away with its own fossilised autocratic imperial government,

Mao was increasingly leaning towards that viewpoint himself in 1918 and 1919, an outlook

which was compounded when he experienced the bourgeois hostility of the Beijing upper and

middle class towards a country boy like himself.

It was in Beijing that Mao's awakening as a political radical fully occurred, China

was drifting ever further into political anarchy in the late 1910s, as a buoyant nationalist

movement led by Sun Yat-sen sought to rejuvenate the Republic in its infancy, which the nationalists

perceived as being governed by a weak, conservative regime, with too many links to the old imperial

past, in parts of the country the government could exercise its authority, but in others

it was little more than a government in name only, this instability was augmented when

the Chinese government failed to secure the former German concession of Shandong at the

Versailles peace negotiations in Paris, following the end of the First World War, the nationalists

considered it an affront to national pride, when this piece of mainland China was instead

granted to Japan, a nation which had been exercising its strength across East Asia

since the late 19th century, when it had modernised in a far more successful manner than China,

and the Shandong controversy was a direct cause of a major student protest which occurred

in Beijing on the 4th of May 1919, this was driven by a younger generation of political

activists like Mao, who were tired of China's seeming impotence on the world stage and disordered

internal politics, the movement would continue afterwards and lead indirectly to the Chinese

civil war many years later.

The May 4th movement, the awakening of China's younger generations to radical politics, is

generally seen as the origins of the Communist Party of China, the events of 1919 led many

young Chinese people who were interested in politics to increasingly turn their backs

on the Western liberals of Britain, France and America, who had betrayed them on Shandong,

and increasingly to turn towards the Marxism and Leninism that was gradually winning the

Russian civil war and cementing its control over Russia, as we have seen, Mao was already

interested in communism by 1919, but it was only in the months following the May 4th protests

that he began to fully commit himself to it, and that summer he organised several student

organisations into an umbrella body to protest against the Japanese presence in Shandong,

this is the first clear sign of his abilities as an organiser, and his writings around this

time and into 1920 began to speak of the Army of the Red Flag and of the victories won by

the Communists in Russia, by the time that the Communist Party of China was formally

established in the summer of 1921, Mao had proclaimed himself to be a communist, believing

that the ideology would be the basis for the coming revolution in China.

It would be a slow ascent towards that revolution, however, in the meantime, Mao married again

in 1920 to Yang Kaihui, the daughter of one of his former teachers, then in July 1921,

he attended the first Congress of the Communist Party of China, a decision was taken early

on by the new party, to accept aid from Russia, but also to establish an alliance with Sun

Yat-sen's nationalist party, the Kuomintang, which would soon be led by a younger nationalist

by the name of Chiang Kai-shek, Mao was one of the first of the Chinese Communists to

also join the Nationalist Party, in the belief that the conservative Chinese political establishment

would only be overthrown if the nationalists and the communists worked in league with each

other, as such, he spent much of the 1920s living in the nationalist stronghold of Guangzhou

province and working as an organiser and propagandist for both the communists and the nationalists

simultaneously, and throughout this period, Mao was gaining a greater appreciation of

the struggles of the Chinese peasantry throughout the country and the strength in sheer numbers

which they had, if they were won over to the communist cause, as such, the early and mid-1920s

were formative, if somewhat unremarkable years in Mao's career.

This all began to change in 1926, with the death of Sun Yat-sen in 1925, Chiang Kai-shek

had taken over the leadership of the nationalists, by this time, his party, the Kuomintang, had

control over large parts of southern China, but the country was still highly fragmented,

with the conservative government of the republic holding Beijing and much of the north, and

quasi-independent Chinese warlords, who were vestiges of the imperial past, holding other

parts of the country. In 1926, Chiang determined to force the issue and launched a nationalist

military campaign to seize Beijing. The Northern Expedition, as it has become known, was a

major success, and during the course of 1926 and 1927, the nationalists seized power in

many of the major cities, but the very success of the Northern Expedition also led to civil

war. Now, the loose alliance which the Chinese communists and the nationalists had been in

since 1921, was effectively ended by Chiang Kai-shek, who had grown wary of the expanding

power of the communists and the role Russia wished to play in China. Once the conservative

regime in Beijing was done away with, the result was a split itself within the Nationalist

Party in 1927, between Chiang's right-leaning nationalists and a left-leaning faction which

wished to accommodate the communists. These events are typically seen as the beginning

of the Chinese Civil War, which would last for over 20 years. In the summer of 1927,

Chiang Kai-shek's newly ascendant Kuomintang began a crackdown on communists throughout

China. Thousands were killed, and the party was suppressed in many places. Mao's reaction

to this major setback, and the inception of civil war between the nationalists and the

communists, was to retreat with several hundred followers into the wilderness around the Jingang

Mountains on the border of Hunan province. It was the beginning of a long period of guerrilla

warfare during which the Communist Party, with tacit aid from Russia, sought to disrupt

the rule of the nationalists in anticipation of mass urban revolts by workers throughout

the country against the new government. These were often tough years for Mao. His wife and

sister were beheaded by the nationalists in 1930, though in his new life as a guerrilla

fighter in rural China, he had formed a relationship with He Zijun, whom he married soon after

Yang Kai-hui was killed. It was also around this time that he determined on a new course.

Instead of waiting for a revolt of the Chinese urban proletariat, he would attempt the same

strategy as had brought the Chinese nationalists to power, building up a territory which he

would control and expand outwards. In February 1930, Mao, who by now was one of the senior

commanders of the Chinese Communist movement, established the Southwest Jiangxi Provincial

Soviet Government in Jiangxi province, although the nationalists controlled most of the country.

For a few years here, in the early 1930s, Mao established a Chinese-Soviet state in

Jiangxi with him serving as the chairman. The Red Army had also expanded and was now

under the overall control of Zhou Enlai, with the wider Chinese Communist Party focusing

attentions on Jiangxi as a safe base for them in the early 1930s. Indeed, Mao, Enlai and

the Red Army saw off several efforts by Chiang Kai-shek to wrest control of the province

back from them in the early 1930s by encircling Jiangxi. However, this military response was

limited by the nationalists, in part because it had found itself embroiled in a conflict

on the other side of China in the early 1930s, as the Empire of Japan invaded the northeastern

Chinese provinces of Manchuria and established a puppet state called Manchukuo there. It

was just the beginning of heightened Japanese involvement in China in the 1930s, but once

the initial furore concerning Manchuria died down, Chiang set his sights on finally reclaiming

Jiangxi province from Mao and the Communists in the mid-1930s.

In September 1933, the Chinese nationalists began the fifth encirclement of Mao and the

Communists in Jiangxi province. This effectively involved an enormous siege by the nationalists

and one which would prove too large for the Red Army to repulse. By the summer of 1934,

it was clear that Mao and his followers would either have to surrender or break out of the

besieged area. They chose the latter and the resulting events have become part of Communist

Party law. In October 1934, Communist forces consisting of 86,000 troops, 15,000 personnel

and 35 women broke through nationalist enemy lines and began an epic retreat from their

encircled headquarters in southwest China. The Long March, as it became known, lasted

368 days and covered 6,000 miles. They crossed 24 rivers and 18 mountain ranges. Weapons

and supplies were borne on the backs of fighters or in horse-drawn carts, and at times the

line of marches stretched for 50 miles. Only 4,000 troops completed the journey. Enduring

starvation, aerial bombardment and almost daily skirmishes with nationalist forces,

Mao eventually halted his columns at the foot of the Great Wall of China. The Long March

is regarded as the longest continuous march in the history of warfare and marked the emergence

of Mao Zedong as the undisputed leader of the Chinese Communists.

The months after the Long March saw a curious drift in Chinese politics towards the rapprochement

between the Communists and the Nationalists. For years, the Nationalist government of Chiang

Kai-shek had been dealing with problems on multiple fronts. As well as the Communists,

there was the perhaps greater problem posed by the Empire of Japan and its ambitions to

dominate the Far East politically and militarily. This had already resulted in the invasion

of Manchuria and the establishment of the puppet state of Manchukuo in the early 1930s,

but as the years went by, it was clear that the Emperor's government in Tokyo had ambitions

for an even greater land grab in China. Accordingly, many within the Nationalist movement believed

it would be best to put aside their differences with the Communists for the foreseeable future

and form a coherent opposition to the impending Japanese attack, and for their part, Mao and

his followers were encouraged to do the same by Moscow. Thus, during the course of 1935

and 1936, Mao's Communists and Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists were once again drifting towards

an alliance of convenience. The drive towards doing so was accelerated in July 1937, when

the Japanese again invaded China and proceeded to militarily occupy many of the major cities

along its eastern coast, massacring tens of thousands of Chinese civilians in cities such

as Nanjing in the process. The Chinese Civil War now morphed into the Second Sino-Japanese

War and in turn, that would become a constituent part of the Second World War in later years.

By the end of 1937, the Communists and the Nationalists were formally allied with each

other again after Chiang Kai-shek caved in to pressure to do so from within his own ranks,

and Mao also married again around this time to Zhang Qing, an actress who would become

his fourth and final wife. As an example of his growing ruthlessness, his former wife

He Tze-chun was packed off to the Soviet Union, where she was placed in a mental asylum.

Meanwhile, the nature of the struggle against Japan, which would play out for the next several

years, was beginning to become clear. The Nationalists moved inland towards central

China as the Japanese occupied the rich cities and farmland of the coastal regions of eastern

China. Here, in the inland provinces, the Nationalists and the Communists would wage

a war of attrition with the Japanese to the east for the next few years, and these were

significant years in terms of the support Mao and the Communists enjoyed. In the course

of the late 1930s and early 1940s, Mao's Red Army ballooned in size from approximately

50,000 to nearly half a million fighters. Thus, the war with Japan was finally creating

the kind of countrywide support for the Communist Party, which Mao and the other leaders had

failed to acquire in the late 1920s and early 1930s.

Already by 1940, there were signs of Mao's Communists being able to win considerable

victories against the Japanese occupation forces. During a campaign which became known

as the Hundred Regiments Campaign, in August 1940, the 400,000-strong Red Army moved against

the Japanese in simultaneous attacks against five of the coastal provinces, attacks which

resulted in the deaths of upwards of 20,000 Japanese troops, as well as a severe disruption

to Japanese supply routes. Late 1941 and early 1942 brought setbacks,

although the Japanese made a series of sweeping conquests across the western Pacific, notably

seizing Singapore and Burma from the British and the Philippines from the United States,

following the declaration of war on the US in December, with the surprise attack on the

American Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. While these conquests initially put

the Japanese in the ascendancy in Eastern Asia, the entry of Japan into the wider Second

World War also ensured that the Nationalists and the Communists now had allies in the shape

of the British and Americans. With increased military, financial and logistical support

being received, they were able to ensure that the Japanese occupation of Eastern China was

never comfortable during the Second World War.

As the war was grinding onwards throughout the first half of the 1940s, the Chinese Communist

Party continued to grow in power and so did Mao as its leader. The nature of the war of

resistance against the Japanese favoured the Communists over the Nationalists. For starters,

the Communists were more attuned to how to wage guerrilla war, having done so for many

years against the Nationalist government in the late 1920s and early 1930s. As a consequence,

they were better prepared for doing so against the Japanese, and as they won a series of

victories against the Japanese, the Red Army became the more attractive option for Chinese

people seeking to oppose the foreign occupation. Moreover, Chiang Kai-shek's Kuomintang seemed

to many to simply be the Chinese manifestation of the right-wing movements which had brought

Japan into China to begin with, and as the Chinese Communist Party or CPC expanded in

size, Mao also consolidated his control, in 1943 he acquired the chairmanship of both

the Party Secretariat and the Politburo of the Party for the first time. It was also

during these war years that he began affirming that Chinese Communism would have a distinctly

different shape than that which had developed in Russia. Beijing would be no puppet of Moscow

in future years.

The

nature of the war against the Japanese changed from 1943 onwards as Japan suffered a series

of severe setbacks in its struggle against the United States, while its European allies,

Germany and Italy, were also fighting an increasingly doomed war against Russia, Britain and the

US. Once the allies were victorious there, all their resources would be employed against

the Empire of Japan. Consequently, in the final years of the war, thoughts once again

turned to China's politics and who would hold power once the country had been freed

from the Japanese. As early as 1940, there were serious cracks in the alliance between

Mao's Communists and Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists and by 1942, open fighting between

the two had broken out yet again as the Chinese Civil War resumed. It would fully erupt again

following the end of the Pacific War. On the 6th and 9th of August 1945, the United

States dropped two atomic bombs on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan. Simultaneously,

the Soviet Union invaded Manchuria, which Japan had occupied all the way back in 1931.

As a result, within weeks, the Empire of Japan had formally surrendered to the Allies. The

Second World War was over and the Chinese Civil War once more commenced between the

Nationalists and Mao's Communists. Mao was in a far more advantageous position in 1945

than he had been ten years earlier after the Long March. If the Long March had kept the

Chinese Communist movement alive, then the Japanese invasion of China in 1937 and the

eight years of war with Japan allowed the Communists to strengthen their position immensely

In a curious twist of history, the Japanese invasion of China indirectly led to the Communists

seizing power in the country. Early in 1946, Mao was handed an extra advantage when Stalin

handed over Manchuria to the Chinese Communist Party. Yet it would take three years of further

intense fighting between the Communists and the Nationalists before a breakthrough was

made. In September 1948, the Communists secured full control of East Central China in the

region south of Beijing with the capture of Shandong Province in the Huaihai Campaign.

Then in the winter of 1948, Mao launched the Pingjin Campaign against Chiang Kai-shek's

forces in northern China. Over a two-month campaign, over a half a million Nationalist

troops were killed, captured or wounded, and the north of the country was left in Communist

hands. With northern China largely secured by early 1949, Mao and the Red Army commanders

took the decision that spring to drive south of the Yangtze River into the heartland of

Nationalist-held territory. This was done despite the efforts of the Soviet leader Joseph

Stalin to encourage Mao to form a coalition government with the Nationalists. Stalin did

not want a rival for power amongst the Communist leaders, but he would soon have one. On the

23rd of April 1949, the Red Army seized the Nationalist capital of Nanjing. A series of

further striking gains saw Chiang Kai-shek retreat south with his remaining supporters

to Guangzhou by the autumn of 1949. Just weeks later, he and the remaining Nationalists decided

to make a strategic retreat from the Chinese mainland to the island of Formosa, more commonly

known today as Taiwan. Here the Nationalists formed a government which they proclaimed

as the continuation of the Republic of China, which had been established back in 1911. Meanwhile,

back on the mainland, Mao had proclaimed the founding of the People's Republic of

China on the 1st of October 1949. The Chinese civil war between the Communists and the Nationalists

was at an end after more than twenty years of conflict. Mao now entered office as the

first chairman of the Central People's Government. The first measure to be taken was to tidy

up the loose ends of the war. In the spring of 1950, the Red Army launched a campaign

against the island of Hainan off the southeast coast of China. Within weeks, the 100,000

strong Nationalist forces there were forced to surrender. The international community

now expected that Mao would proceed with an invasion of Taiwan, and indeed, even the American

government, a long-time supporter of Chiang Kai-shek and the Kuomintang, had decided not

to recognize his new regime in Taiwan in the belief that it would soon be defeated by Mao

and the Communists. But no invasion came, and despite numerous crises between the two

sides, Taiwan remains self-governing to this day, and this period immediately after the

conclusion of the civil war also saw Mao head to Moscow in the winter of 1949 to 1950. Here,

he secured large injections of Russian financial support for China, as well as technological

advisers, although the agreement came with a tacit admission by Mao of Stalin's primacy

within the Communist world. Mao would have to wait several years before he could attempt

to go his own way. The post-war years in China saw the initiation

of wide-ranging political, social and economic reforms. Firstly, a massive land reform campaign

was initiated to transfer agricultural land out of the hands of large-scale farmers and

landlords and into the hands of poorer peasants. While this reduced economic inequality, it

was not without violence, and there were many, many instances of the former landlords being

attacked or even murdered across China in the early 1950s. In tandem, a huge drive was

initiated to crack down on opium production and consumption across the country, a habit

which was partly a legacy of British meddling into the Chinese economy in the 19th century.

In the 1950s, millions of opium addicts and habitual users were press-ganged into labor

reform camps. They were joined in these by the hundreds of thousands of individuals who

Mao's regime branded as counter-revolutionaries, many of them being former members of the Kuomintang,

and Mao also launched the new People's Republic onto the world stage by entering into the

Korean War, which broke out in the summer of 1950 between a Communist North and an American-backed

North. Massive Chinese aid ensured that the conflict ended in a stalemate three years

later. It also led to a split of relations between Mao's new regime and the United States,

one which involved a trade embargo which lasted for over twenty years.

In the 1950s, Mao had formed a clear idea of how he believed communism should develop

in China. It would be incorrect to assume that Mao Zedong was simply a power-monger

who used Communist ideology to secure authority in China. Certainly, he was a brutal autocrat,

a fact which would become strikingly clear as his long chairmanship continued on into

the 1960s and 1970s. But he had also read widely on Marxist-Leninist thought and had

a vision for how communism would develop in China. In the early 1950s, that vision involved

the industrial capacity of China's burgeoning cities of the East Coast and its great rivers,

leading the country away from its reliance on agriculture. As Mao described it, the Communists

had come to power by the Red Army encircling the cities, occupied by the Nationalists and

the Japanese, and then absorbing the cities when they were strong enough. Now, the direct

opposite was needed. China's cities would need to expand outward and bring the country

closer to achieving communism as Marx had intended it. To that end, in 1953, the first

Five-Year Plan was initiated in China, in imitation of the Five-Year Plans which the

Soviet Union had begun employing in Russia in the 1920s. The first Five-Year Plan of

1953 to 1957 was geared primarily towards reducing the reliance of the Chinese economy

on agricultural output and moving towards becoming a global power through the creation

of an industrial economy. With Soviet financial support and expertise provided through Russian

advisers, new factories were built across the country during the plan, farms were collectivized

across China and placed under state management, and billions of yuan were spent in total on

completing 595 large and medium-sized infrastructural and economic projects, including railways,

major roads, and new dams, often linking parts of China with each other in ways which had

never been possible before. As a result, Chinese industrial productivity increased by 128 percent,

and steel production alone jumped from 1.35 million tons in 1953 to over 5 million in

1957. Coal extraction doubled during the five years, while in agriculture, yields of grain

and cotton rose by over 30 percent during the same time period. Overall, the first Five-Year

Plan under Mao was a tremendous success in pure economic terms, but in its success were

sown the seeds of destruction, for a hubris now entered into Mao and his colleagues'

thinking, a hubris which would be injected with catastrophic consequences into the second

Five-Year Plan, or as it is more commonly known, the Great Leap Forward. On the 22nd

of May 1957, the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, who had succeeded Stalin on his death in 1953,

delivered a speech at a regional meeting of Soviet representatives, in the course of

which he proclaimed that it was his goal that the Soviet Union should, "...catch up and

overtake America in economic output by 1980." A few months later, in November 1957, at a

gathering in Moscow of international communist leaders to celebrate the 40th anniversary

of the October Revolution, which had brought the Soviets to power in 1917, he repeated

his claim, only now he was even more ambitious. The Soviets would now eclipse the Americans

within 15 years. Mao, who wished for China to rival the Soviet Union, and whose relationship

with Khrushchev was more antagonistic than it had been with Stalin, began pondering this

goal in the aftermath of the Soviet leader's speech. Not to be outdone, he quickly determined

to make similar claims, and made it known that it was China's goal to catch up with

Britain's economy within 15 years, and exceed their production of steel and other

core industrial outputs. With this goal in mind, in 1958, the Chinese Communist Party

initiated the Second Five-Year Plan, or what was soon referred to as the Great Leap Forward,

for the country's economy. It would result in the most catastrophic famine the world

has ever seen. Mao believed that the key indicators of how

China's economy was progressing would be seen in grain and steel production. If these

could be increased rapidly, it would show the Soviets in Moscow, and the world in general,

that China was asserting itself on the world stage. Accordingly, all of the instruments

of the state were deployed in 1958 to begin increasing the rate of grain and steel production,

by establishing new smelting factories, and turning ever greater amounts of agricultural

land over to grain production. Massive amounts of farmland were collectivized into giant

state farms towards this end, and millions of workers were redeployed to different parts

of the economy than they were trained for. Huge amounts of state funding were also given

out to aid in the effort, and party officials were sent out into the countryside and the

towns, charged with maximizing production. However, many of these initiatives were potentially

hazardous to begin with, as the state was employing experimental farming methods, in

some instances, and in others, was turning over land to grain production, which was more

suited to other crops. In other instances, workers were being sent into steel factories

with little or no training in what they were doing. It was an inauspicious beginning in

1958, but one which would get much worse over time.

Despite these structural issues, there were some initial signs of progress. Steel and

iron production did increase in the initial stages of the Great Leap Forward, perhaps

by as much as 30 to 40 percent in 1958, but the mechanism whereby it was being increased

would prove catastrophic in some instances. In their eagerness to show good results, local

party cadres throughout the country were often resorting to unimaginably short-sighted

and brutal tactics. The more cruel methods involved overworking their laborers in the

factories to try to have larger amounts of steel produced. But within a few months, party

officials throughout the country were also setting up what became known as backyard furnaces,

the use of which Mao had actually encouraged. These were essentially makeshift steel furnaces,

which were often set up in the yards of people's homes. Scrap metal was used to produce pig

iron, which was almost totally useless. But the worst thing was that farming tools and

other instruments which were needed for producing food throughout the country were often being

thrown into these backyard furnaces and melted down so that local party officials could record

higher outputs of alleged steel production in their areas. The result was a lack of basic

tools for farming as the months went by. The effect of all this between 1958 and 1961 was

catastrophic, with millions of farmers being press-ganged into working in factories in

the cities and towns. There was not enough people available to produce food throughout

China in a country which was often on a subsistence food level anyway. Added to this was the practice

of party officials destroying basic farming equipment to inflate the amount of steel they

were producing in their areas. Furthermore, the party had begun trying to use experimental

irrigation methods, which had rendered large amounts of farmland temporarily unusable in

some areas. Given all this, it is unsurprising that even by the autumn of 1958, just months

after the Great Leap Forward had started, there were major food shortages in some parts

of the country, and this was further compounded by the fact that the government continued

to export grain and other agricultural products in order to increase its revenue and also

keep up the appearance that productivity was increasing. By late 1958, people in certain

parts of the country were beginning to start foraging for wild foods in the countryside,

and others were starving to death. This was just the beginning though, and by 1959, grain

production had fallen by roughly 15-20% in total across the country.

There is considerable debate as to how much Mao knew about what was unfolding across China

as a result of the Great Leap Forward. It is quite possible that in late 1958 and early

1959, he was unaware of the famine conditions, but evidence has been uncovered which suggests

he knew by at least the late spring of 1959, and yet did not do enough to change course.

By 1960, when he delegated control of certain parts of the Great Leap Forward program to

others, the Central Party members were actively trying to prevent the worst, but by then,

it was too late. The forces which were unleashed in 1958 and 1959 reverberated into 1960 and

1961, and famine struck China over each of these years with varying degrees of severity.

There have been many different estimates of the number of people who died in recent years,

as the opening of certain archives in China has allowed for more accurate assessments,

but scholars are generally agreed that at least 25 million people died in a country,

the population of which was approximately 660 million in 1958. Frank Dicotta, who studied

the period in detail and who saw the Great Leap Forward as Mao's Great Famine in the

title of his study of these events, suggested the death toll was as many as 55 million people,

others would suggest somewhere between 30 and 45 million, making this the most catastrophic

famine in human history in terms of sheer numbers of deaths.

The second five-year plan, advertised as the Great Leap Forward, came to an end in

1962. Curiously, it was relatively under-reported internationally, as much of the information

concerning it was transmitted through the Republic of China's government in Taiwan

or the British enclave of Hong Kong, and many foreign services believed they were exaggerating

the extent of the suffering caused for political purposes. Internally, however, it had badly

compromised Mao's leadership. On the 27th of April 1959, Mao's term as Chairman of the People's

Republic of China came to an end, although he retained his position as Chairman of the Communist

Party and of Military Affairs, he was succeeded by Liu Xiaoqi and by January 1962, the Great

Leap Forward was being wound down. At this time, Liu made a speech at what was to become known as

the 7000 Carters Conference, in which he denounced the Great Leap Forward. It was a

very thinly-veiled public rebuke of Mao, the likes of which would have been unimaginable

five years earlier. Nevertheless, while Mao had lost some of his authority for now, he

was still very much in charge. He would, however, have to govern in a more collective fashion,

with figures such as Xiaoqi and Deng Xiaoping, who had done much to recover the economic

situation in the wake of the disastrous policies of the late 1950s. The 1960s also saw China

increasingly isolated on the world stage. Tensions had been brewing between Mao and

the Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev ever since the latter succeeded Stalin in the mid-1950s.

Mao was particularly perturbed by Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalin's brutal authoritarianism

and more moderate stance towards the Western powers. He also found himself increasingly

ad-loggerheads with Moscow about the two regimes' interpretation of orthodox Marxism. Relations

were bad by the late 1950s, but they became particularly acute in the early 1960s,

especially once the Cuban Missile Crisis inspired Khrushchev to begin working more closely with the

US government of John F. Kennedy to defuse the Cold War in ways which Mao opposed. A sign of the

split was seen in 1961, when Mao denounced the Soviet regime as revisionist traitors. For his

part, Khrushchev was increasingly wary of Mao's attitude towards the possibility of a nuclear war

with the West. Mao once worryingly suggested that if 300 million Chinese people died in a nuclear

war, the other half would still be alive to secure victory, and so the Russian leader must have been

concerned in 1964 when the Chinese successfully tested their first nuclear bomb, but by then,

the Sino-Soviet split was complete. While much is known about the political life of the man who

oversaw this split with Russia and the catastrophes of the Great Leap Forward, the more private Mao

remains something of an enigma. His fourth marriage, that to Zhang Qing in 1938, lasted for

the remainder of his life. Though Mao engaged in a string of extramarital affairs, including most

controversially in his later life with a private secretary, Zhang Yufeng, who was in her early

twenties when she first entered Mao's employ. He had at least ten children, several of whom had

been born in the 1920s and with whom he had very little relationship, as he had had to leave them

with others during the long civil war years. He spent much of his private time writing and was a

prolific composer of political writings and poems, while his reading habits tended to favour traditional

Chinese literature. By temperament, he would become aggressive when challenged, but his demeanour was

certainly not genuinely unhinged like Stalin had been in Russia during the 1930s and 1940s.

For Mao, state violence was engaged in for political rather than personal purposes, but a

great deal about his other personal motivations and inclinations are shrouded behind a public image

which was closely managed during his lifetime. The Sino-Soviet split and the catastrophic

consequences of the Great Leap Forward were the background against which Mao initiated what has

today become known as simply the Cultural Revolution, but the full name of which was the

Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. Launched in 1966, the Cultural Revolution was designed to be

a political and social movement which aimed to purify Chinese society and Chinese communism

by removing any of the vestiges of Chinese traditionalism which remained and the capitalist

bourgeois elements within it. Mao claimed that a bourgeois bureaucracy had developed within the

Chinese Communist Party that was leading China in the wrong direction and this, along with communist

revisionists such as those who were now in power in Russia, needed to be stopped and a renewed

dedication to the communist cause developed. In particular, Mao called on the younger generations

of China, those which had been born after the Second World War and who had never known life in

China before communist rule, to bombard the headquarters to purify Chinese society of these

bourgeois capitalist elements and to reinvigorate the communist movement. There has been a widespread

debate as to what Mao's motivations for launching the Cultural Revolution were. Some historians have

argued that he genuinely believed that the Chinese Communist Party and the huge administration which

operated under it throughout China had been compromised by nearly twenty years in power

and that a cultural reawakening was necessary to stop the bureaucratic degeneration of the country.

However, while this might have been a motivating factor for Mao, there is no doubt that the Cultural

Revolution was primarily conceived as a way for the chairman to resuscitate his control

over the Communist Party and the country as a whole. By its very nature, the movement allowed

Mao to use the party's apparatus and wider organs of the state to purge the government of his

opponents and competing factions. These had multiplied in number in the early 1960s as the

catastrophic impact of the Great Leap Forward was felt across the country. Now, Mao would eliminate

those who had dared to cross him in the most brutal purges seen within the Chinese Communist Party.

The result would be years of unrest which turned ordinary Chinese people against each other

and created an environment of fear and suspicion. The Cultural Revolution was initiated in May 1966,

with Mao urging the people and students in particular to act to purify the party ranks.

Within weeks, gangs of students were attacking their teachers, intellectuals, government officials,

and even people who were deemed to be wearing bourgeois clothing. These attacks could range from

being mild to moderately violent, such as when teachers were attacked by gangs of students and

had their heads shaved, to truly bloody acts, such as when government officials were actually murdered

or driven to commit suicide. As the frenzy built up in the summer of 1966, official party newspapers

stoked the flames by calling on the masses to clear away the evil habits of the old society

and attack the monsters and demons. By now, students in classrooms and on college campuses

across China were organizing themselves into bands of so-called Red Guards, committed to preserving

the Communist Revolution and rooting out what were termed the Four Olds, old ideas, old customs,

old habits, and old culture. By the early autumn, gangs of teenagers wearing red armbands roamed the

streets of cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, and the unrest was so visceral that August became

known as Red August. Soon, the initial student-led violence spread to other groups and factory

workers and laborers on collectivized farms began joining what was termed the Red Terror.

Meanwhile, Mao was directing these groups as best they could be directed, against his enemies within

the government and the wider party apparatus. But as a means of purging the party of his opponents,

this was a very unstable method. By 1967, radical elements were threatening to move beyond Mao's

ability to control them, but the Cultural Revolution nevertheless continued. In 1968,

Mao initiated the Down to the Countryside, whereby the children of supposed middle-class bourgeois

urban families were forced into what were effectively re-education camps in the countryside.

Meanwhile, the chairman was building up an ever-greater cult of personality around himself,

in part led by the publication of his Little Red Book, a collection of his sayings and writings

which became central to the concept of Maoism in China around this time. The violence continued

unabated through the late 1960s, but by 1971, even Mao was aware of the need to scale things back,

and though the Cultural Revolution is deemed by some to have only ended with Mao's death in 1976,

the worst of the unrest subsided in the early 1970s. As with the enormous famine created by

the Great Leap Forward ten years earlier, historians have found it difficult to precisely

identify how many people died as a result of the Cultural Revolution. Estimates tend to vary between

500,000 and 2 million people having lost their lives as a result of the violence which swept

through China between 1966 and 1971. Many of these were killed by the Red Guards and other groups,

triggered into fanaticism by Mao's injunctions, however probably the greater proportion of these

lost their lives in instances where the army was called in to quell the unrest or by the army and

the Communist Party being directed to purge certain groups by Mao himself. Just as damaging

was the psychological pain inflicted on a society where people were effectively turned against each

other by the state. Perhaps the most glaring example of this occurred in Guangxi Province

in the south of the country, where between 100,000 and 150,000 lives were lost during the Cultural

Revolution. People here even resorted to burying the persecuted alive or boiling or disemboweling

them and there was systematic cannibalism engaged in in Guangxi as the frenzied masses sought to

literally devour their enemies in their fervor. Ultimately, the Cultural Revolution scarred Chinese

society in ways which are hard to quantify. The early 1970s witnessed a major event in China's

relations on the international stage which has had important implications down to the present day.

Chinese involvement in the Korean War had seen diplomatic ties between the People's Republic

and the United States government effectively shut down with trade sanctions imposed on China

by Washington. However, with the passage of 20 years, both sides were cautiously investigating

the possibility of re-establishing diplomatic ties. During the course of the 1968 US presidential

election, the Republican candidate Richard Nixon had proposed making overtures to China to that

effect and after he entered office, negotiations commenced. In 1971, Nixon's National Security

Advisor Henry Kissinger went on a secret diplomatic mission to Beijing and this was followed in

February 1972 by an official state visit in China by Nixon during the course of which he met Mao.

The first meeting between a Chinese and American head of state since the Second World War which has

grown ever greater in importance since and which is now regarded by many as the most significant

international relationship between two states in the world. Despite the veneer of normality which

was lent to US-Chinese relations by the official state visit of Nixon in 1972, at home the Chinese

government continued to operate in an extreme fashion. By the time Nixon visited, Mao was nearly

80 years of age and owing to years of chain smoking, he was suffering from numerous physical

ailments. It was due to this and the cult of personality which he had built up around himself

that he allowed a number of senior Communist Party members to become immensely influential

in China in his final years. These were known as the Gang of Four which consisted of Mao's wife

Jiang Qing, Jiang Qiongqiao, an ultra-Maoist writer who had come to prominence during the 1960s for

his denunciation of bourgeois elements within Chinese society, a close ally of Chun Qiao's,

Yao Wenyuan and Wang Hongwen, a younger political figure who had risen from within the Shanghai

branch of the Chinese Communist Party to become one of its highest-ranking figures during the

Cultural Revolution. The Gang of Four had done much to promote the worst excesses of the Cultural

Revolution between 1966 and 1971, but even after the most extreme period of the purges ended in

the late 1960s, their influence over Mao's government continued. The last years of Mao's

life and his primacy in the politics of China are hard to characterize, as competing forces were at

work in the halls of power in Beijing. Certainly, Mao remained wedded to the idea of clinging to

power until the very end. As a result, he continued to allow the Gang of Four and their supporters

to hold considerable influence in the country. However, separately, there was a growing clique

of individuals who coalesced around other older stalwarts of the Party, such as the former head

of the Red Army and Premier Zhou Enlai, and the former General Secretary of the Party Dong Xiaoping.

They wished to break from some of the more traditional ideological values of the Party,

espoused by Mao, and introduce a greater degree of professionalism into the running of the government

and the economy. There was also much bitterness within the Party establishment at the damage

wrought by the Cultural Revolution, as individuals who had fought the Japanese and the Nationalists

in the 1930s and 1940s had often been purged from the Party in the late 1960s, only to be

gradually rehabilitated in the 1970s. Acrimony between all these groups characterised the

politics of China in the final years of Mao's life, and it was he himself who was largely

responsible for creating this situation. The political uncertainty of the post-Cultural

Revolution period was still unresolved as Mao entered the final stages of his life.

His health had further deteriorated in the mid-1970s, and he was suffering from several

heart and lung ailments, the latter aggravated considerably by his chain smoking, while there

were unconfirmed rumours of a considerable reliance on sleeping pills which had developed

over the years. On the 27th of May 1976, he met the Prime Minister of Pakistan, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto,

on a state visit, at which the last known photo of Mao was taken, but by then he had already

suffered the first of several heart attacks that occurred between the spring and autumn of 1976,

and which left him increasingly incapacitated. The final one on the 5th of September left him

largely unable to move, and he died four days later. A state funeral lasting a week followed,

between the 11th and the 18th of September 1976, during which one million Chinese people

filed past his body. Today, the enormous mausoleum of Mao Zedong housing his embalmed body,

stands in the middle of Tiananmen Square in central Beijing, on the site where the Gate of

China, the southern gate of the old imperial city between the 14th and the 20th centuries,

used to stand, before its destruction in 1954. It is perhaps fitting as a statement of where

ancient China ended and modern China began. Mao's death occurred at a time when the older

leadership of the entire Chinese Communist Party, the generation who had come to political

consciousness during the May 4th movement all the way back in 1919, was fading from Chinese life,

the old leader of the Red Army, and a possible successor to Mao, Zhou Enlai, had pre-deceased

Mao by just a few months. Consequently, Mao had appointed the Minister for Public Security,

Hua Guofeng, as his successor, shortly before his death. He succeeded as chairman of the Chinese

Communist Party in 1976, but he would not last long. Guofeng was outmaneuvered in the years that

followed by Deng Xiaoping, who became the de facto leader of China in 1978. Though Guofeng's brief

period as leader was significant in arresting and charging the Gang of Four as being responsible for

the excesses of the Cultural Revolution, in all but one instance, they subsequently were sentenced

to life in prison under Deng Xiaoping's leadership. Elsewhere, despite his impeccable communist

credentials, Deng Xiaoping quickly moved China away from its planned economy and the more

authoritarian aspects of Mao's reign, setting term limits on the holding of office. It was during

Deng's tenure as Mao's successor that the roots of China's economic miracle can really be found,

as he opened the country up to foreign investment and expertise. Thus, in the end, Mao proved to be

the impediment to China's growth, rather than the deliverer of it. Mao Zedong is one of the most

contentious individuals in Chinese history, and indeed the history of the modern world, to some

he was a brutal tyrant and a mass murderer, under whose rule, between 1949 and 1946, over 50 million

people and perhaps as many as 80 million died prematurely, whether as a result of the catastrophic

failures of the Great Leap Forward, the waves of violence unleashed during the Cultural Revolution,

or government-orchestrated disasters such as the Banqiao Dam failure of 1975, which by some estimates

resulted in the deaths of over 200,000 people. However, to many others, he is one of the great

heroes of modern-day China, the man who ensured that the cause of Chinese communism survived

during the Long March of the 1930s, the commander who led Chinese resistance to the Japanese

occupation during the Second World War, and the individual who thereafter led the Red Army to

victory over the Nationalists. Many who focus on his achievements will also point towards the fact

that life expectancy rates and living standards in China increased dramatically between the 1940s

and the 1970s, and argue that Mao laid the basis for China's economic miracle, which began in the

late 20th century. It is indeed striking that one individual can provoke such widely diverging

opinions. There is no doubting Mao's critical role in ensuring the ascent to power of the Communist

Party in China. Without Mao, the movement might not have survived the 1930s, and his leadership

was also critical in the post-war period, but once he secured power, this individual, who was clearly

possessed of a considerable intellect and ability, became obsessed with retaining and expanding his

control of China, at the expense of lives and social stability. It was his desire to not play

second fiddle to Khrushchev and the Russians, which drove China into the disastrous Great Leap

Forward, and his unwillingness to accept how badly things had gone wrong, which saw the famine which

the second Five-Year Plan created, drag on for years and kill somewhere between 30 and 50 million

Chinese people. It was Mao's pathological desire to reinforce his position as head of the Chinese

state in the mid-1960s, which led to the violence and instability of the Cultural Revolution. The

Mao of the 1950s and 1960s was a different one to the individual who first joined the party in 1921

and initiated the Long March in 1934. Those who knew him over the course of his life often confirmed

that he changed considerably over the years. What do you think of Mao Zedong? Do you think

he was actually committed to the idea of communism? Please let us know in the comment section,

and in the meantime, thank you very much for watching.

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Mao Zedong - Chairman Mao Documentary Mao Zedong - Documental sobre el Presidente Mao Mao Zedong - Documentário sobre o Presidente Mao Мао Цзэдун - председатель Мао Документальный фильм

The man known to history as Mao Zedong or Chairman Mao, was born on the 26th of December

1893 in the village of Xiaoshan in the province of Hunan in southern China.

His father was Mao Yichang, who had been raised in a family of poverty-stricken peasants,

however after serving in the Xiang army for a few years in his youth, Yichang had returned

to his native region and begun working as a farmer, he soon acquired enough money to

become a lender in the district, and this, combined with his agricultural work, allowed

him to become one of the more prosperous farmers in the Xiaoshan area, eventually coming into

possession of about 20 acres of land.

Mao's mother was Wen Qimei, a devout Buddhist who had a troubled upbringing, her father

was a poor shoemaker who drank heavily and her mother had been his concubine.

Mao's childhood was less than ideal, his father was a strict disciplinarian, whose

method of parenting primarily involved beating Mao and his three siblings if they did not

do as they were told, their mother tried to temper his outbursts but with little effect,

Young Mao developed an interest in his mother's Buddhism when he was younger, though he soon

became disenchanted with religion, and when he was just eight years old, he was sent to

the local primary school in Xiaoshan, just as the twentieth century was dawning, his

education there was a mixture of traditional Chinese learning centred on Confucianism combined

with the centuries-old values of the Far East, along with a sprinkling of influences from

the encroaching Western world which could not be avoided in China by the 1900s.

Additionally, the young Mao developed an interest early on in history and politics, when he

was thirteen years old, his father arranged for him to be married to Liu Yixiu, the seventeen-year-old

daughter of another prosperous local farmer, but Mao demonstrated his rebellious streak

at a young age and refused to honour the arranged marriage, causing something of a controversy

in the Xiaoshan area, and as a result of this disagreement, the teenage Mao temporarily

left his father's farm, although he returned before very long.

Mao was growing up at a time when China was experiencing momentous change, like Korea

and Japan to the east, China had first come into contact with European traders and religious

missionaries in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, and like them, the Chinese had

quickly become wary of the newcomers and had restricted their contacts with them to

one or two ports in the south-east of the country, where a tiny amount of trade was

conducted.

It continued like this for nearly two centuries, with China remaining largely closed to a world

which was modernizing without it, it remained highly conservative in its religious, social

and political values, changing little, and continuing to be ruled by an emperor and a

closed government of imperial rituals and administrators, as it had been for centuries,

but by the mid-nineteenth century, China again, like Japan and Korea, could no longer prevent

the Europeans, with their modern warships, guns and industrial power, from interfering

in their countries, with the Opium Wars of 1839 to 1842, and 1856 to 1860, Britain forced

China to end its self-imposed isolation, following which, China experienced a flood

of European contact, and with it came not just British opium, but ideas about different

types of government, new economic developments and all manner of technological innovation.

Perhaps the most striking and revolutionary of these new ideas, which arrived into China

from the mid-nineteenth century onwards, was the knowledge that the Europeans and the Americans

were not ruled by powerful monarchs and emperors anymore, many lived under republics governed

by the people, and even where some of these countries still had emperors or empresses

such as Queen Victoria in Britain, she was essentially a figurehead, and it was Parliament

that actually ruled the British Empire, moreover, these democracies were not all alike, some

were very conservative, some were more liberal and some had different degrees of economic

development, and there were also competing ideas about how they should be reformed and

developed, with some wanting the wealthy to hold a great amount of power, and others who

believed that power and wealth should be distributed equally throughout society, and there were

more extreme ideas again, one of these, developed in particular by the German political scientist

Karl Marx in the mid-nineteenth century, argued that all wealth and goods should be held in

communal ownership, he called this communism, in early twentieth century China, these ideas

would soon lead to great change, as many began questioning why they were still ruled by the

emperor of the nearly three hundred year old Qing dynasty.

As Mao entered his teenage years, he was already reading about these political ideas, he was

particularly interested in calls for a democracy to be established in China to replace the

imperial government, and also the republican writings of Sun Yat-sen, who had become a

figurehead for the republican movement within China, he would soon see these desires confirmed,

just as Mao was starting at a new school in Changsha, the country was entering into a

period of rapid change, regional famines had struck parts of China in the late 1900s and

early 1910s, and this, combined with numerous regional uprisings throughout the country,

and growing calls for a more representative government, led to an army revolt in October

1911, at first the imperial government of Emperor Pu Yi, who was just a six-year-old

child, tried to address the grievances of the dissenters, but it soon became apparent

that a more drastic shift would be necessary, after weeks of negotiations it was determined

in February 1912, that the emperor would abdicate and a new republic of China would be established,

with the imperial officer Yuan Shikai serving as its first president of a national government,

thus an empire which had been in existence for centuries had ended, it was however, very

unclear in the mid-1910s, exactly in what direction China's politics would now head.

These were striking developments, and ones which Mao had not been entirely removed from,

when the conflict erupted late in 1911, he had enlisted in the rebel army as an 18-year-old

recruit, now in the spring of 1912, he simply returned to school, and it was around this

time that he first started reading about the idea of socialism and communism as more radical

forms of government, if he remained unconvinced that this was the best approach for China

at that time, meanwhile, his education continued, he determined at some point around 1913, that

he would become a teacher, and so he enrolled in the First Normal School of Hunan, widely

regarded at the time as the best in the province, here he became a popular and accomplished

student, reading widely, being elected secretary of the student society and eventually finishing

as one of the highest-ranked students in the school, more pivotally, in terms of his later

activities, Mao was increasingly exposed to the socialist ideas he had first encountered

a few years earlier, and over time, he began to find that he agreed more with what he read,

particularly so, as the environment of the First Normal School was one of radical political

thought, especially during China's first forays into representative government.

In 1917, Mao moved to Peking, now Beijing, where one of his main influences at this time,

Yang Changji, had taken a job at the Peking University, here Mao also took a job, as a

library assistant, but he was increasingly moving in circles of individuals who favoured

socialism and communism or Marxism as a solution to China's political woes, even with the

establishment of the Republic in 1912, the country had continued to experience turbulence

as conservative and liberal forces fought amongst each other and regional warlords and

power groups exercised quasi-regional independence throughout the country, Marxism appealed to

many at this time, because the Bolsheviks, a branch of Russian communism, had secured

control of the Russian government in the autumn of 1917, just months after the fall of the

autocratic Tsarist government there, perhaps, many thought, communism was also suitable

for China, which had just done away with its own fossilised autocratic imperial government,

Mao was increasingly leaning towards that viewpoint himself in 1918 and 1919, an outlook

which was compounded when he experienced the bourgeois hostility of the Beijing upper and

middle class towards a country boy like himself.

It was in Beijing that Mao's awakening as a political radical fully occurred, China

was drifting ever further into political anarchy in the late 1910s, as a buoyant nationalist

movement led by Sun Yat-sen sought to rejuvenate the Republic in its infancy, which the nationalists

perceived as being governed by a weak, conservative regime, with too many links to the old imperial

past, in parts of the country the government could exercise its authority, but in others

it was little more than a government in name only, this instability was augmented when

the Chinese government failed to secure the former German concession of Shandong at the

Versailles peace negotiations in Paris, following the end of the First World War, the nationalists

considered it an affront to national pride, when this piece of mainland China was instead

granted to Japan, a nation which had been exercising its strength across East Asia

since the late 19th century, when it had modernised in a far more successful manner than China,

and the Shandong controversy was a direct cause of a major student protest which occurred

in Beijing on the 4th of May 1919, this was driven by a younger generation of political

activists like Mao, who were tired of China's seeming impotence on the world stage and disordered

internal politics, the movement would continue afterwards and lead indirectly to the Chinese

civil war many years later.

The May 4th movement, the awakening of China's younger generations to radical politics, is

generally seen as the origins of the Communist Party of China, the events of 1919 led many

young Chinese people who were interested in politics to increasingly turn their backs

on the Western liberals of Britain, France and America, who had betrayed them on Shandong,

and increasingly to turn towards the Marxism and Leninism that was gradually winning the

Russian civil war and cementing its control over Russia, as we have seen, Mao was already

interested in communism by 1919, but it was only in the months following the May 4th protests

that he began to fully commit himself to it, and that summer he organised several student

organisations into an umbrella body to protest against the Japanese presence in Shandong,

this is the first clear sign of his abilities as an organiser, and his writings around this

time and into 1920 began to speak of the Army of the Red Flag and of the victories won by

the Communists in Russia, by the time that the Communist Party of China was formally

established in the summer of 1921, Mao had proclaimed himself to be a communist, believing

that the ideology would be the basis for the coming revolution in China.

It would be a slow ascent towards that revolution, however, in the meantime, Mao married again

in 1920 to Yang Kaihui, the daughter of one of his former teachers, then in July 1921,

he attended the first Congress of the Communist Party of China, a decision was taken early

on by the new party, to accept aid from Russia, but also to establish an alliance with Sun

Yat-sen's nationalist party, the Kuomintang, which would soon be led by a younger nationalist

by the name of Chiang Kai-shek, Mao was one of the first of the Chinese Communists to

also join the Nationalist Party, in the belief that the conservative Chinese political establishment

would only be overthrown if the nationalists and the communists worked in league with each

other, as such, he spent much of the 1920s living in the nationalist stronghold of Guangzhou

province and working as an organiser and propagandist for both the communists and the nationalists

simultaneously, and throughout this period, Mao was gaining a greater appreciation of

the struggles of the Chinese peasantry throughout the country and the strength in sheer numbers

which they had, if they were won over to the communist cause, as such, the early and mid-1920s

were formative, if somewhat unremarkable years in Mao's career.

This all began to change in 1926, with the death of Sun Yat-sen in 1925, Chiang Kai-shek

had taken over the leadership of the nationalists, by this time, his party, the Kuomintang, had

control over large parts of southern China, but the country was still highly fragmented,

with the conservative government of the republic holding Beijing and much of the north, and

quasi-independent Chinese warlords, who were vestiges of the imperial past, holding other

parts of the country. In 1926, Chiang determined to force the issue and launched a nationalist

military campaign to seize Beijing. The Northern Expedition, as it has become known, was a

major success, and during the course of 1926 and 1927, the nationalists seized power in

many of the major cities, but the very success of the Northern Expedition also led to civil

war. Now, the loose alliance which the Chinese communists and the nationalists had been in

since 1921, was effectively ended by Chiang Kai-shek, who had grown wary of the expanding

power of the communists and the role Russia wished to play in China. Once the conservative

regime in Beijing was done away with, the result was a split itself within the Nationalist

Party in 1927, between Chiang's right-leaning nationalists and a left-leaning faction which

wished to accommodate the communists. These events are typically seen as the beginning

of the Chinese Civil War, which would last for over 20 years. In the summer of 1927,

Chiang Kai-shek's newly ascendant Kuomintang began a crackdown on communists throughout

China. Thousands were killed, and the party was suppressed in many places. Mao's reaction

to this major setback, and the inception of civil war between the nationalists and the

communists, was to retreat with several hundred followers into the wilderness around the Jingang

Mountains on the border of Hunan province. It was the beginning of a long period of guerrilla

warfare during which the Communist Party, with tacit aid from Russia, sought to disrupt

the rule of the nationalists in anticipation of mass urban revolts by workers throughout

the country against the new government. These were often tough years for Mao. His wife and

sister were beheaded by the nationalists in 1930, though in his new life as a guerrilla

fighter in rural China, he had formed a relationship with He Zijun, whom he married soon after

Yang Kai-hui was killed. It was also around this time that he determined on a new course.

Instead of waiting for a revolt of the Chinese urban proletariat, he would attempt the same

strategy as had brought the Chinese nationalists to power, building up a territory which he

would control and expand outwards. In February 1930, Mao, who by now was one of the senior

commanders of the Chinese Communist movement, established the Southwest Jiangxi Provincial

Soviet Government in Jiangxi province, although the nationalists controlled most of the country.

For a few years here, in the early 1930s, Mao established a Chinese-Soviet state in

Jiangxi with him serving as the chairman. The Red Army had also expanded and was now

under the overall control of Zhou Enlai, with the wider Chinese Communist Party focusing

attentions on Jiangxi as a safe base for them in the early 1930s. Indeed, Mao, Enlai and

the Red Army saw off several efforts by Chiang Kai-shek to wrest control of the province

back from them in the early 1930s by encircling Jiangxi. However, this military response was

limited by the nationalists, in part because it had found itself embroiled in a conflict

on the other side of China in the early 1930s, as the Empire of Japan invaded the northeastern

Chinese provinces of Manchuria and established a puppet state called Manchukuo there. It

was just the beginning of heightened Japanese involvement in China in the 1930s, but once

the initial furore concerning Manchuria died down, Chiang set his sights on finally reclaiming

Jiangxi province from Mao and the Communists in the mid-1930s.

In September 1933, the Chinese nationalists began the fifth encirclement of Mao and the

Communists in Jiangxi province. This effectively involved an enormous siege by the nationalists

and one which would prove too large for the Red Army to repulse. By the summer of 1934,

it was clear that Mao and his followers would either have to surrender or break out of the

besieged area. They chose the latter and the resulting events have become part of Communist

Party law. In October 1934, Communist forces consisting of 86,000 troops, 15,000 personnel

and 35 women broke through nationalist enemy lines and began an epic retreat from their

encircled headquarters in southwest China. The Long March, as it became known, lasted

368 days and covered 6,000 miles. They crossed 24 rivers and 18 mountain ranges. Weapons

and supplies were borne on the backs of fighters or in horse-drawn carts, and at times the

line of marches stretched for 50 miles. Only 4,000 troops completed the journey. Enduring

starvation, aerial bombardment and almost daily skirmishes with nationalist forces,

Mao eventually halted his columns at the foot of the Great Wall of China. The Long March

is regarded as the longest continuous march in the history of warfare and marked the emergence

of Mao Zedong as the undisputed leader of the Chinese Communists.

The months after the Long March saw a curious drift in Chinese politics towards the rapprochement

between the Communists and the Nationalists. For years, the Nationalist government of Chiang

Kai-shek had been dealing with problems on multiple fronts. As well as the Communists,

there was the perhaps greater problem posed by the Empire of Japan and its ambitions to

dominate the Far East politically and militarily. This had already resulted in the invasion

of Manchuria and the establishment of the puppet state of Manchukuo in the early 1930s,

but as the years went by, it was clear that the Emperor's government in Tokyo had ambitions

for an even greater land grab in China. Accordingly, many within the Nationalist movement believed

it would be best to put aside their differences with the Communists for the foreseeable future

and form a coherent opposition to the impending Japanese attack, and for their part, Mao and

his followers were encouraged to do the same by Moscow. Thus, during the course of 1935

and 1936, Mao's Communists and Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists were once again drifting towards

an alliance of convenience. The drive towards doing so was accelerated in July 1937, when

the Japanese again invaded China and proceeded to militarily occupy many of the major cities

along its eastern coast, massacring tens of thousands of Chinese civilians in cities such

as Nanjing in the process. The Chinese Civil War now morphed into the Second Sino-Japanese

War and in turn, that would become a constituent part of the Second World War in later years.

By the end of 1937, the Communists and the Nationalists were formally allied with each

other again after Chiang Kai-shek caved in to pressure to do so from within his own ranks,

and Mao also married again around this time to Zhang Qing, an actress who would become

his fourth and final wife. As an example of his growing ruthlessness, his former wife

He Tze-chun was packed off to the Soviet Union, where she was placed in a mental asylum.

Meanwhile, the nature of the struggle against Japan, which would play out for the next several

years, was beginning to become clear. The Nationalists moved inland towards central

China as the Japanese occupied the rich cities and farmland of the coastal regions of eastern

China. Here, in the inland provinces, the Nationalists and the Communists would wage

a war of attrition with the Japanese to the east for the next few years, and these were

significant years in terms of the support Mao and the Communists enjoyed. In the course

of the late 1930s and early 1940s, Mao's Red Army ballooned in size from approximately

50,000 to nearly half a million fighters. Thus, the war with Japan was finally creating

the kind of countrywide support for the Communist Party, which Mao and the other leaders had

failed to acquire in the late 1920s and early 1930s.

Already by 1940, there were signs of Mao's Communists being able to win considerable

victories against the Japanese occupation forces. During a campaign which became known

as the Hundred Regiments Campaign, in August 1940, the 400,000-strong Red Army moved against

the Japanese in simultaneous attacks against five of the coastal provinces, attacks which

resulted in the deaths of upwards of 20,000 Japanese troops, as well as a severe disruption

to Japanese supply routes. Late 1941 and early 1942 brought setbacks,

although the Japanese made a series of sweeping conquests across the western Pacific, notably

seizing Singapore and Burma from the British and the Philippines from the United States,

following the declaration of war on the US in December, with the surprise attack on the

American Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. While these conquests initially put

the Japanese in the ascendancy in Eastern Asia, the entry of Japan into the wider Second

World War also ensured that the Nationalists and the Communists now had allies in the shape

of the British and Americans. With increased military, financial and logistical support

being received, they were able to ensure that the Japanese occupation of Eastern China was

never comfortable during the Second World War.

As the war was grinding onwards throughout the first half of the 1940s, the Chinese Communist

Party continued to grow in power and so did Mao as its leader. The nature of the war of

resistance against the Japanese favoured the Communists over the Nationalists. For starters,

the Communists were more attuned to how to wage guerrilla war, having done so for many

years against the Nationalist government in the late 1920s and early 1930s. As a consequence,

they were better prepared for doing so against the Japanese, and as they won a series of

victories against the Japanese, the Red Army became the more attractive option for Chinese

people seeking to oppose the foreign occupation. Moreover, Chiang Kai-shek's Kuomintang seemed

to many to simply be the Chinese manifestation of the right-wing movements which had brought

Japan into China to begin with, and as the Chinese Communist Party or CPC expanded in

size, Mao also consolidated his control, in 1943 he acquired the chairmanship of both

the Party Secretariat and the Politburo of the Party for the first time. It was also

during these war years that he began affirming that Chinese Communism would have a distinctly

different shape than that which had developed in Russia. Beijing would be no puppet of Moscow

in future years.

The

nature of the war against the Japanese changed from 1943 onwards as Japan suffered a series

of severe setbacks in its struggle against the United States, while its European allies,

Germany and Italy, were also fighting an increasingly doomed war against Russia, Britain and the

US. Once the allies were victorious there, all their resources would be employed against

the Empire of Japan. Consequently, in the final years of the war, thoughts once again

turned to China's politics and who would hold power once the country had been freed

from the Japanese. As early as 1940, there were serious cracks in the alliance between

Mao's Communists and Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists and by 1942, open fighting between

the two had broken out yet again as the Chinese Civil War resumed. It would fully erupt again

following the end of the Pacific War. On the 6th and 9th of August 1945, the United

States dropped two atomic bombs on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan. Simultaneously,

the Soviet Union invaded Manchuria, which Japan had occupied all the way back in 1931.

As a result, within weeks, the Empire of Japan had formally surrendered to the Allies. The

Second World War was over and the Chinese Civil War once more commenced between the

Nationalists and Mao's Communists. Mao was in a far more advantageous position in 1945

than he had been ten years earlier after the Long March. If the Long March had kept the

Chinese Communist movement alive, then the Japanese invasion of China in 1937 and the

eight years of war with Japan allowed the Communists to strengthen their position immensely

In a curious twist of history, the Japanese invasion of China indirectly led to the Communists

seizing power in the country. Early in 1946, Mao was handed an extra advantage when Stalin

handed over Manchuria to the Chinese Communist Party. Yet it would take three years of further

intense fighting between the Communists and the Nationalists before a breakthrough was

made. In September 1948, the Communists secured full control of East Central China in the

region south of Beijing with the capture of Shandong Province in the Huaihai Campaign.

Then in the winter of 1948, Mao launched the Pingjin Campaign against Chiang Kai-shek's

forces in northern China. Over a two-month campaign, over a half a million Nationalist

troops were killed, captured or wounded, and the north of the country was left in Communist

hands. With northern China largely secured by early 1949, Mao and the Red Army commanders

took the decision that spring to drive south of the Yangtze River into the heartland of

Nationalist-held territory. This was done despite the efforts of the Soviet leader Joseph

Stalin to encourage Mao to form a coalition government with the Nationalists. Stalin did

not want a rival for power amongst the Communist leaders, but he would soon have one. On the

23rd of April 1949, the Red Army seized the Nationalist capital of Nanjing. A series of

further striking gains saw Chiang Kai-shek retreat south with his remaining supporters

to Guangzhou by the autumn of 1949. Just weeks later, he and the remaining Nationalists decided

to make a strategic retreat from the Chinese mainland to the island of Formosa, more commonly

known today as Taiwan. Here the Nationalists formed a government which they proclaimed

as the continuation of the Republic of China, which had been established back in 1911. Meanwhile,

back on the mainland, Mao had proclaimed the founding of the People's Republic of

China on the 1st of October 1949. The Chinese civil war between the Communists and the Nationalists

was at an end after more than twenty years of conflict. Mao now entered office as the

first chairman of the Central People's Government. The first measure to be taken was to tidy

up the loose ends of the war. In the spring of 1950, the Red Army launched a campaign

against the island of Hainan off the southeast coast of China. Within weeks, the 100,000

strong Nationalist forces there were forced to surrender. The international community

now expected that Mao would proceed with an invasion of Taiwan, and indeed, even the American

government, a long-time supporter of Chiang Kai-shek and the Kuomintang, had decided not

to recognize his new regime in Taiwan in the belief that it would soon be defeated by Mao

and the Communists. But no invasion came, and despite numerous crises between the two

sides, Taiwan remains self-governing to this day, and this period immediately after the

conclusion of the civil war also saw Mao head to Moscow in the winter of 1949 to 1950. Here,

he secured large injections of Russian financial support for China, as well as technological

advisers, although the agreement came with a tacit admission by Mao of Stalin's primacy

within the Communist world. Mao would have to wait several years before he could attempt

to go his own way. The post-war years in China saw the initiation

of wide-ranging political, social and economic reforms. Firstly, a massive land reform campaign

was initiated to transfer agricultural land out of the hands of large-scale farmers and

landlords and into the hands of poorer peasants. While this reduced economic inequality, it

was not without violence, and there were many, many instances of the former landlords being

attacked or even murdered across China in the early 1950s. In tandem, a huge drive was

initiated to crack down on opium production and consumption across the country, a habit

which was partly a legacy of British meddling into the Chinese economy in the 19th century.

In the 1950s, millions of opium addicts and habitual users were press-ganged into labor

reform camps. They were joined in these by the hundreds of thousands of individuals who

Mao's regime branded as counter-revolutionaries, many of them being former members of the Kuomintang,

and Mao also launched the new People's Republic onto the world stage by entering into the

Korean War, which broke out in the summer of 1950 between a Communist North and an American-backed

North. Massive Chinese aid ensured that the conflict ended in a stalemate three years

later. It also led to a split of relations between Mao's new regime and the United States,

one which involved a trade embargo which lasted for over twenty years.

In the 1950s, Mao had formed a clear idea of how he believed communism should develop

in China. It would be incorrect to assume that Mao Zedong was simply a power-monger

who used Communist ideology to secure authority in China. Certainly, he was a brutal autocrat,

a fact which would become strikingly clear as his long chairmanship continued on into

the 1960s and 1970s. But he had also read widely on Marxist-Leninist thought and had

a vision for how communism would develop in China. In the early 1950s, that vision involved

the industrial capacity of China's burgeoning cities of the East Coast and its great rivers,

leading the country away from its reliance on agriculture. As Mao described it, the Communists

had come to power by the Red Army encircling the cities, occupied by the Nationalists and

the Japanese, and then absorbing the cities when they were strong enough. Now, the direct

opposite was needed. China's cities would need to expand outward and bring the country

closer to achieving communism as Marx had intended it. To that end, in 1953, the first

Five-Year Plan was initiated in China, in imitation of the Five-Year Plans which the

Soviet Union had begun employing in Russia in the 1920s. The first Five-Year Plan of

1953 to 1957 was geared primarily towards reducing the reliance of the Chinese economy

on agricultural output and moving towards becoming a global power through the creation

of an industrial economy. With Soviet financial support and expertise provided through Russian

advisers, new factories were built across the country during the plan, farms were collectivized

across China and placed under state management, and billions of yuan were spent in total on

completing 595 large and medium-sized infrastructural and economic projects, including railways,

major roads, and new dams, often linking parts of China with each other in ways which had

never been possible before. As a result, Chinese industrial productivity increased by 128 percent,

and steel production alone jumped from 1.35 million tons in 1953 to over 5 million in

1957. Coal extraction doubled during the five years, while in agriculture, yields of grain

and cotton rose by over 30 percent during the same time period. Overall, the first Five-Year

Plan under Mao was a tremendous success in pure economic terms, but in its success were

sown the seeds of destruction, for a hubris now entered into Mao and his colleagues'

thinking, a hubris which would be injected with catastrophic consequences into the second

Five-Year Plan, or as it is more commonly known, the Great Leap Forward. On the 22nd

of May 1957, the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, who had succeeded Stalin on his death in 1953,

delivered a speech at a regional meeting of Soviet representatives, in the course of

which he proclaimed that it was his goal that the Soviet Union should, "...catch up and

overtake America in economic output by 1980." A few months later, in November 1957, at a

gathering in Moscow of international communist leaders to celebrate the 40th anniversary

of the October Revolution, which had brought the Soviets to power in 1917, he repeated

his claim, only now he was even more ambitious. The Soviets would now eclipse the Americans

within 15 years. Mao, who wished for China to rival the Soviet Union, and whose relationship

with Khrushchev was more antagonistic than it had been with Stalin, began pondering this

goal in the aftermath of the Soviet leader's speech. Not to be outdone, he quickly determined

to make similar claims, and made it known that it was China's goal to catch up with

Britain's economy within 15 years, and exceed their production of steel and other

core industrial outputs. With this goal in mind, in 1958, the Chinese Communist Party

initiated the Second Five-Year Plan, or what was soon referred to as the Great Leap Forward,

for the country's economy. It would result in the most catastrophic famine the world

has ever seen. Mao believed that the key indicators of how

China's economy was progressing would be seen in grain and steel production. If these

could be increased rapidly, it would show the Soviets in Moscow, and the world in general,

that China was asserting itself on the world stage. Accordingly, all of the instruments

of the state were deployed in 1958 to begin increasing the rate of grain and steel production,

by establishing new smelting factories, and turning ever greater amounts of agricultural

land over to grain production. Massive amounts of farmland were collectivized into giant

state farms towards this end, and millions of workers were redeployed to different parts

of the economy than they were trained for. Huge amounts of state funding were also given

out to aid in the effort, and party officials were sent out into the countryside and the

towns, charged with maximizing production. However, many of these initiatives were potentially

hazardous to begin with, as the state was employing experimental farming methods, in

some instances, and in others, was turning over land to grain production, which was more

suited to other crops. In other instances, workers were being sent into steel factories

with little or no training in what they were doing. It was an inauspicious beginning in

1958, but one which would get much worse over time.

Despite these structural issues, there were some initial signs of progress. Steel and

iron production did increase in the initial stages of the Great Leap Forward, perhaps

by as much as 30 to 40 percent in 1958, but the mechanism whereby it was being increased

would prove catastrophic in some instances. In their eagerness to show good results, local

party cadres throughout the country were often resorting to unimaginably short-sighted

and brutal tactics. The more cruel methods involved overworking their laborers in the

factories to try to have larger amounts of steel produced. But within a few months, party

officials throughout the country were also setting up what became known as backyard furnaces,

the use of which Mao had actually encouraged. These were essentially makeshift steel furnaces,

which were often set up in the yards of people's homes. Scrap metal was used to produce pig

iron, which was almost totally useless. But the worst thing was that farming tools and

other instruments which were needed for producing food throughout the country were often being

thrown into these backyard furnaces and melted down so that local party officials could record

higher outputs of alleged steel production in their areas. The result was a lack of basic

tools for farming as the months went by. The effect of all this between 1958 and 1961 was

catastrophic, with millions of farmers being press-ganged into working in factories in

the cities and towns. There was not enough people available to produce food throughout

China in a country which was often on a subsistence food level anyway. Added to this was the practice

of party officials destroying basic farming equipment to inflate the amount of steel they

were producing in their areas. Furthermore, the party had begun trying to use experimental

irrigation methods, which had rendered large amounts of farmland temporarily unusable in

some areas. Given all this, it is unsurprising that even by the autumn of 1958, just months

after the Great Leap Forward had started, there were major food shortages in some parts

of the country, and this was further compounded by the fact that the government continued

to export grain and other agricultural products in order to increase its revenue and also

keep up the appearance that productivity was increasing. By late 1958, people in certain

parts of the country were beginning to start foraging for wild foods in the countryside,

and others were starving to death. This was just the beginning though, and by 1959, grain

production had fallen by roughly 15-20% in total across the country.

There is considerable debate as to how much Mao knew about what was unfolding across China

as a result of the Great Leap Forward. It is quite possible that in late 1958 and early

1959, he was unaware of the famine conditions, but evidence has been uncovered which suggests

he knew by at least the late spring of 1959, and yet did not do enough to change course.

By 1960, when he delegated control of certain parts of the Great Leap Forward program to

others, the Central Party members were actively trying to prevent the worst, but by then,

it was too late. The forces which were unleashed in 1958 and 1959 reverberated into 1960 and

1961, and famine struck China over each of these years with varying degrees of severity.

There have been many different estimates of the number of people who died in recent years,

as the opening of certain archives in China has allowed for more accurate assessments,

but scholars are generally agreed that at least 25 million people died in a country,

the population of which was approximately 660 million in 1958. Frank Dicotta, who studied

the period in detail and who saw the Great Leap Forward as Mao's Great Famine in the

title of his study of these events, suggested the death toll was as many as 55 million people,

others would suggest somewhere between 30 and 45 million, making this the most catastrophic

famine in human history in terms of sheer numbers of deaths.

The second five-year plan, advertised as the Great Leap Forward, came to an end in

1962. Curiously, it was relatively under-reported internationally, as much of the information

concerning it was transmitted through the Republic of China's government in Taiwan

or the British enclave of Hong Kong, and many foreign services believed they were exaggerating

the extent of the suffering caused for political purposes. Internally, however, it had badly

compromised Mao's leadership. On the 27th of April 1959, Mao's term as Chairman of the People's

Republic of China came to an end, although he retained his position as Chairman of the Communist

Party and of Military Affairs, he was succeeded by Liu Xiaoqi and by January 1962, the Great

Leap Forward was being wound down. At this time, Liu made a speech at what was to become known as

the 7000 Carters Conference, in which he denounced the Great Leap Forward. It was a

very thinly-veiled public rebuke of Mao, the likes of which would have been unimaginable

five years earlier. Nevertheless, while Mao had lost some of his authority for now, he

was still very much in charge. He would, however, have to govern in a more collective fashion,

with figures such as Xiaoqi and Deng Xiaoping, who had done much to recover the economic

situation in the wake of the disastrous policies of the late 1950s. The 1960s also saw China

increasingly isolated on the world stage. Tensions had been brewing between Mao and

the Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev ever since the latter succeeded Stalin in the mid-1950s.

Mao was particularly perturbed by Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalin's brutal authoritarianism

and more moderate stance towards the Western powers. He also found himself increasingly

ad-loggerheads with Moscow about the two regimes' interpretation of orthodox Marxism. Relations

were bad by the late 1950s, but they became particularly acute in the early 1960s,

especially once the Cuban Missile Crisis inspired Khrushchev to begin working more closely with the

US government of John F. Kennedy to defuse the Cold War in ways which Mao opposed. A sign of the

split was seen in 1961, when Mao denounced the Soviet regime as revisionist traitors. For his

part, Khrushchev was increasingly wary of Mao's attitude towards the possibility of a nuclear war

with the West. Mao once worryingly suggested that if 300 million Chinese people died in a nuclear

war, the other half would still be alive to secure victory, and so the Russian leader must have been

concerned in 1964 when the Chinese successfully tested their first nuclear bomb, but by then,

the Sino-Soviet split was complete. While much is known about the political life of the man who

oversaw this split with Russia and the catastrophes of the Great Leap Forward, the more private Mao

remains something of an enigma. His fourth marriage, that to Zhang Qing in 1938, lasted for

the remainder of his life. Though Mao engaged in a string of extramarital affairs, including most

controversially in his later life with a private secretary, Zhang Yufeng, who was in her early

twenties when she first entered Mao's employ. He had at least ten children, several of whom had

been born in the 1920s and with whom he had very little relationship, as he had had to leave them

with others during the long civil war years. He spent much of his private time writing and was a

prolific composer of political writings and poems, while his reading habits tended to favour traditional

Chinese literature. By temperament, he would become aggressive when challenged, but his demeanour was

certainly not genuinely unhinged like Stalin had been in Russia during the 1930s and 1940s.

For Mao, state violence was engaged in for political rather than personal purposes, but a

great deal about his other personal motivations and inclinations are shrouded behind a public image

which was closely managed during his lifetime. The Sino-Soviet split and the catastrophic

consequences of the Great Leap Forward were the background against which Mao initiated what has

today become known as simply the Cultural Revolution, but the full name of which was the

Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. Launched in 1966, the Cultural Revolution was designed to be

a political and social movement which aimed to purify Chinese society and Chinese communism

by removing any of the vestiges of Chinese traditionalism which remained and the capitalist

bourgeois elements within it. Mao claimed that a bourgeois bureaucracy had developed within the

Chinese Communist Party that was leading China in the wrong direction and this, along with communist

revisionists such as those who were now in power in Russia, needed to be stopped and a renewed

dedication to the communist cause developed. In particular, Mao called on the younger generations

of China, those which had been born after the Second World War and who had never known life in

China before communist rule, to bombard the headquarters to purify Chinese society of these

bourgeois capitalist elements and to reinvigorate the communist movement. There has been a widespread

debate as to what Mao's motivations for launching the Cultural Revolution were. Some historians have

argued that he genuinely believed that the Chinese Communist Party and the huge administration which

operated under it throughout China had been compromised by nearly twenty years in power

and that a cultural reawakening was necessary to stop the bureaucratic degeneration of the country.

However, while this might have been a motivating factor for Mao, there is no doubt that the Cultural

Revolution was primarily conceived as a way for the chairman to resuscitate his control

over the Communist Party and the country as a whole. By its very nature, the movement allowed

Mao to use the party's apparatus and wider organs of the state to purge the government of his

opponents and competing factions. These had multiplied in number in the early 1960s as the

catastrophic impact of the Great Leap Forward was felt across the country. Now, Mao would eliminate

those who had dared to cross him in the most brutal purges seen within the Chinese Communist Party.

The result would be years of unrest which turned ordinary Chinese people against each other

and created an environment of fear and suspicion. The Cultural Revolution was initiated in May 1966,

with Mao urging the people and students in particular to act to purify the party ranks.

Within weeks, gangs of students were attacking their teachers, intellectuals, government officials,

and even people who were deemed to be wearing bourgeois clothing. These attacks could range from

being mild to moderately violent, such as when teachers were attacked by gangs of students and

had their heads shaved, to truly bloody acts, such as when government officials were actually murdered

or driven to commit suicide. As the frenzy built up in the summer of 1966, official party newspapers

stoked the flames by calling on the masses to clear away the evil habits of the old society

and attack the monsters and demons. By now, students in classrooms and on college campuses

across China were organizing themselves into bands of so-called Red Guards, committed to preserving

the Communist Revolution and rooting out what were termed the Four Olds, old ideas, old customs,

old habits, and old culture. By the early autumn, gangs of teenagers wearing red armbands roamed the

streets of cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, and the unrest was so visceral that August became

known as Red August. Soon, the initial student-led violence spread to other groups and factory

workers and laborers on collectivized farms began joining what was termed the Red Terror.

Meanwhile, Mao was directing these groups as best they could be directed, against his enemies within

the government and the wider party apparatus. But as a means of purging the party of his opponents,

this was a very unstable method. By 1967, radical elements were threatening to move beyond Mao's

ability to control them, but the Cultural Revolution nevertheless continued. In 1968,

Mao initiated the Down to the Countryside, whereby the children of supposed middle-class bourgeois

urban families were forced into what were effectively re-education camps in the countryside.

Meanwhile, the chairman was building up an ever-greater cult of personality around himself,

in part led by the publication of his Little Red Book, a collection of his sayings and writings

which became central to the concept of Maoism in China around this time. The violence continued

unabated through the late 1960s, but by 1971, even Mao was aware of the need to scale things back,

and though the Cultural Revolution is deemed by some to have only ended with Mao's death in 1976,

the worst of the unrest subsided in the early 1970s. As with the enormous famine created by

the Great Leap Forward ten years earlier, historians have found it difficult to precisely

identify how many people died as a result of the Cultural Revolution. Estimates tend to vary between

500,000 and 2 million people having lost their lives as a result of the violence which swept

through China between 1966 and 1971. Many of these were killed by the Red Guards and other groups,

triggered into fanaticism by Mao's injunctions, however probably the greater proportion of these

lost their lives in instances where the army was called in to quell the unrest or by the army and

the Communist Party being directed to purge certain groups by Mao himself. Just as damaging

was the psychological pain inflicted on a society where people were effectively turned against each

other by the state. Perhaps the most glaring example of this occurred in Guangxi Province

in the south of the country, where between 100,000 and 150,000 lives were lost during the Cultural

Revolution. People here even resorted to burying the persecuted alive or boiling or disemboweling

them and there was systematic cannibalism engaged in in Guangxi as the frenzied masses sought to

literally devour their enemies in their fervor. Ultimately, the Cultural Revolution scarred Chinese

society in ways which are hard to quantify. The early 1970s witnessed a major event in China's

relations on the international stage which has had important implications down to the present day.

Chinese involvement in the Korean War had seen diplomatic ties between the People's Republic

and the United States government effectively shut down with trade sanctions imposed on China

by Washington. However, with the passage of 20 years, both sides were cautiously investigating

the possibility of re-establishing diplomatic ties. During the course of the 1968 US presidential

election, the Republican candidate Richard Nixon had proposed making overtures to China to that

effect and after he entered office, negotiations commenced. In 1971, Nixon's National Security

Advisor Henry Kissinger went on a secret diplomatic mission to Beijing and this was followed in

February 1972 by an official state visit in China by Nixon during the course of which he met Mao.

The first meeting between a Chinese and American head of state since the Second World War which has

grown ever greater in importance since and which is now regarded by many as the most significant

international relationship between two states in the world. Despite the veneer of normality which

was lent to US-Chinese relations by the official state visit of Nixon in 1972, at home the Chinese

government continued to operate in an extreme fashion. By the time Nixon visited, Mao was nearly

80 years of age and owing to years of chain smoking, he was suffering from numerous physical

ailments. It was due to this and the cult of personality which he had built up around himself

that he allowed a number of senior Communist Party members to become immensely influential

in China in his final years. These were known as the Gang of Four which consisted of Mao's wife

Jiang Qing, Jiang Qiongqiao, an ultra-Maoist writer who had come to prominence during the 1960s for

his denunciation of bourgeois elements within Chinese society, a close ally of Chun Qiao's,

Yao Wenyuan and Wang Hongwen, a younger political figure who had risen from within the Shanghai

branch of the Chinese Communist Party to become one of its highest-ranking figures during the

Cultural Revolution. The Gang of Four had done much to promote the worst excesses of the Cultural

Revolution between 1966 and 1971, but even after the most extreme period of the purges ended in

the late 1960s, their influence over Mao's government continued. The last years of Mao's

life and his primacy in the politics of China are hard to characterize, as competing forces were at

work in the halls of power in Beijing. Certainly, Mao remained wedded to the idea of clinging to

power until the very end. As a result, he continued to allow the Gang of Four and their supporters

to hold considerable influence in the country. However, separately, there was a growing clique

of individuals who coalesced around other older stalwarts of the Party, such as the former head

of the Red Army and Premier Zhou Enlai, and the former General Secretary of the Party Dong Xiaoping.

They wished to break from some of the more traditional ideological values of the Party,

espoused by Mao, and introduce a greater degree of professionalism into the running of the government

and the economy. There was also much bitterness within the Party establishment at the damage

wrought by the Cultural Revolution, as individuals who had fought the Japanese and the Nationalists

in the 1930s and 1940s had often been purged from the Party in the late 1960s, only to be

gradually rehabilitated in the 1970s. Acrimony between all these groups characterised the

politics of China in the final years of Mao's life, and it was he himself who was largely

responsible for creating this situation. The political uncertainty of the post-Cultural

Revolution period was still unresolved as Mao entered the final stages of his life.

His health had further deteriorated in the mid-1970s, and he was suffering from several

heart and lung ailments, the latter aggravated considerably by his chain smoking, while there

were unconfirmed rumours of a considerable reliance on sleeping pills which had developed

over the years. On the 27th of May 1976, he met the Prime Minister of Pakistan, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto,

on a state visit, at which the last known photo of Mao was taken, but by then he had already

suffered the first of several heart attacks that occurred between the spring and autumn of 1976,

and which left him increasingly incapacitated. The final one on the 5th of September left him

largely unable to move, and he died four days later. A state funeral lasting a week followed,

between the 11th and the 18th of September 1976, during which one million Chinese people

filed past his body. Today, the enormous mausoleum of Mao Zedong housing his embalmed body,

stands in the middle of Tiananmen Square in central Beijing, on the site where the Gate of

China, the southern gate of the old imperial city between the 14th and the 20th centuries,

used to stand, before its destruction in 1954. It is perhaps fitting as a statement of where

ancient China ended and modern China began. Mao's death occurred at a time when the older

leadership of the entire Chinese Communist Party, the generation who had come to political

consciousness during the May 4th movement all the way back in 1919, was fading from Chinese life,

the old leader of the Red Army, and a possible successor to Mao, Zhou Enlai, had pre-deceased

Mao by just a few months. Consequently, Mao had appointed the Minister for Public Security,

Hua Guofeng, as his successor, shortly before his death. He succeeded as chairman of the Chinese

Communist Party in 1976, but he would not last long. Guofeng was outmaneuvered in the years that

followed by Deng Xiaoping, who became the de facto leader of China in 1978. Though Guofeng's brief

period as leader was significant in arresting and charging the Gang of Four as being responsible for

the excesses of the Cultural Revolution, in all but one instance, they subsequently were sentenced

to life in prison under Deng Xiaoping's leadership. Elsewhere, despite his impeccable communist

credentials, Deng Xiaoping quickly moved China away from its planned economy and the more

authoritarian aspects of Mao's reign, setting term limits on the holding of office. It was during

Deng's tenure as Mao's successor that the roots of China's economic miracle can really be found,

as he opened the country up to foreign investment and expertise. Thus, in the end, Mao proved to be

the impediment to China's growth, rather than the deliverer of it. Mao Zedong is one of the most

contentious individuals in Chinese history, and indeed the history of the modern world, to some

he was a brutal tyrant and a mass murderer, under whose rule, between 1949 and 1946, over 50 million

people and perhaps as many as 80 million died prematurely, whether as a result of the catastrophic

failures of the Great Leap Forward, the waves of violence unleashed during the Cultural Revolution,

or government-orchestrated disasters such as the Banqiao Dam failure of 1975, which by some estimates

resulted in the deaths of over 200,000 people. However, to many others, he is one of the great

heroes of modern-day China, the man who ensured that the cause of Chinese communism survived

during the Long March of the 1930s, the commander who led Chinese resistance to the Japanese

occupation during the Second World War, and the individual who thereafter led the Red Army to

victory over the Nationalists. Many who focus on his achievements will also point towards the fact

that life expectancy rates and living standards in China increased dramatically between the 1940s

and the 1970s, and argue that Mao laid the basis for China's economic miracle, which began in the

late 20th century. It is indeed striking that one individual can provoke such widely diverging

opinions. There is no doubting Mao's critical role in ensuring the ascent to power of the Communist

Party in China. Without Mao, the movement might not have survived the 1930s, and his leadership

was also critical in the post-war period, but once he secured power, this individual, who was clearly

possessed of a considerable intellect and ability, became obsessed with retaining and expanding his

control of China, at the expense of lives and social stability. It was his desire to not play

second fiddle to Khrushchev and the Russians, which drove China into the disastrous Great Leap

Forward, and his unwillingness to accept how badly things had gone wrong, which saw the famine which

the second Five-Year Plan created, drag on for years and kill somewhere between 30 and 50 million

Chinese people. It was Mao's pathological desire to reinforce his position as head of the Chinese

state in the mid-1960s, which led to the violence and instability of the Cultural Revolution. The

Mao of the 1950s and 1960s was a different one to the individual who first joined the party in 1921

and initiated the Long March in 1934. Those who knew him over the course of his life often confirmed

that he changed considerably over the years. What do you think of Mao Zedong? Do you think

he was actually committed to the idea of communism? Please let us know in the comment section,

and in the meantime, thank you very much for watching.

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