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Deng Zihui

Deng Zihui (simplified Chinese: 邓子恢; traditional Chinese: 鄧子恢; pinyin: Dèng Zǐhuī; 17 August 1896 – 10 December 1972) was a Chinese communist revolutionary and one of the most influential leaders of the People's Republic of China during the 1940s and 1950s. He was one of the major military leaders of China during the Chinese Civil War along with Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai, Peng Dehuai and Lin Biao.

Deng Zihui
邓子恢
Deng during the 1940s
Member of Central Committee of the Communist Party of China
In office
October 1954 – January 1965
ChairmanMao Zedong
1st Vice Premier of the People's Republic of China
In office
1954–1965
PremierZhou Enlai
Succeeded byLin Biao
Personal details
Born(1896-08-17)17 August 1896
Xinluo District, Fujian
Died10 December 1972(1972-12-10) (aged 76)
Beijing
Political partyCommunist Party of China
Spouse(s)3 (Cao Quangdi, Huang Xiuxiang and Chen Lan)
Children9 (including Deng Huaisheng,[1] Deng Xiaolan, Deng Ruisheng[2])

Deng was one of the initiators of the Central Rural Work Development that aimed on achieving agricultural growth. Deng Zihui also had a close relationship to Mao Zedong on issues related to agricultural reforms, however he was purged from all positions due to the Cultural Revolution.

Biography edit

Early life edit

 
A group photo of prominent Chinese communist leaders. Deng Zihui can be seen in the middle of the photograph.

Deng Zihui, a native of Fujian, was born on 17 August 1896 in Longyan and he came from a family of impoverished rural scholars.[3][4] After attending secondary school in China, he decided to study in Japan,[4] however, after one year, he was forced to drop out due to lung disease and return to China.[5] In September 1923, Deng founded the Rock Sound newspaper which aimed to spread Marxist ideas.[6] Between 1917 and 1928 he briefly worked as a teacher, but mostly as an employee, and then he began working as a salesman in his family's business.[4] This experience is what made him familiar with market mechanisms and with the organic links between urban and rural economies.[4]

Revolutionary activity edit

The revolutionary surge in the 1920s drew Deng into political action. He initially joined the Kuomintang and then, in December 1926, he joined the Communist Party of China.[3][4] In 1928, Deng Zihui began land reform experiments in Minxi.[7]: 48  Deng's efforts included a bottom-up method of policy development through consultation with locals and adopting their practical suggestions while reserving broader policy questions and expansion for Communist Party evaluation.[7]: 48  Some scholars view Deng (as opposed to Mao) as the first to experiment with land reform through establishing "model villages" and disseminating "model experiences."[7]: 48  By 1930, the experiments with land reform in Minxi had been widely disseminated in Communist Party publications and became an important point of reference for the Jiangxi Soviet's land policies from 1931 to 1934.[7]: 48 

Deng organised many guerrilla strikes in his home province, Fujian.[8] Deng was put in charge of finance in the Ruijin soviet government of 1931–1933.[4] After the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War, in 1938, he became a major military leader of the newly created New Fourth Army.[8] During the course of the wars Deng participated in, he became a close associate of Mao Zedong and he belonged in the small circle of Mao's faithful comrades.[4][8]

State career edit

Early career edit

 
The former site of the People's Finance Committee of the Jiangxi–Fujian Soviet in Ruijin, which Deng was in charge of.

After the founding of the People's Republic of China, Deng suffered from hepatitis and diabetes, however he continued to work with these diseases.[9] He dominated both the party's and the state's policies throughout the period 1953–1962 and he often came into various conflicts with Mao Zedong over agricultural issues.[8] Following his appointment to head the party's newfound Rural Work Department in early 1953, Deng became the Vice Premier of the People's Republic of China in 1954, overseeing agriculture, forestry, fisheries, hydraulics, trade and finance in the rural sector.[4] During the initial phases of agricultural collectivization, he supported proposals for the redistribution of lands to poor peasants from the wealthy peasants and landlords.[8] However, during the mid-1950s he reverted his early support of moderate policies. Deng became a strong defender of peasant property rights, he started opposing the radical policies of forced agricultural collectivization pursued by Mao, especially after the Great Leap Forward.[8] He relied on extensive investigations into the rural economy to support legal protection of peasant property rights while advocating against policies involving extreme egalitarianism, by opposing policies such as excessive government grain requisitions, state monopoly of agricultural pricing and the frequent and rapid transfer of property ownership.[8] Deng's proposals inaugurated major agricultural reforms, such as the 'household contract system' (包产到户, baochan daohu) concerning the country's food crisis.[8] In this system, Deng found an efficient means of resolving the recurrent difficulties that were being faced in the management of collective work.[4] The system was supported by the chief members of the politburo, such as Tian Jiaying, Chen Yun and Deng Xiaoping, however, when it was proposed to Mao Zedong, he refused to consider it because he believed that it pointed to the direction of capitalism.[4]

Late career and conflict with Mao Zedong edit

During the Central Committee Work Conference at Beidaihe (6 August 1962 - 24 August 1962) the agricultural questioned was placed first.[4] After Mao Zedong's speech on a general leaders' meeting in the 6th of August, the themes of class struggle, criticism of the 'winds of individual farming' (单干风, danganfeng) and 'winds of darkness' (黑暗风, hei’anfang) dominated discussions in meetings held by regional groups.[4] Mao used a central structure (中心小组, zhongxin xiaozu), comprising members of the politburo and a number of regional leaders, to centralize topics of discussion and channel the opinions expressed.[4] Deng now felt that he was being directly targeted and, on the 10th of August, he tried to defend himself against attacks by Li Jingquan, Chen Boda and Ke Qingshi. He reminded to them that the 'responsibility system for contracting work and output' (包产责任制, baochan zerenzhi) had been ratified by the Communist Party as early as 1957. This policy had been undermined after 1958, but its resumption would improve collective farming.[4] Deng stated that the 'farming responsibility system' (责任田, zerentian) could not be considered a form of individual farming.[4] However, on the following day, Mao defamed Deng, by describing him as an individual 'devoid of any intellectual predisposition in favour of the socialist revolution'. Later on, Mao's attacks took the form of comments that he implanted into speeches by other leaders. He also distributed an old document from the Rural Work Department in order to stigmatise Deng's change of position. Additionally, in one harsh handwritten note, Mao recalled some supposed 'serious and historic errors' committed by Deng at the beginning of the 1950s.[4] Shortly after, the Rural Work Department which Deng was in charge of, was accused by Mao of 'having done nothing useful for the past ten years' and dissolved.[4]

Death and legacy edit

Deng was persecuted by Lin Biao and Jiang Qing and purged from all positions during the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976).[8] Beset with illness and bereft of official protection, Deng died from an accident on 10 December 1972 in Beijing.[3][4] He was posthumously rehabilitated and his reputation was restored.[10] Because of his efforts to resist hasty collectivization and his pioneering advocacy of the responsibility system, Deng became a 'hero before his time' in recent historical reconstructions.[11] In 1987, the 'Deng Zihui Memorial Hall' was built in Dongxiao.[6] A statue of Deng was placed in the middle of the hall.[6] A biography of him was written in 1996.[8]

Family edit

 
Deng Zihui with his final wife, Chen Lan (1959)

Deng Zihui was born into a prosperous family and he was the second eldest out of eight children. His father was a businessman working in Ganzhou, while his mother was doing the housework. Deng's mother died from an illness when he was only thirteen years old.In the first month of 1915, Deng fell in love with his future wife, Cao Quangdi (June 1899 – November 1954). Later, during the same year, he proposed to her and on the tenth day of the first lunar month of 1916, he married her. Deng taught her how to read and write, while explaining revolutionary concepts to her, which she slowly accepted.Soon, Cao gave birth to their eldest son, Deng Yisheng. In April 1928, Deng Zihui was labeled a criminal by the nationalist Kuomintang government and as a family member, his wife was also wanted along with him. Cao, who was pregnant at the time, was forced to hide in Tibet where she gave birth to the couple's daughter, Deng Fangmei. During the Dragon Boat Festival, she secretly returned to China with his son and daughter, however she was caught by the local security chief and was arrested along with her parents. The Kuomintang pressured Cao to reveal her husband's whereabouts, however she refused. She was imprisoned for two months and then she was let go under surveillance. In the autumn of 1934, the Jiangxi–Fujian Soviet was in a state of emergency and the Chinese Red Army was coming close to the historic Long March.[2] Deng Zihui was forced to divorce her, in order to not cause trouble for her and to protect her and the rest of his family against reprisals from the Kuomintang.[12] In 1954, Cao suffered from uterine cancer and passed away. Deng met and married his second wife, Huang Xiuxiang, in late 1934. Huang, was a native of Fujian and she lived very close to Deng Zihui's home.[13] They had two children together (Deng Xiaolan and Deng Ruisheng[2]). Three days after the birth of their eldest child, Deng Huaisheng, they were forced to sent him to a farmer's home in Huichang along with the son of Lin Boqu, due to the consequences of the civil war.[2] Later on, Huang was wounded, captured and executed during the breakout of the Long March.[2] In 1936, during the Chinese New Year, Deng remarried; this time with a woman named Chen Lan. Chen was born in 1913 but due to family poverty, she was sold to a mason's family as a child bride when she was only six years old. She joined the communist guerillas under the command of Deng Zihui after the Kuomintang killed her family in late 1934 where she served as a mimeographer, intelligence agent, needlewoman, sentry and cook.[12] The couple had seven children together (incl. Deng Husheng and Deng Hansheng). Chen died in Beijing, in 2005, at the age of 92.

References edit

  1. ^ "风雨十年农村工作部——邓子恢长子邓淮生访谈录--党史频道-人民网". 2013-01-23. from the original on 2013-01-28.
  2. ^ a b c d e "邓子恢之子邓瑞生的三个名字--中国共产党新闻--中国共产党新闻-人民网". Internet Archive. 2015-02-18. from the original on 2015-02-18.
  3. ^ a b c Summary of World Broadcasts: Asia, Pacific. Part 3. British Broadcasting Corporation. 1996. p. 5. Born in Longyan County of southeast China's coastal province of Fujian in August 1896, Deng became a Communist Party member in 1926 [...] He died in Beijing on 10th December 1972.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Xiaohong, Xiao-Planes (2018). A dissenting voice against Mao Zedong's agricultural policy: Deng Zihui - 1953-1962. pp. 3–4, 18–20.
  5. ^ Deng, Zihui; 邓子恢 (2007). Deng Zihui zi shu (Di 1 ban ed.). Beijing: Ren min chu ban she. p. 3. ISBN 978-7-01-005809-2. OCLC 192079658.
  6. ^ a b c "邓子恢-龙岩市人民政府". Longyan Encyclopedia. from the original on 2021-11-11.
  7. ^ a b c d Heilmann, Sebastian (2018). Red Swan: How Unorthodox Policy-Making Facilitated China’s Rise. The Chinese University of Hong Kong Press. ISBN 978-962-996-827-4.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sullivan, Lawrence R. (2021-12-15). Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Communist Party. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 126–127. ISBN 978-1-5381-5724-4.
  9. ^ Xiaoyang, Lu (4 January 2011). "用大炮轰"不倒的邓子恢, 中国共产党新闻, 人民网". Internet Archive (in Chinese). from the original on 2015-02-18. Retrieved 2021-11-08.
  10. ^ Chinese Law and Government Volume 34. M. E. Sharpe. 2001. Comrade Shaoqi and Comrade Deng Zihui have been completely rehabilitated and their reputations restored.
  11. ^ Dittmer, Lowell (1989-01-01). China's Continuous Revolution: The Post-liberation Epoch, 1949-1981. University of California Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-520-06599-4.
  12. ^ a b Benton, Gregor; Benton, Professor Gregor (1992-01-01). Mountain Fires: The Red Army's Three-Year War in South China, 1934-1938. University of California Press. pp. 152–153. ISBN 978-0-520-04158-5.
  13. ^ 邓子恢传 (in Chinese). 人民出版社. 1996. p. 172. ISBN 978-7-01-002448-6. 黄秀香是龙岩县东肖乡榴坑人,与邓子恢的家相距很近。

Further reading edit

Frederick C., Teiwes; Warren, Sun (1993). The Politics of Agricultural Cooperativization in China: Mao, Deng Zihui, and the "High Tide" of 1955. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 9781563243820.

deng, zihui, this, chinese, name, family, name, deng, simplified, chinese, 邓子恢, traditional, chinese, 鄧子恢, pinyin, dèng, zǐhuī, august, 1896, december, 1972, chinese, communist, revolutionary, most, influential, leaders, people, republic, china, during, 1940s,. In this Chinese name the family name is Deng Deng Zihui simplified Chinese 邓子恢 traditional Chinese 鄧子恢 pinyin Deng Zǐhui 17 August 1896 10 December 1972 was a Chinese communist revolutionary and one of the most influential leaders of the People s Republic of China during the 1940s and 1950s He was one of the major military leaders of China during the Chinese Civil War along with Mao Zedong Zhou Enlai Peng Dehuai and Lin Biao Deng Zihui邓子恢Deng during the 1940sMember of Central Committee of the Communist Party of ChinaIn office October 1954 January 1965ChairmanMao Zedong1st Vice Premier of the People s Republic of ChinaIn office 1954 1965PremierZhou EnlaiSucceeded byLin BiaoPersonal detailsBorn 1896 08 17 17 August 1896Xinluo District FujianDied10 December 1972 1972 12 10 aged 76 BeijingPolitical partyCommunist Party of ChinaSpouse s 3 Cao Quangdi Huang Xiuxiang and Chen Lan Children9 including Deng Huaisheng 1 Deng Xiaolan Deng Ruisheng 2 Deng was one of the initiators of the Central Rural Work Development that aimed on achieving agricultural growth Deng Zihui also had a close relationship to Mao Zedong on issues related to agricultural reforms however he was purged from all positions due to the Cultural Revolution Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 1 1 Revolutionary activity 1 2 State career 1 2 1 Early career 1 2 2 Late career and conflict with Mao Zedong 1 3 Death and legacy 2 Family 3 References 4 Further readingBiography editEarly life edit nbsp A group photo of prominent Chinese communist leaders Deng Zihui can be seen in the middle of the photograph Deng Zihui a native of Fujian was born on 17 August 1896 in Longyan and he came from a family of impoverished rural scholars 3 4 After attending secondary school in China he decided to study in Japan 4 however after one year he was forced to drop out due to lung disease and return to China 5 In September 1923 Deng founded the Rock Sound newspaper which aimed to spread Marxist ideas 6 Between 1917 and 1928 he briefly worked as a teacher but mostly as an employee and then he began working as a salesman in his family s business 4 This experience is what made him familiar with market mechanisms and with the organic links between urban and rural economies 4 Revolutionary activity edit The revolutionary surge in the 1920s drew Deng into political action He initially joined the Kuomintang and then in December 1926 he joined the Communist Party of China 3 4 In 1928 Deng Zihui began land reform experiments in Minxi 7 48 Deng s efforts included a bottom up method of policy development through consultation with locals and adopting their practical suggestions while reserving broader policy questions and expansion for Communist Party evaluation 7 48 Some scholars view Deng as opposed to Mao as the first to experiment with land reform through establishing model villages and disseminating model experiences 7 48 By 1930 the experiments with land reform in Minxi had been widely disseminated in Communist Party publications and became an important point of reference for the Jiangxi Soviet s land policies from 1931 to 1934 7 48 Deng organised many guerrilla strikes in his home province Fujian 8 Deng was put in charge of finance in the Ruijin soviet government of 1931 1933 4 After the outbreak of the Second Sino Japanese War in 1938 he became a major military leader of the newly created New Fourth Army 8 During the course of the wars Deng participated in he became a close associate of Mao Zedong and he belonged in the small circle of Mao s faithful comrades 4 8 State career edit Early career edit nbsp The former site of the People s Finance Committee of the Jiangxi Fujian Soviet in Ruijin which Deng was in charge of After the founding of the People s Republic of China Deng suffered from hepatitis and diabetes however he continued to work with these diseases 9 He dominated both the party s and the state s policies throughout the period 1953 1962 and he often came into various conflicts with Mao Zedong over agricultural issues 8 Following his appointment to head the party s newfound Rural Work Department in early 1953 Deng became the Vice Premier of the People s Republic of China in 1954 overseeing agriculture forestry fisheries hydraulics trade and finance in the rural sector 4 During the initial phases of agricultural collectivization he supported proposals for the redistribution of lands to poor peasants from the wealthy peasants and landlords 8 However during the mid 1950s he reverted his early support of moderate policies Deng became a strong defender of peasant property rights he started opposing the radical policies of forced agricultural collectivization pursued by Mao especially after the Great Leap Forward 8 He relied on extensive investigations into the rural economy to support legal protection of peasant property rights while advocating against policies involving extreme egalitarianism by opposing policies such as excessive government grain requisitions state monopoly of agricultural pricing and the frequent and rapid transfer of property ownership 8 Deng s proposals inaugurated major agricultural reforms such as the household contract system 包产到户 baochan daohu concerning the country s food crisis 8 In this system Deng found an efficient means of resolving the recurrent difficulties that were being faced in the management of collective work 4 The system was supported by the chief members of the politburo such as Tian Jiaying Chen Yun and Deng Xiaoping however when it was proposed to Mao Zedong he refused to consider it because he believed that it pointed to the direction of capitalism 4 Late career and conflict with Mao Zedong edit During the Central Committee Work Conference at Beidaihe 6 August 1962 24 August 1962 the agricultural questioned was placed first 4 After Mao Zedong s speech on a general leaders meeting in the 6th of August the themes of class struggle criticism of the winds of individual farming 单干风 danganfeng and winds of darkness 黑暗风 hei anfang dominated discussions in meetings held by regional groups 4 Mao used a central structure 中心小组 zhongxin xiaozu comprising members of the politburo and a number of regional leaders to centralize topics of discussion and channel the opinions expressed 4 Deng now felt that he was being directly targeted and on the 10th of August he tried to defend himself against attacks by Li Jingquan Chen Boda and Ke Qingshi He reminded to them that the responsibility system for contracting work and output 包产责任制 baochan zerenzhi had been ratified by the Communist Party as early as 1957 This policy had been undermined after 1958 but its resumption would improve collective farming 4 Deng stated that the farming responsibility system 责任田 zerentian could not be considered a form of individual farming 4 However on the following day Mao defamed Deng by describing him as an individual devoid of any intellectual predisposition in favour of the socialist revolution Later on Mao s attacks took the form of comments that he implanted into speeches by other leaders He also distributed an old document from the Rural Work Department in order to stigmatise Deng s change of position Additionally in one harsh handwritten note Mao recalled some supposed serious and historic errors committed by Deng at the beginning of the 1950s 4 Shortly after the Rural Work Department which Deng was in charge of was accused by Mao of having done nothing useful for the past ten years and dissolved 4 Death and legacy edit Deng was persecuted by Lin Biao and Jiang Qing and purged from all positions during the Cultural Revolution 1966 1976 8 Beset with illness and bereft of official protection Deng died from an accident on 10 December 1972 in Beijing 3 4 He was posthumously rehabilitated and his reputation was restored 10 Because of his efforts to resist hasty collectivization and his pioneering advocacy of the responsibility system Deng became a hero before his time in recent historical reconstructions 11 In 1987 the Deng Zihui Memorial Hall was built in Dongxiao 6 A statue of Deng was placed in the middle of the hall 6 A biography of him was written in 1996 8 Family edit nbsp Deng Zihui with his final wife Chen Lan 1959 Deng Zihui was born into a prosperous family and he was the second eldest out of eight children His father was a businessman working in Ganzhou while his mother was doing the housework Deng s mother died from an illness when he was only thirteen years old In the first month of 1915 Deng fell in love with his future wife Cao Quangdi June 1899 November 1954 Later during the same year he proposed to her and on the tenth day of the first lunar month of 1916 he married her Deng taught her how to read and write while explaining revolutionary concepts to her which she slowly accepted Soon Cao gave birth to their eldest son Deng Yisheng In April 1928 Deng Zihui was labeled a criminal by the nationalist Kuomintang government and as a family member his wife was also wanted along with him Cao who was pregnant at the time was forced to hide in Tibet where she gave birth to the couple s daughter Deng Fangmei During the Dragon Boat Festival she secretly returned to China with his son and daughter however she was caught by the local security chief and was arrested along with her parents The Kuomintang pressured Cao to reveal her husband s whereabouts however she refused She was imprisoned for two months and then she was let go under surveillance In the autumn of 1934 the Jiangxi Fujian Soviet was in a state of emergency and the Chinese Red Army was coming close to the historic Long March 2 Deng Zihui was forced to divorce her in order to not cause trouble for her and to protect her and the rest of his family against reprisals from the Kuomintang 12 In 1954 Cao suffered from uterine cancer and passed away Deng met and married his second wife Huang Xiuxiang in late 1934 Huang was a native of Fujian and she lived very close to Deng Zihui s home 13 They had two children together Deng Xiaolan and Deng Ruisheng 2 Three days after the birth of their eldest child Deng Huaisheng they were forced to sent him to a farmer s home in Huichang along with the son of Lin Boqu due to the consequences of the civil war 2 Later on Huang was wounded captured and executed during the breakout of the Long March 2 In 1936 during the Chinese New Year Deng remarried this time with a woman named Chen Lan Chen was born in 1913 but due to family poverty she was sold to a mason s family as a child bride when she was only six years old She joined the communist guerillas under the command of Deng Zihui after the Kuomintang killed her family in late 1934 where she served as a mimeographer intelligence agent needlewoman sentry and cook 12 The couple had seven children together incl Deng Husheng and Deng Hansheng Chen died in Beijing in 2005 at the age of 92 References edit 风雨十年农村工作部 邓子恢长子邓淮生访谈录 党史频道 人民网 2013 01 23 Archived from the original on 2013 01 28 a b c d e 邓子恢之子邓瑞生的三个名字 中国共产党新闻 中国共产党新闻 人民网 Internet Archive 2015 02 18 Archived from the original on 2015 02 18 a b c Summary of World Broadcasts Asia Pacific Part 3 British Broadcasting Corporation 1996 p 5 Born in Longyan County of southeast China s coastal province of Fujian in August 1896 Deng became a Communist Party member in 1926 He died in Beijing on 10th December 1972 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Xiaohong Xiao Planes 2018 A dissenting voice against Mao Zedong s agricultural policy Deng Zihui 1953 1962 pp 3 4 18 20 Deng Zihui 邓子恢 2007 Deng Zihui zi shu Di 1 ban ed Beijing Ren min chu ban she p 3 ISBN 978 7 01 005809 2 OCLC 192079658 a b c 邓子恢 龙岩市人民政府 Longyan Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 2021 11 11 a b c d Heilmann Sebastian 2018 Red Swan How Unorthodox Policy Making Facilitated China s Rise The Chinese University of Hong Kong Press ISBN 978 962 996 827 4 a b c d e f g h i j Sullivan Lawrence R 2021 12 15 Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Communist Party Rowman amp Littlefield pp 126 127 ISBN 978 1 5381 5724 4 Xiaoyang Lu 4 January 2011 用大炮轰 不倒的邓子恢 中国共产党新闻 人民网 Internet Archive in Chinese Archived from the original on 2015 02 18 Retrieved 2021 11 08 Chinese Law and Government Volume 34 M E Sharpe 2001 Comrade Shaoqi and Comrade Deng Zihui have been completely rehabilitated and their reputations restored Dittmer Lowell 1989 01 01 China s Continuous Revolution The Post liberation Epoch 1949 1981 University of California Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 520 06599 4 a b Benton Gregor Benton Professor Gregor 1992 01 01 Mountain Fires The Red Army s Three Year War in South China 1934 1938 University of California Press pp 152 153 ISBN 978 0 520 04158 5 邓子恢传 in Chinese 人民出版社 1996 p 172 ISBN 978 7 01 002448 6 黄秀香是龙岩县东肖乡榴坑人 与邓子恢的家相距很近 Further reading editFrederick C Teiwes Warren Sun 1993 The Politics of Agricultural Cooperativization in China Mao Deng Zihui and the High Tide of 1955 M E Sharpe ISBN 9781563243820 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Deng Zihui amp oldid 1170690873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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