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Red Guards

Red Guards (simplified Chinese: 红卫兵; traditional Chinese: 紅衛兵; pinyin: Hóng Wèibīng) were a mass student-led paramilitary social movement mobilized and guided by Chairman Mao Zedong in 1966 through 1967, during the first phase of the Cultural Revolution, which he had instituted.[1] According to a Red Guard leader, the movement's aims were as follows:

Propaganda poster depicting Red Guards

Chairman Mao has defined our future as an armed revolutionary youth organization.... So if Chairman Mao is our Red-Commander-in-Chief and we are his Red Guards, who can stop us? First we will make China Maoist from inside out and then we will help the working people of other countries make the world red...and then the whole universe.[2]

Despite being met with resistance early on, the Red Guards received personal support from Mao, and the movement rapidly grew. The movement in Beijing culminated during the "Red August" of 1966, which later spread to other areas in mainland China.[3][4] Mao made use of the group as propaganda and to accomplish goals such as seizing power and destroying symbols of China's pre-communist past ("Four Olds"), including ancient artifacts and gravesites of notable Chinese figures. Moreover, the government was very permissive of the Red Guards, and even allowed the Red Guards to inflict bodily harm on people viewed as dissidents. The movement quickly grew out of control, frequently coming into conflict with authority and threatening public security until the government made efforts to rein the youths in, with even Mao himself finding the leftist students to have become too radical.[5] The Red Guard groups also suffered from in-fighting as factions developed among them. By the end of 1968, the group as a formal movement had dissolved.

Origins

 
Political slogan by Red Guards on the campus of Fudan University, Shanghai, China says "Defend Central Committee with (our) blood and life! Defend Chairman Mao with (our) blood and life!"

The first students to call themselves "Red Guards" in China were from the Tsinghua University Middle School, who were given the name to sign two big-character posters issued on 25 May – 2 June 1966.[6] The students believed that the criticism of the play Hai Rui Dismissed from Office was a political issue and needed greater attention. The group of students – led by Zhang Chengzhi at Tsinghua Middle School and Nie Yuanzi at Peking University – originally wrote the posters as a constructive criticism of Tsinghua University and Peking University's administrations, who were accused of harbouring intellectual elitism and bourgeois tendencies.[7] Most of the early Red Guards came from the so-called "Five Red Categories".[8][9]

The Red Guards were denounced as counter-revolutionaries and radicals by the school administration and by fellow students and were forced to secretly meet amongst the ruins of the Old Summer Palace. Nevertheless, Chairman Mao Zedong ordered that the manifesto of the Red Guards be broadcast on national radio and published in the People's Daily newspaper. This action gave the Red Guards political legitimacy, and student groups quickly began to appear across China.[10] By the end of August 1966, almost every Chinese city and a majority of counties had Red Guard activity.[11] Eighty-five percent of counties had local Red Guard activity by October 1966.[11] According to sociologist Andrew G. Walder, "These figures represent a remarkable level of popular political mobilization. At no point in the previous history of the regime were ordinary citizens permitted, much less encouraged, to form independent political organizations."[11]

Due to the factionalism already emerging in the Red Guard movement, President Liu Shaoqi made the decision in early June 1966 to send in Chinese Communist Party (CCP) work teams.[6] These workgroups were led by Zhang Chunqiao, head of China's Propaganda Department, in an attempt by the Party to keep the movement under control. Rival Red Guard groups led by the sons and daughters of cadres were formed by these work teams to deflect attacks from those in positions of power towards bourgeois elements in society, mainly intellectuals.[10] In addition, these Party-backed rebel groups also attacked students with 'bad' class backgrounds, including children of former landlords and capitalists.[10] These actions were all attempts by the CCP to preserve the existing state government and apparatus.[6]

 
Red Guards in 1966

Mao, concerned that these work teams were hindering the course of the Cultural Revolution, dispatched Chen Boda, Jiang Qing, Kang Sheng, and others to join the Red Guards and combat the work teams.[7] In July 1966, Mao ordered the removal of the remaining work teams (against the wishes of Liu Shaoqi) and condemned their 'Fifty Days of White Terror', a label referencing the period of time the work teams were active.[12] The Red Guards were then free to organize without the restrictions of the Party and, within a few weeks, on the encouragement of Mao's supporters, Red Guard groups had appeared in almost every school in China.[13]

Chiang Kai-Shek believed Mao lost trust in CCP officials and members, Communist Youth League of China (CYLC) members, and even workers, peasants and soldiers, so he had put faith in the students, and made use of the Red Guards to preserve his authority.[14]

Role in the Cultural Revolution

Red August

 
A public appearance of Chairman Mao and Lin Biao among Red Guards, in Beijing, during the Cultural Revolution (November 1966)

Mao Zedong expressed personal approval and support for the Red Guards in a letter to Tsinghua University Red Guards on 1 August 1966.[15] During the "Red August" of Beijing, Mao gave the movement a public boost at a massive rally on 18 August at Tiananmen Square. Mao appeared atop Tiananmen wearing an olive green military uniform, the type favored by Red Guards, but which he had not worn in many years.[15] He personally greeted 1,500 Red Guards and waved to 800,000 Red Guards and onlookers below.[15]

The rally was led by Chen Boda and Lin Biao gave a keynote speech.[15] Red Guard leaders, led by Nie Yuanzi, also gave speeches.[15] A high school Red Guard leader, Song Binbin placed a red armband inscribed with the characters for "Red Guard" on the chairman, who stood for six hours.[15] The 8-18 Rally, as it was known, was the first of eight receptions the Chairman gave to Red Guards in Tiananmen in the fall of 1966. It was this rally that signified the beginning of the Red Guards' involvement in implementing the aims of the Cultural Revolution.[16]

A second rally, held on 31 August, was led by Kang Sheng and Lin Biao also donned a red arm band. The last rally was held on 26 November 1966. In all, the Chairman greeted eleven to twelve million Red Guards, most of whom traveled from afar to attend the rallies[15][17] including one held on National Day 1966, which included the usual civil-military parade.

During Red August, large number of members of "Five Black Categories" were persecuted and even killed.[4]

Attacks upon the "Four Olds"

 
The remains of Ming dynasty Wanli Emperor at the Ming tombs. Red Guards dragged the remains of the Wanli Emperor and Empresses to the front of the tomb, where they were posthumously "denounced" and burned.[18]

In August 1966, the 11th Plenum of the CCP Central Committee had ratified the 'Sixteen Articles', a document that stated the aims of the Cultural Revolution and the role students would be asked to play in the movement. After the 18 August rally, the Cultural Revolution Group directed the Red Guards to attack the 'Four Olds' of Chinese society (i.e., old customs, old culture, old habits, and old ideas). For the rest of the year, Red Guards marched across China in a campaign to eradicate the 'Four Olds'. Old books and art were destroyed, museums were ransacked, and streets were renamed with new revolutionary names, adorned with pictures and the sayings of Mao.[19] Many famous temples, shrines, and other heritage sites in Beijing were attacked.[20]

The Cemetery of Confucius was attacked in November 1966 by a team of Red Guards from Beijing Normal University, led by Tan Houlan.[21][22] The corpse of the 76th-generation Duke Yansheng was removed from its grave and hung naked from a tree in front of the palace during the desecration of the cemetery.[23]

Attacks on other cultural and historic sites occurred between 1966 and 1967. One of the greater damages was to the Ming Dynasty Tomb of the Wanli Emperor in which his and the empress' corpses, along with a variety of artifacts from the tomb, were destroyed by student members of the Red Guard. Between the assaults on Wan Li and Confucius' tombs alone, more than 6,618 historic Chinese artifacts were destroyed in the desire to achieve the goals of the Cultural Revolution.[24]

Individual property was also targeted by Red Guard members if it was considered to represent one of the Four Olds. Commonly, religious texts and figures would be confiscated and burned. In other instances, items of historic importance would be left in place, but defaced, with examples such as Qin Dynasty scrolls having their writings partially removed, and stone and wood carvings having the faces and words carved out of them.

Re-education came alongside the destruction of previous culture and history, throughout the Cultural Revolution schools were a target of Red Guard groups to teach both the new ideas of the Cultural Revolution; as well as to point out what ideas represented the previous era idealizing the Four Olds. For example, one student, Mo Bo, described a variety of the Red Guards activities taken to teach the next generation what was no longer the norms.[25] This was done according to Bo with wall posters lining the walls of schools pointing out workers who undertook "bourgeois" lifestyles. These actions inspired other students across China to join the Red Guard as well. One of these very people, Rae Yang, described how these actions inspired students. Through authority figures, such as teachers, using their positions as a form of absolute command rather than as educators, gave students a reason to believe Red Guard messages.[26] In Yang's case it is exemplified through a teacher using a poorly phrased statement as an excuse to shame a student to legitimize the teacher's own position.

Attacks on culture quickly descended into attacks on people. Ignoring guidelines in the 'Sixteen Articles' which stipulated that persuasion rather than force were to be used to bring about the Cultural Revolution, officials in positions of authority and perceived 'bourgeois elements' were denounced and suffered physical and psychological attacks.[19] On 22 August 1966, a central directive was issued to stop police intervention in Red Guard activities.[27] Those in the police force who defied this notice were labeled "counter-revolutionaries." Mao's praise for rebellion effectively endorsed the actions of the Red Guards, which grew increasingly violent.[28]

Public security in China deteriorated rapidly as a result of central officials lifting restraints on violent behavior.[29] Xie Fuzhi, the national police chief, said it was "no big deal" if Red Guards were beating "bad people" to death.[30] The police relayed Xie's remarks to the Red Guards and they acted accordingly.[30] In the course of about two weeks, the violence left some 100 teachers, school officials, and educated cadres dead in Beijing's western district alone. The number injured was "too large to be calculated."[29]

The most gruesome aspects of the campaign included numerous incidents of torture, murder, and public humiliation. Many people who were targets of 'struggle' could no longer bear the stress and committed suicide. In August and September 1966, there were 1,772 people murdered in Beijing alone. In Shanghai there were 704 suicides and 534 deaths related to the Cultural Revolution in September. In Wuhan there were 62 suicides and 32 murders during the same period.[31]

Intellectuals were to suffer the brunt of these attacks. Many were ousted from official posts such as university teaching, and allocated manual tasks such as "sweeping courtyards, building walls and cleaning toilets from 7am to 5pm" which would encourage them to dwell on past "mistakes."[32] An official report in October 1966 stated that the Red Guards had already arrested 22,000 'counterrevolutionaries'.[33]

The Red Guards were also tasked with rooting out 'capitalist roaders' (those with supposed 'right-wing' views) in positions of authority. This search was to extend to the very highest echelons of the CCP, with many top party officials, such as Liu Shaoqi, Deng Xiaoping and Peng Dehuai, being attacked both verbally and physically by the Red Guards.[34] Liu Shaoqi was especially targeted, as he had taken Mao's seat as State Chairman (Chinese President) following the Great Leap Forward. Although Mao stepped down from his post as a sign of accepting responsibility, he was angered that Liu could take the reins of communist China.

Clashes with the PLA

The Red Guards were not completely unchallenged. They were not permitted to enter Zhongnanhai, the Forbidden City, or any military facility that was tasked with classified information (i.e. special intelligence, Nuclear Weapons development). Several times, Red Guards attempted to storm Zhongnanhai and the 8341 Special Regiment, which was responsible for Mao's security, fired upon them.[35]

Jiang Qing promoted the idea that the Red Guards should "crush the PLA,"[citation needed] with Lin Biao seemingly supportive of her plans (e.g., permitting Red Guards to loot barracks). At the same time, several military commanders, oblivious to the ongoing chaos that the People's Liberation Army (PLA) had to deal with, disregarded their chain of command and attacked Red Guards whenever their bases or people were threatened. When Red Guards entered factories and other areas of production, they encountered resistance in the form of worker and peasant groups who were keen to maintain the status quo.[35] In addition, there were bitter divisions within the Red Guard movement itself, especially along social and political lines. The most radical students often found themselves in conflict with more conservative Red Guards.[17]

The leadership in Beijing also simultaneously tried to restrain and encourage the Red Guards, adding confusion to an already chaotic situation. On the one hand, the Cultural Revolution Group reiterated calls for non-violence. On the other hand, the PLA was told to assist the Red Guards with transport and lodging, and assist in organizing rallies.[17] By the end of 1966, most of the Cultural Revolution Group were of the opinion that the Red Guards had become a political liability.[17] The campaign against 'capitalist roaders' had led to anarchy, the Red Guards' actions had led to conservatism amongst China's workers, and the lack of discipline and the factionalism in the movement had made the Red Guards politically dangerous.[36] 1967 would see the decision to dispel the student movement.

Red Guard press

During the early period of the Cultural Revolution, independent publications by mass political organizations such as Red Guards grew, reaching an estimated number as high as 10,000.[37] Publications were not uniform in style or form and ranged from mimeographed tabloids to newspapers printed with professional metal type in broadsheet format.[38] The first Red Guard newspapers, Red Guard News ( 红卫兵报; Hongweibing bao) and Red Guard (红卫兵; Hongweibing) were published on September 1, 1966.[39]

Red Guard newspapers adopted standard journalistic practices such as publishing editorials and commentator articles, as well as reprinted articles from publications such as People's Daily.[40] Red Guard newspapers contained many articles regarding big-character posters and their function within the information environment of the Cultural Revolution.[41]

A small but significant group of the Red Guard press focused on press criticism.[42] This subset of Red Guard newspapers criticized pre-Cultural Revolution practices and proposed new modes of journalism.[43] For example, a group of journalists from the prestigious newspaper Guangming Daily founded a rebel newspaper called Guangming Battle Bulletin (光明战报; Guangming zhanbao) in which they denounced the press theories of Liu Shaoqi and argued that the proletarian press should be a tool of the dictatorship of the proletariat.[44] Rebel workers at Xinhua News Agency also published newspapers in which they commented and reported on press issues.[42]

Because of their grass roots nature and organic connection with the masses, the Red Guard press was able to exercise public oversight over the Party press.[45]

Factionalism within the Red Guards

 
A 1960s Chinese holds up Selected Works of Mao Zedong, with the words "revolution is no crime, to rebel is justified" written on the back, 1967.

"Enveloped in a trance of excitement and change," all student Red Guards pledged their loyalty to Chairman Mao Zedong.[1] Many worshipped Mao above everything and this was typical of a "pure and innocent generation," especially of a generation that was brought up under a marxist party, which discouraged religion altogether.[46]

Factions quickly formed based on individual interpretations of Mao's statements. All groups pledged loyalty to Mao and claimed to have his best interests in mind, yet they continually engaged in verbal and physical skirmishes throughout the Cultural Revolution, proving that there was no core political foundation at work. This domestic anarchy continued until the second half of the Cultural Revolution, when the 9th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party started civil policies.[citation needed]

Youths from families with party-members and of revolutionary origin joined conservative factions. These factions focused on the socio-political status quo, keeping within their localities and working to challenge existing distributions of power and privilege.[47] Those from the countryside and without ties to the CCP often joined radical groups who sought to change and uproot local government leadership.[48] Among the disputes between Red Guard factions was the bloodline theory advocated by most conservative Red Guard groups in the early period of the Cultural Revolution.[49] Under this political view, the issue of a good class background was a precondition for political participation.[49] Students whose parents had been labeled right wing elements in 1957, for example, were not admitted in groups adhering to the bloodline theory.[50] Although it was quickly politically discredited, the bloodline theory was highly influential and contentious among Red Guards in the early stages of the Cultural Revolution.[51]

The primary goal of the radicals was to restructure existing political and social systems, as supposed "capitalist roaders" were corrupting the Socialist agenda. Primarily influenced by travel and a freer exchange of ideas from different regions of China, more joined the radical, rebel factions of the Red Guards by the second half of the Cultural Revolution.[48]

Some historians, such as Andrew Walder, argue that individuals and their political choices also influenced the development of Red Guard factions across China. Interests of individuals, interactions with authority figures, and social interactions all altered identities to forge factions that would fight for new grievances against "the system".[47]

Suppression by the PLA (1967–1968)

By February 1967, political opinion at the center had decided on the removal of the Red Guards from the Cultural Revolution scene in the interest of stability.[52] The PLA forcibly suppressed the more radical Red Guard groups in Sichuan, Anhui, Hunan, Fujian, and Hubei provinces in February and March. Students were ordered to return to schools; student radicalism was branded 'counterrevolutionary' and banned.[53] These groups, as well as many of their supporters, were later branded May Sixteenth elements after an ultra-left Red Guard organization based in Beijing.

May Sixteenth elements (五一六分子) were named after the so-called May Sixteenth Army Corps (五一六兵团; 1967–1968), ultra-left Red Guards in Beijing during the early years of the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) who targeted Zhou Enlai with the backing of Jiang Qing. The name came from the historic May 16 Notice (五一六通知) which Mao Zedong partially wrote and edited, which triggered the revolution. However, Mao was concerned with its radicalism, so in late 1967 the group was outlawed on conspiracy and anarchism charges, followed by the arrest of most Cultural Revolution Group members (except Jiang Qing). A nationwide campaign was later launched to liquidate "May Sixteenth Elements", which created further chaos.

There was a wide backlash in the spring against the suppression, with student attacks on any symbol of authority and PLA units, but not on Marshal Lin Biao, the Minister of National Defense and one of the Chairman's biggest allies. An order from Mao, the Cultural Revolution Group, the State Council, and the Central Military Affairs Committee of the PLA on 5 September 1967 instructed the PLA to restore order to China and end the chaos.[54] The order came within months of incidents of PLA forces disobeying government and CRG orders during the summer (including the Wuhan incident), the aftermath of these resulted in even more violence amongst the Red Guards, even targeting local level PLA formations, raising fears of a repeat of the Wuhan events and other similar ones.

The PLA violently put down the national Red Guard movement in the year that followed, with the suppression often brutal. A radical alliance of Red Guard groups in Hunan province, called the Shengwulian, was involved in clashes with local PLA units, for example, and in the first half of 1968 was forcibly suppressed.[55] At the same time the PLA carried out mass executions of Red Guards in Guangxi province that were unprecedented in the Cultural Revolution.[55]

The final remnants of the movement were defeated in Beijing in the summer of 1968. Reportedly, in an audience of the Red Guard leaders with Mao, the Chairman informed them gently of the end of the movement with a tear in his eye. The repression of the students by the PLA was not as gentle.[56] After the summer of 1968 some more-radical students continued to travel across China and play an unofficial part in the Cultural Revolution, but by then the movement's official and substantial role was over.

Rustication

From 1962 to 1979, 16 to 18 million youths were sent to the countryside to undergo re-education.[57][58]

Sending city students to the countryside was also used to defuse the student fanaticism set in motion by the Red Guards. On 22 December 1968, Chairman Mao directed the People's Daily to publish a piece entitled "We too have two hands, let us not laze about in the city", which quoted Mao as saying "The intellectual youth must go to the country, and be educated from living in rural poverty." In 1969 many youths were rusticated.[59]

Monuments

Due to the sensitive nature of this part of Chinese history, most Red Guard cemeteries were demolished prior to 2007. The Red Guard Cemetery in People's Park (人民公园) in Shapingba District, Chongqing commemorates a group of the Red Guard called the 815.[60] In December 2009 that cemetery was made the first Cultural Revolution relic to be formally recognized for its cultural heritage site.[61][62]

Historiography

The Red Guards and the wider Cultural Revolution are a sensitive and heavily censored chapter in the historiography of China. Official government mentions of the era are rare and brief.[63]

In popular culture

  • Allen Ginsberg refers to "Red Guards battling country workers in Nanking" in the first line of his poem "Returning North of Vortex," included in the collection The Fall of America: Poems of These States (1973).
  • The Red Guard (1967), a Nick Carter spy novel, features scenes involving Red Guards in Shanghai during the Cultural Revolution.
  • In the book Son of the Revolution (1983), the protagonist, Liang Heng, becomes a Red Guard at age 12, despite the years of persecution he and his family received from them.
  • In The Last Emperor (1987), the Red Guard appeared near the end of the film humiliating the prison warden who treated the Emperor of China, Puyi, kindly.
  • Nien Cheng's memoir Life and Death in Shanghai (1987) describes Red Guard activities in Shanghai during the Cultural Revolution.
  • Jung Chang's autobiography, Wild Swans (1991), describes the atrocities committed by the Red Guards.
  • In Farewell My Concubine (1993), the Red Guards humiliate Cheng Dieyi and Duan Xiaolou as they try to overthrow the old society.
  • In the film The Blue Kite (1993), Tei Tou's classmates are shown wearing the red scarf of the red guards, and the film ends with the red guards denouncing his stepfather.
  • The film To Live (1994) has the Red Guards appearing in a few scenes, showing their various types of activity.
  • In the short The Red Violin, the eponymous violin is hurriedly hidden under the floor boards of a house. The Red Guards come, break in and forcibly confiscate the (empty) case and burn it. The violin survives, hidden, to continue its Odyssey.
  • In Hong Kong, TVB and ATV often depicted the brutality of the Red Guards in films and television dramas. They are rarely portrayed in film and television programs produced in mainland China.
  • The video game Command & Conquer: Generals misleadingly named the Chinese standard infantry unit the "Red Guard" which ensured the game's ban in China.[citation needed]
  • Ji-li Jiang's Red Scarf Girl (1997) is a novel about the Cultural Revolution that prominently features the Red Guards. The protagonist often wishes she could become one.
  • In his autobiography Gang of One, Fan Shen provides first hand accounts of his youth as a Red Guard.
  • Li Cunxin makes repeated reference to the Red Guards in his autobiography, Mao's Last Dancer (2003).
  • In the book Red Flower of China, Zhai Zhenhua recounts her time as a Red Guard.
  • Yang Rae recounts her time in the Red Guards and in the countryside in Spider Eaters.
  • In the novel Frog by Mo Yan, Red Guard is mentioned on several occasions, like public prosecution.
  • Members of the Red Guard are featured prominently in the novel The Three-Body Problem by the Chinese novelist Liu Cixin.
  • Two American organizations have adopted the title and ideology of the Red Guards in the United States, first being Red Guard Party, an Asian-American empowerment organization and the Red Guards, a small American collective of decentralized groups also inspired by Abimael Guzman, former leader of the Shining Path.
  • Red Guards, and especially Jiang Qing's role in their establishment, are discussed in Adam Curtis's documentary television series Can't Get You Out of My Head.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Teiwes
  2. ^ Chong, Woei Lien (2002). China's Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution: Master Narratives and Post-Mao Counternarratives. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780742518742 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Wang, Youqin (2001). "Student Attacks Against Teachers: The Revolution of 1966" (PDF). The University of Chicago. (PDF) from the original on 17 April 2020.
  4. ^ a b Jian, Guo; Song, Yongyi; Zhou, Yuan (2006). Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6491-7. from the original on 11 June 2020. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  5. ^ MacFarquhar, Roderick; Schoenhals, Michael (2006). Mao's Last Revolution. The Belknap Press. ISBN 9780674023321.
  6. ^ a b c Chesneaux, p. 141
  7. ^ a b Jiaqi, Yan; Gao Gao (1996). Turbulent Decade: A History of the Cultural Revolution. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 56–64. ISBN 0-8248-1695-1. from the original on 13 October 2022. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  8. ^ Tanigawa, Shinichi (2007). Dynamics of the Chinese Cultural Revolution in the Countryside: Shaanxi, 1966–1971. Stanford University. ISBN 978-0-549-06376-6. from the original on 13 October 2022. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  9. ^ Singer, Martin (2020). Educated Youth and the Cultural Revolution in China. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-03814-5. from the original on 13 October 2022. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  10. ^ a b c Meisner, p. 334
  11. ^ a b c Walder, Andrew G. (2019). Agents of disorder : inside China's Cultural Revolution. Cambridge, Massachusetts. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-674-24363-7. OCLC 1120781893.
  12. ^ Meisner, p. 335
  13. ^ Meisner, p. 366
  14. ^ Kai-Shek, Chiang (9 October 1966). "中華民國五十五年國慶日前夕告中共黨人書" [Manifesto to the CPC Members on the Eve of the National Day of the 55th Years of the Republic of China]. 總統蔣公思想言論總集 (in Traditional Chinese). 中正文教基金會 (Chungcheng Cultural and Educational Foundation). from the original on 20 July 2021. Retrieved 11 March 2021. 今天很明白的事實,就是毛澤東對於你們這一代,從黨政軍領導幹部到黨員團員及其所謂工農兵群眾,根本上都不敢相信,認為都已不可靠了,所以它不得不寄望下一代無知的孩子們,組訓「紅衛兵」來保衛它個人生命,來保衛它獨夫暴政、生殺予奪的淫威特權。
  15. ^ a b c d e f g (Chinese)Ni, Tianqi (7 April 2011). "倪天祚, "毛主席八次接见红卫兵的组织工作" 中国共产党新闻网" [Chairman Mao received the organization of the Red Guards eight times.]. people.com.cn. from the original on 1 October 2018. Retrieved 27 December 2011.
  16. ^ Van der Sprenkel, p. 455
  17. ^ a b c d Meisner, p. 340
  18. ^ Melvin, Shelia (7 September 2011). "China's Reluctant Emperor". New York Times. from the original on 24 March 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  19. ^ a b Meisner, p. 339
  20. ^ Joseph Esherick; Paul Pickowicz; Andrew George Walder (2006). The Chinese cultural revolution as history. Stanford University Press. p. 92. ISBN 0-8047-5350-4.
  21. ^ Ma, Aiping; Si, Lina; Zhang, Hongfei (2009), "The evolution of cultural tourism: The example of Qufu, the birthplace of Confucius", in Ryan, Chris; Gu, Huimin (eds.), Tourism in China: destination, cultures and communities, Routledge advances in tourism, Taylor & Francis US, p. 183, ISBN 978-0-415-99189-6
  22. ^ "Asiaweek article". Asiaweek. 3 January 1984. from the original on 13 October 2022. Retrieved 16 October 2016 – via Google Books.
  23. ^ Jeni Hung (5 April 2003). "Children of Confucius". The Spectator. from the original on 14 June 2016. Retrieved 4 March 2007.
  24. ^ "Burn, loot and pillage! Destruction of antiques during China's Cultural Revolution". AFC China. 10 February 2013. from the original on 14 May 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  25. ^ Bo, Lo (April 1987). "I Was a Teenage Red Guard". New Internationalist Magazine. from the original on 10 April 2017. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  26. ^ Yang, Rae (1997). Spider Eaters. University of California Press. p. 116.
  27. ^ MacFarquhar, Roderick and Schoenhals, Michael. Mao's Last Revolution. Harvard University Press, 2006. p. 124
  28. ^ MacFarquhar & Schoenhals; p. 515
  29. ^ a b MacFarquhar, Roderick and Schoenhals, Michael. Mao's Last Revolution. Harvard University Press, 2006. p. 126
  30. ^ a b MacFarquhar, Roderick and Schoenhals, Michael. Mao's Last Revolution. Harvard University Press, 2006. p. 125
  31. ^ MacFarquhar & Schoenhals; p. 124
  32. ^ Howard, p. 169.
  33. ^ Karnow, p. 209
  34. ^ Karnow, pp. 232, 244
  35. ^ a b Meisner, pp. 339–340
  36. ^ Meisner, p. 341
  37. ^ Volland, Nicolai (2021). ""Liberating the Small Devils": Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics, 1966–1968". The China Quarterly. 246: 354–373. doi:10.1017/S0305741021000424. ISSN 0305-7410.
  38. ^ Volland, Nicolai (2021). ""Liberating the Small Devils": Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics, 1966–1968". The China Quarterly. 246: 358. doi:10.1017/S0305741021000424. ISSN 0305-7410.
  39. ^ Volland, Nicolai (2021). ""Liberating the Small Devils": Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics, 1966–1968". The China Quarterly. 246: 357. doi:10.1017/S0305741021000424. ISSN 0305-7410.
  40. ^ Volland, Nicolai (2021). ""Liberating the Small Devils": Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics, 1966–1968". The China Quarterly. 246: 359. doi:10.1017/S0305741021000424. ISSN 0305-7410.
  41. ^ Volland, Nicolai (2021). ""Liberating the Small Devils": Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics, 1966–1968". The China Quarterly. 246: 365. doi:10.1017/S0305741021000424. ISSN 0305-7410.
  42. ^ a b Volland, Nicolai (2021). ""Liberating the Small Devils": Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics, 1966–1968". The China Quarterly. 246: 361–364. doi:10.1017/S0305741021000424. ISSN 0305-7410.
  43. ^ Volland, Nicolai (2021). ""Liberating the Small Devils": Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics, 1966–1968". The China Quarterly. 246: 363. doi:10.1017/S0305741021000424. ISSN 0305-7410.
  44. ^ Volland, Nicolai (2021). ""Liberating the Small Devils": Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics, 1966–1968". The China Quarterly. 246: 361–363. doi:10.1017/S0305741021000424. ISSN 0305-7410.
  45. ^ Volland, Nicolai (2021). ""Liberating the Small Devils": Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics, 1966–1968". The China Quarterly. 246: 369. doi:10.1017/S0305741021000424. ISSN 0305-7410.
  46. ^ Chan
  47. ^ a b Walder
  48. ^ a b Chan, p. 143
  49. ^ a b Russo, Alessandro (2020). Cultural Revolution and revolutionary culture. Durham: Duke University Press. p. 155. ISBN 1-4780-1218-8. OCLC 1156439609.
  50. ^ Russo, Alessandro (2020). Cultural Revolution and revolutionary culture. Durham: Duke University Press. pp. 155–156. ISBN 1-4780-1218-8. OCLC 1156439609.
  51. ^ Russo, Alessandro (2020). Cultural Revolution and revolutionary culture. Durham: Duke University Press. p. 156. ISBN 1-4780-1218-8. OCLC 1156439609.
  52. ^ Meisner, p. 351
  53. ^ Meisner, p. 352
  54. ^ Meisner, p. 357
  55. ^ a b Meisner, p. 361
  56. ^ Meisner, p. 362
  57. ^ Riskin, Carl; United Nations Development Programme (2000), China human development report 1999: transition and the state, Oxford University Press, p. 37, ISBN 978-0-19-592586-9
  58. ^ Bramall, Chris. Industrialization of Rural China, p. 148. Oxford University Press (Oxford), 2007. ISBN 0199275939.
  59. ^ Shu Jiang Lu, When Huai Flowers Bloom, p .115 ISBN 978-0-7914-7231-6
  60. ^ McClatchy DC https://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/nation-world/world/article24595612.html. Retrieved 9 June 2022. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  61. ^ "Red Guards cemetery reveals scars yet to heal". China Daily. from the original on 9 June 2022. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
  62. ^ Zhang, Everett Y. (2013). "Grieving at Chongqing's Red Guard Graveyard: In the Name of Life Itself". The China Journal. China Journal, The. 70 (70): 24–47. doi:10.1086/671331. JSTOR 10.1086/671331. S2CID 147059133. from the original on 9 June 2022. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
  63. ^ Buckley, Chris (13 January 2014). "Bowed and Remorseful, Former Red Guard Recalls Teacher's Death". New York Times. from the original on 30 October 2020. Retrieved 26 September 2020.

See also

  • Chan, A; 'Children of Mao: Personality Development and Political Activism in the Red Guard Generation'; University of Washington Press (1985)
  • Chesneaux, J; 'China: The People's Republic Since 1949'; Harvester Press (1979)
  • Howard, R; "Red Guards are always right". New Society, 2 February 1967, pp169–70.
  • Karnow, S; 'Mao and China: Inside China's Cultural Revolution'; Penguin (1984)
  • Meisner, M; 'Mao's China and After: A History of the People's Republic Since 1949'; Free Press (1986)
  • Teiwes, F; "Mao and His Followers". A Critical Introduction to Mao Zedong; Cambridge University Press (2010)
  • Van der Sprenkel, S; The Red Guards in perspective. New Society, 22 September 1966, pp455–6.
  • Walder, A; 'Fractured Rebellion: the Beijing Red Guard Movement'; Harvard University Press (2009)

guards, this, article, about, mass, social, movement, china, other, uses, disambiguation, simplified, chinese, 红卫兵, traditional, chinese, 紅衛兵, pinyin, hóng, wèibīng, were, mass, student, paramilitary, social, movement, mobilized, guided, chairman, zedong, 1966. This article is about the mass social movement in China For other uses see Red Guards disambiguation Red Guards simplified Chinese 红卫兵 traditional Chinese 紅衛兵 pinyin Hong Weibing were a mass student led paramilitary social movement mobilized and guided by Chairman Mao Zedong in 1966 through 1967 during the first phase of the Cultural Revolution which he had instituted 1 According to a Red Guard leader the movement s aims were as follows Propaganda poster depicting Red Guards Chairman Mao has defined our future as an armed revolutionary youth organization So if Chairman Mao is our Red Commander in Chief and we are his Red Guards who can stop us First we will make China Maoist from inside out and then we will help the working people of other countries make the world red and then the whole universe 2 Despite being met with resistance early on the Red Guards received personal support from Mao and the movement rapidly grew The movement in Beijing culminated during the Red August of 1966 which later spread to other areas in mainland China 3 4 Mao made use of the group as propaganda and to accomplish goals such as seizing power and destroying symbols of China s pre communist past Four Olds including ancient artifacts and gravesites of notable Chinese figures Moreover the government was very permissive of the Red Guards and even allowed the Red Guards to inflict bodily harm on people viewed as dissidents The movement quickly grew out of control frequently coming into conflict with authority and threatening public security until the government made efforts to rein the youths in with even Mao himself finding the leftist students to have become too radical 5 The Red Guard groups also suffered from in fighting as factions developed among them By the end of 1968 the group as a formal movement had dissolved Contents 1 Origins 2 Role in the Cultural Revolution 2 1 Red August 2 2 Attacks upon the Four Olds 2 3 Clashes with the PLA 2 4 Red Guard press 3 Factionalism within the Red Guards 4 Suppression by the PLA 1967 1968 5 Rustication 6 Monuments 7 Historiography 8 In popular culture 9 See also 10 Notes 11 See alsoOrigins Edit Political slogan by Red Guards on the campus of Fudan University Shanghai China says Defend Central Committee with our blood and life Defend Chairman Mao with our blood and life The first students to call themselves Red Guards in China were from the Tsinghua University Middle School who were given the name to sign two big character posters issued on 25 May 2 June 1966 6 The students believed that the criticism of the play Hai Rui Dismissed from Office was a political issue and needed greater attention The group of students led by Zhang Chengzhi at Tsinghua Middle School and Nie Yuanzi at Peking University originally wrote the posters as a constructive criticism of Tsinghua University and Peking University s administrations who were accused of harbouring intellectual elitism and bourgeois tendencies 7 Most of the early Red Guards came from the so called Five Red Categories 8 9 The Red Guards were denounced as counter revolutionaries and radicals by the school administration and by fellow students and were forced to secretly meet amongst the ruins of the Old Summer Palace Nevertheless Chairman Mao Zedong ordered that the manifesto of the Red Guards be broadcast on national radio and published in the People s Daily newspaper This action gave the Red Guards political legitimacy and student groups quickly began to appear across China 10 By the end of August 1966 almost every Chinese city and a majority of counties had Red Guard activity 11 Eighty five percent of counties had local Red Guard activity by October 1966 11 According to sociologist Andrew G Walder These figures represent a remarkable level of popular political mobilization At no point in the previous history of the regime were ordinary citizens permitted much less encouraged to form independent political organizations 11 Due to the factionalism already emerging in the Red Guard movement President Liu Shaoqi made the decision in early June 1966 to send in Chinese Communist Party CCP work teams 6 These workgroups were led by Zhang Chunqiao head of China s Propaganda Department in an attempt by the Party to keep the movement under control Rival Red Guard groups led by the sons and daughters of cadres were formed by these work teams to deflect attacks from those in positions of power towards bourgeois elements in society mainly intellectuals 10 In addition these Party backed rebel groups also attacked students with bad class backgrounds including children of former landlords and capitalists 10 These actions were all attempts by the CCP to preserve the existing state government and apparatus 6 Red Guards in 1966 Mao concerned that these work teams were hindering the course of the Cultural Revolution dispatched Chen Boda Jiang Qing Kang Sheng and others to join the Red Guards and combat the work teams 7 In July 1966 Mao ordered the removal of the remaining work teams against the wishes of Liu Shaoqi and condemned their Fifty Days of White Terror a label referencing the period of time the work teams were active 12 The Red Guards were then free to organize without the restrictions of the Party and within a few weeks on the encouragement of Mao s supporters Red Guard groups had appeared in almost every school in China 13 Chiang Kai Shek believed Mao lost trust in CCP officials and members Communist Youth League of China CYLC members and even workers peasants and soldiers so he had put faith in the students and made use of the Red Guards to preserve his authority 14 Role in the Cultural Revolution EditRed August Edit Main article Red August A public appearance of Chairman Mao and Lin Biao among Red Guards in Beijing during the Cultural Revolution November 1966 Mao Zedong expressed personal approval and support for the Red Guards in a letter to Tsinghua University Red Guards on 1 August 1966 15 During the Red August of Beijing Mao gave the movement a public boost at a massive rally on 18 August at Tiananmen Square Mao appeared atop Tiananmen wearing an olive green military uniform the type favored by Red Guards but which he had not worn in many years 15 He personally greeted 1 500 Red Guards and waved to 800 000 Red Guards and onlookers below 15 The rally was led by Chen Boda and Lin Biao gave a keynote speech 15 Red Guard leaders led by Nie Yuanzi also gave speeches 15 A high school Red Guard leader Song Binbin placed a red armband inscribed with the characters for Red Guard on the chairman who stood for six hours 15 The 8 18 Rally as it was known was the first of eight receptions the Chairman gave to Red Guards in Tiananmen in the fall of 1966 It was this rally that signified the beginning of the Red Guards involvement in implementing the aims of the Cultural Revolution 16 A second rally held on 31 August was led by Kang Sheng and Lin Biao also donned a red arm band The last rally was held on 26 November 1966 In all the Chairman greeted eleven to twelve million Red Guards most of whom traveled from afar to attend the rallies 15 17 including one held on National Day 1966 which included the usual civil military parade During Red August large number of members of Five Black Categories were persecuted and even killed 4 Attacks upon the Four Olds Edit Main article Four Olds The remains of Ming dynasty Wanli Emperor at the Ming tombs Red Guards dragged the remains of the Wanli Emperor and Empresses to the front of the tomb where they were posthumously denounced and burned 18 In August 1966 the 11th Plenum of the CCP Central Committee had ratified the Sixteen Articles a document that stated the aims of the Cultural Revolution and the role students would be asked to play in the movement After the 18 August rally the Cultural Revolution Group directed the Red Guards to attack the Four Olds of Chinese society i e old customs old culture old habits and old ideas For the rest of the year Red Guards marched across China in a campaign to eradicate the Four Olds Old books and art were destroyed museums were ransacked and streets were renamed with new revolutionary names adorned with pictures and the sayings of Mao 19 Many famous temples shrines and other heritage sites in Beijing were attacked 20 The Cemetery of Confucius was attacked in November 1966 by a team of Red Guards from Beijing Normal University led by Tan Houlan 21 22 The corpse of the 76th generation Duke Yansheng was removed from its grave and hung naked from a tree in front of the palace during the desecration of the cemetery 23 Attacks on other cultural and historic sites occurred between 1966 and 1967 One of the greater damages was to the Ming Dynasty Tomb of the Wanli Emperor in which his and the empress corpses along with a variety of artifacts from the tomb were destroyed by student members of the Red Guard Between the assaults on Wan Li and Confucius tombs alone more than 6 618 historic Chinese artifacts were destroyed in the desire to achieve the goals of the Cultural Revolution 24 Individual property was also targeted by Red Guard members if it was considered to represent one of the Four Olds Commonly religious texts and figures would be confiscated and burned In other instances items of historic importance would be left in place but defaced with examples such as Qin Dynasty scrolls having their writings partially removed and stone and wood carvings having the faces and words carved out of them Re education came alongside the destruction of previous culture and history throughout the Cultural Revolution schools were a target of Red Guard groups to teach both the new ideas of the Cultural Revolution as well as to point out what ideas represented the previous era idealizing the Four Olds For example one student Mo Bo described a variety of the Red Guards activities taken to teach the next generation what was no longer the norms 25 This was done according to Bo with wall posters lining the walls of schools pointing out workers who undertook bourgeois lifestyles These actions inspired other students across China to join the Red Guard as well One of these very people Rae Yang described how these actions inspired students Through authority figures such as teachers using their positions as a form of absolute command rather than as educators gave students a reason to believe Red Guard messages 26 In Yang s case it is exemplified through a teacher using a poorly phrased statement as an excuse to shame a student to legitimize the teacher s own position Attacks on culture quickly descended into attacks on people Ignoring guidelines in the Sixteen Articles which stipulated that persuasion rather than force were to be used to bring about the Cultural Revolution officials in positions of authority and perceived bourgeois elements were denounced and suffered physical and psychological attacks 19 On 22 August 1966 a central directive was issued to stop police intervention in Red Guard activities 27 Those in the police force who defied this notice were labeled counter revolutionaries Mao s praise for rebellion effectively endorsed the actions of the Red Guards which grew increasingly violent 28 Public security in China deteriorated rapidly as a result of central officials lifting restraints on violent behavior 29 Xie Fuzhi the national police chief said it was no big deal if Red Guards were beating bad people to death 30 The police relayed Xie s remarks to the Red Guards and they acted accordingly 30 In the course of about two weeks the violence left some 100 teachers school officials and educated cadres dead in Beijing s western district alone The number injured was too large to be calculated 29 The most gruesome aspects of the campaign included numerous incidents of torture murder and public humiliation Many people who were targets of struggle could no longer bear the stress and committed suicide In August and September 1966 there were 1 772 people murdered in Beijing alone In Shanghai there were 704 suicides and 534 deaths related to the Cultural Revolution in September In Wuhan there were 62 suicides and 32 murders during the same period 31 Intellectuals were to suffer the brunt of these attacks Many were ousted from official posts such as university teaching and allocated manual tasks such as sweeping courtyards building walls and cleaning toilets from 7am to 5pm which would encourage them to dwell on past mistakes 32 An official report in October 1966 stated that the Red Guards had already arrested 22 000 counterrevolutionaries 33 The Red Guards were also tasked with rooting out capitalist roaders those with supposed right wing views in positions of authority This search was to extend to the very highest echelons of the CCP with many top party officials such as Liu Shaoqi Deng Xiaoping and Peng Dehuai being attacked both verbally and physically by the Red Guards 34 Liu Shaoqi was especially targeted as he had taken Mao s seat as State Chairman Chinese President following the Great Leap Forward Although Mao stepped down from his post as a sign of accepting responsibility he was angered that Liu could take the reins of communist China Clashes with the PLA Edit The Red Guards were not completely unchallenged They were not permitted to enter Zhongnanhai the Forbidden City or any military facility that was tasked with classified information i e special intelligence Nuclear Weapons development Several times Red Guards attempted to storm Zhongnanhai and the 8341 Special Regiment which was responsible for Mao s security fired upon them 35 Jiang Qing promoted the idea that the Red Guards should crush the PLA citation needed with Lin Biao seemingly supportive of her plans e g permitting Red Guards to loot barracks At the same time several military commanders oblivious to the ongoing chaos that the People s Liberation Army PLA had to deal with disregarded their chain of command and attacked Red Guards whenever their bases or people were threatened When Red Guards entered factories and other areas of production they encountered resistance in the form of worker and peasant groups who were keen to maintain the status quo 35 In addition there were bitter divisions within the Red Guard movement itself especially along social and political lines The most radical students often found themselves in conflict with more conservative Red Guards 17 The leadership in Beijing also simultaneously tried to restrain and encourage the Red Guards adding confusion to an already chaotic situation On the one hand the Cultural Revolution Group reiterated calls for non violence On the other hand the PLA was told to assist the Red Guards with transport and lodging and assist in organizing rallies 17 By the end of 1966 most of the Cultural Revolution Group were of the opinion that the Red Guards had become a political liability 17 The campaign against capitalist roaders had led to anarchy the Red Guards actions had led to conservatism amongst China s workers and the lack of discipline and the factionalism in the movement had made the Red Guards politically dangerous 36 1967 would see the decision to dispel the student movement Red Guard press Edit During the early period of the Cultural Revolution independent publications by mass political organizations such as Red Guards grew reaching an estimated number as high as 10 000 37 Publications were not uniform in style or form and ranged from mimeographed tabloids to newspapers printed with professional metal type in broadsheet format 38 The first Red Guard newspapers Red Guard News 红卫兵报 Hongweibing bao and Red Guard 红卫兵 Hongweibing were published on September 1 1966 39 Red Guard newspapers adopted standard journalistic practices such as publishing editorials and commentator articles as well as reprinted articles from publications such as People s Daily 40 Red Guard newspapers contained many articles regarding big character posters and their function within the information environment of the Cultural Revolution 41 A small but significant group of the Red Guard press focused on press criticism 42 This subset of Red Guard newspapers criticized pre Cultural Revolution practices and proposed new modes of journalism 43 For example a group of journalists from the prestigious newspaper Guangming Daily founded a rebel newspaper called Guangming Battle Bulletin 光明战报 Guangming zhanbao in which they denounced the press theories of Liu Shaoqi and argued that the proletarian press should be a tool of the dictatorship of the proletariat 44 Rebel workers at Xinhua News Agency also published newspapers in which they commented and reported on press issues 42 Because of their grass roots nature and organic connection with the masses the Red Guard press was able to exercise public oversight over the Party press 45 Factionalism within the Red Guards Edit A 1960s Chinese holds up Selected Works of Mao Zedong with the words revolution is no crime to rebel is justified written on the back 1967 See also Violent Struggle Enveloped in a trance of excitement and change all student Red Guards pledged their loyalty to Chairman Mao Zedong 1 Many worshipped Mao above everything and this was typical of a pure and innocent generation especially of a generation that was brought up under a marxist party which discouraged religion altogether 46 Factions quickly formed based on individual interpretations of Mao s statements All groups pledged loyalty to Mao and claimed to have his best interests in mind yet they continually engaged in verbal and physical skirmishes throughout the Cultural Revolution proving that there was no core political foundation at work This domestic anarchy continued until the second half of the Cultural Revolution when the 9th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party started civil policies citation needed Youths from families with party members and of revolutionary origin joined conservative factions These factions focused on the socio political status quo keeping within their localities and working to challenge existing distributions of power and privilege 47 Those from the countryside and without ties to the CCP often joined radical groups who sought to change and uproot local government leadership 48 Among the disputes between Red Guard factions was the bloodline theory advocated by most conservative Red Guard groups in the early period of the Cultural Revolution 49 Under this political view the issue of a good class background was a precondition for political participation 49 Students whose parents had been labeled right wing elements in 1957 for example were not admitted in groups adhering to the bloodline theory 50 Although it was quickly politically discredited the bloodline theory was highly influential and contentious among Red Guards in the early stages of the Cultural Revolution 51 The primary goal of the radicals was to restructure existing political and social systems as supposed capitalist roaders were corrupting the Socialist agenda Primarily influenced by travel and a freer exchange of ideas from different regions of China more joined the radical rebel factions of the Red Guards by the second half of the Cultural Revolution 48 Some historians such as Andrew Walder argue that individuals and their political choices also influenced the development of Red Guard factions across China Interests of individuals interactions with authority figures and social interactions all altered identities to forge factions that would fight for new grievances against the system 47 Suppression by the PLA 1967 1968 EditBy February 1967 political opinion at the center had decided on the removal of the Red Guards from the Cultural Revolution scene in the interest of stability 52 The PLA forcibly suppressed the more radical Red Guard groups in Sichuan Anhui Hunan Fujian and Hubei provinces in February and March Students were ordered to return to schools student radicalism was branded counterrevolutionary and banned 53 These groups as well as many of their supporters were later branded May Sixteenth elements after an ultra left Red Guard organization based in Beijing May Sixteenth elements 五一六分子 were named after the so called May Sixteenth Army Corps 五一六兵团 1967 1968 ultra left Red Guards in Beijing during the early years of the Cultural Revolution 1966 1976 who targeted Zhou Enlai with the backing of Jiang Qing The name came from the historic May 16 Notice 五一六通知 which Mao Zedong partially wrote and edited which triggered the revolution However Mao was concerned with its radicalism so in late 1967 the group was outlawed on conspiracy and anarchism charges followed by the arrest of most Cultural Revolution Group members except Jiang Qing A nationwide campaign was later launched to liquidate May Sixteenth Elements which created further chaos There was a wide backlash in the spring against the suppression with student attacks on any symbol of authority and PLA units but not on Marshal Lin Biao the Minister of National Defense and one of the Chairman s biggest allies An order from Mao the Cultural Revolution Group the State Council and the Central Military Affairs Committee of the PLA on 5 September 1967 instructed the PLA to restore order to China and end the chaos 54 The order came within months of incidents of PLA forces disobeying government and CRG orders during the summer including the Wuhan incident the aftermath of these resulted in even more violence amongst the Red Guards even targeting local level PLA formations raising fears of a repeat of the Wuhan events and other similar ones The PLA violently put down the national Red Guard movement in the year that followed with the suppression often brutal A radical alliance of Red Guard groups in Hunan province called the Shengwulian was involved in clashes with local PLA units for example and in the first half of 1968 was forcibly suppressed 55 At the same time the PLA carried out mass executions of Red Guards in Guangxi province that were unprecedented in the Cultural Revolution 55 The final remnants of the movement were defeated in Beijing in the summer of 1968 Reportedly in an audience of the Red Guard leaders with Mao the Chairman informed them gently of the end of the movement with a tear in his eye The repression of the students by the PLA was not as gentle 56 After the summer of 1968 some more radical students continued to travel across China and play an unofficial part in the Cultural Revolution but by then the movement s official and substantial role was over Rustication EditMain article Sent down youth From 1962 to 1979 16 to 18 million youths were sent to the countryside to undergo re education 57 58 Sending city students to the countryside was also used to defuse the student fanaticism set in motion by the Red Guards On 22 December 1968 Chairman Mao directed the People s Daily to publish a piece entitled We too have two hands let us not laze about in the city which quoted Mao as saying The intellectual youth must go to the country and be educated from living in rural poverty In 1969 many youths were rusticated 59 Monuments EditDue to the sensitive nature of this part of Chinese history most Red Guard cemeteries were demolished prior to 2007 The Red Guard Cemetery in People s Park 人民公园 in Shapingba District Chongqing commemorates a group of the Red Guard called the 815 60 In December 2009 that cemetery was made the first Cultural Revolution relic to be formally recognized for its cultural heritage site 61 62 Historiography EditThe Red Guards and the wider Cultural Revolution are a sensitive and heavily censored chapter in the historiography of China Official government mentions of the era are rare and brief 63 In popular culture EditAllen Ginsberg refers to Red Guards battling country workers in Nanking in the first line of his poem Returning North of Vortex included in the collection The Fall of America Poems of These States 1973 The Red Guard 1967 a Nick Carter spy novel features scenes involving Red Guards in Shanghai during the Cultural Revolution In the book Son of the Revolution 1983 the protagonist Liang Heng becomes a Red Guard at age 12 despite the years of persecution he and his family received from them In The Last Emperor 1987 the Red Guard appeared near the end of the film humiliating the prison warden who treated the Emperor of China Puyi kindly Nien Cheng s memoir Life and Death in Shanghai 1987 describes Red Guard activities in Shanghai during the Cultural Revolution Jung Chang s autobiography Wild Swans 1991 describes the atrocities committed by the Red Guards In Farewell My Concubine 1993 the Red Guards humiliate Cheng Dieyi and Duan Xiaolou as they try to overthrow the old society In the film The Blue Kite 1993 Tei Tou s classmates are shown wearing the red scarf of the red guards and the film ends with the red guards denouncing his stepfather The film To Live 1994 has the Red Guards appearing in a few scenes showing their various types of activity In the short The Red Violin the eponymous violin is hurriedly hidden under the floor boards of a house The Red Guards come break in and forcibly confiscate the empty case and burn it The violin survives hidden to continue its Odyssey In Hong Kong TVB and ATV often depicted the brutality of the Red Guards in films and television dramas They are rarely portrayed in film and television programs produced in mainland China The video game Command amp Conquer Generals misleadingly named the Chinese standard infantry unit the Red Guard which ensured the game s ban in China citation needed Ji li Jiang s Red Scarf Girl 1997 is a novel about the Cultural Revolution that prominently features the Red Guards The protagonist often wishes she could become one In his autobiography Gang of One Fan Shen provides first hand accounts of his youth as a Red Guard Li Cunxin makes repeated reference to the Red Guards in his autobiography Mao s Last Dancer 2003 In the book Red Flower of China Zhai Zhenhua recounts her time as a Red Guard Yang Rae recounts her time in the Red Guards and in the countryside in Spider Eaters In the novel Frog by Mo Yan Red Guard is mentioned on several occasions like public prosecution Members of the Red Guard are featured prominently in the novel The Three Body Problem by the Chinese novelist Liu Cixin Two American organizations have adopted the title and ideology of the Red Guards in the United States first being Red Guard Party an Asian American empowerment organization and the Red Guards a small American collective of decentralized groups also inspired by Abimael Guzman former leader of the Shining Path Red Guards and especially Jiang Qing s role in their establishment are discussed in Adam Curtis s documentary television series Can t Get You Out of My Head See also EditRed August Violent Struggle Seizure of power Cultural Revolution Gang of Four Morning Sun film Kimilsungist Kimjongilist Youth League Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse tung Little Pink Red ribbonNotes Edit a b Teiwes Chong Woei Lien 2002 China s Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution Master Narratives and Post Mao Counternarratives Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780742518742 via Google Books Wang Youqin 2001 Student Attacks Against Teachers The Revolution of 1966 PDF The University of Chicago Archived PDF from the original on 17 April 2020 a b Jian Guo Song Yongyi Zhou Yuan 2006 Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Cultural Revolution Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 6491 7 Archived from the original on 11 June 2020 Retrieved 10 July 2020 MacFarquhar Roderick Schoenhals Michael 2006 Mao s Last Revolution The Belknap Press ISBN 9780674023321 a b c Chesneaux p 141 a b Jiaqi Yan Gao Gao 1996 Turbulent Decade A History of the Cultural Revolution University of Hawaii Press pp 56 64 ISBN 0 8248 1695 1 Archived from the original on 13 October 2022 Retrieved 3 December 2020 Tanigawa Shinichi 2007 Dynamics of the Chinese Cultural Revolution in the Countryside Shaanxi 1966 1971 Stanford University ISBN 978 0 549 06376 6 Archived from the original on 13 October 2022 Retrieved 17 May 2021 Singer Martin 2020 Educated Youth and the Cultural Revolution in China University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 03814 5 Archived from the original on 13 October 2022 Retrieved 17 May 2021 a b c Meisner p 334 a b c Walder Andrew G 2019 Agents of disorder inside China s Cultural Revolution Cambridge Massachusetts p 32 ISBN 978 0 674 24363 7 OCLC 1120781893 Meisner p 335 Meisner p 366 Kai Shek Chiang 9 October 1966 中華民國五十五年國慶日前夕告中共黨人書 Manifesto to the CPC Members on the Eve of the National Day of the 55th Years of the Republic of China 總統蔣公思想言論總集 in Traditional Chinese 中正文教基金會 Chungcheng Cultural and Educational Foundation Archived from the original on 20 July 2021 Retrieved 11 March 2021 今天很明白的事實 就是毛澤東對於你們這一代 從黨政軍領導幹部到黨員團員及其所謂工農兵群眾 根本上都不敢相信 認為都已不可靠了 所以它不得不寄望下一代無知的孩子們 組訓 紅衛兵 來保衛它個人生命 來保衛它獨夫暴政 生殺予奪的淫威特權 a b c d e f g Chinese Ni Tianqi 7 April 2011 倪天祚 毛主席八次接见红卫兵的组织工作 中国共产党新闻网 Chairman Mao received the organization of the Red Guards eight times people com cn Archived from the original on 1 October 2018 Retrieved 27 December 2011 Van der Sprenkel p 455 a b c d Meisner p 340 Melvin Shelia 7 September 2011 China s Reluctant Emperor New York Times Archived from the original on 24 March 2022 Retrieved 28 February 2017 a b Meisner p 339 Joseph Esherick Paul Pickowicz Andrew George Walder 2006 The Chinese cultural revolution as history Stanford University Press p 92 ISBN 0 8047 5350 4 Ma Aiping Si Lina Zhang Hongfei 2009 The evolution of cultural tourism The example of Qufu the birthplace of Confucius in Ryan Chris Gu Huimin eds Tourism in China destination cultures and communities Routledge advances in tourism Taylor amp Francis US p 183 ISBN 978 0 415 99189 6 Asiaweek article Asiaweek 3 January 1984 Archived from the original on 13 October 2022 Retrieved 16 October 2016 via Google Books Jeni Hung 5 April 2003 Children of Confucius The Spectator Archived from the original on 14 June 2016 Retrieved 4 March 2007 Burn loot and pillage Destruction of antiques during China s Cultural Revolution AFC China 10 February 2013 Archived from the original on 14 May 2020 Retrieved 10 April 2017 Bo Lo April 1987 I Was a Teenage Red Guard New Internationalist Magazine Archived from the original on 10 April 2017 Retrieved 10 April 2017 Yang Rae 1997 Spider Eaters University of California Press p 116 MacFarquhar Roderick and Schoenhals Michael Mao s Last Revolution Harvard University Press 2006 p 124 MacFarquhar amp Schoenhals p 515 a b MacFarquhar Roderick and Schoenhals Michael Mao s Last Revolution Harvard University Press 2006 p 126 a b MacFarquhar Roderick and Schoenhals Michael Mao s Last Revolution Harvard University Press 2006 p 125 MacFarquhar amp Schoenhals p 124 Howard p 169 Karnow p 209 Karnow pp 232 244 a b Meisner pp 339 340 Meisner p 341 Volland Nicolai 2021 Liberating the Small Devils Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics 1966 1968 The China Quarterly 246 354 373 doi 10 1017 S0305741021000424 ISSN 0305 7410 Volland Nicolai 2021 Liberating the Small Devils Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics 1966 1968 The China Quarterly 246 358 doi 10 1017 S0305741021000424 ISSN 0305 7410 Volland Nicolai 2021 Liberating the Small Devils Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics 1966 1968 The China Quarterly 246 357 doi 10 1017 S0305741021000424 ISSN 0305 7410 Volland Nicolai 2021 Liberating the Small Devils Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics 1966 1968 The China Quarterly 246 359 doi 10 1017 S0305741021000424 ISSN 0305 7410 Volland Nicolai 2021 Liberating the Small Devils Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics 1966 1968 The China Quarterly 246 365 doi 10 1017 S0305741021000424 ISSN 0305 7410 a b Volland Nicolai 2021 Liberating the Small Devils Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics 1966 1968 The China Quarterly 246 361 364 doi 10 1017 S0305741021000424 ISSN 0305 7410 Volland Nicolai 2021 Liberating the Small Devils Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics 1966 1968 The China Quarterly 246 363 doi 10 1017 S0305741021000424 ISSN 0305 7410 Volland Nicolai 2021 Liberating the Small Devils Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics 1966 1968 The China Quarterly 246 361 363 doi 10 1017 S0305741021000424 ISSN 0305 7410 Volland Nicolai 2021 Liberating the Small Devils Red Guard Newspapers and Radical Publics 1966 1968 The China Quarterly 246 369 doi 10 1017 S0305741021000424 ISSN 0305 7410 Chan a b Walder a b Chan p 143 a b Russo Alessandro 2020 Cultural Revolution and revolutionary culture Durham Duke University Press p 155 ISBN 1 4780 1218 8 OCLC 1156439609 Russo Alessandro 2020 Cultural Revolution and revolutionary culture Durham Duke University Press pp 155 156 ISBN 1 4780 1218 8 OCLC 1156439609 Russo Alessandro 2020 Cultural Revolution and revolutionary culture Durham Duke University Press p 156 ISBN 1 4780 1218 8 OCLC 1156439609 Meisner p 351 Meisner p 352 Meisner p 357 a b Meisner p 361 Meisner p 362 Riskin Carl United Nations Development Programme 2000 China human development report 1999 transition and the state Oxford University Press p 37 ISBN 978 0 19 592586 9 Bramall Chris Industrialization of Rural China p 148 Oxford University Press Oxford 2007 ISBN 0199275939 Shu Jiang Lu When Huai Flowers Bloom p 115 ISBN 978 0 7914 7231 6 McClatchy DC https www mcclatchydc com news nation world world article24595612 html Retrieved 9 June 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Red Guards cemetery reveals scars yet to heal China Daily Archived from the original on 9 June 2022 Retrieved 9 June 2022 Zhang Everett Y 2013 Grieving at Chongqing s Red Guard Graveyard In the Name of Life Itself The China Journal China Journal The 70 70 24 47 doi 10 1086 671331 JSTOR 10 1086 671331 S2CID 147059133 Archived from the original on 9 June 2022 Retrieved 9 June 2022 Buckley Chris 13 January 2014 Bowed and Remorseful Former Red Guard Recalls Teacher s Death New York Times Archived from the original on 30 October 2020 Retrieved 26 September 2020 See also Edit Look up red guard or hongweibing in Wiktionary the free dictionary Chan A Children of Mao Personality Development and Political Activism in the Red Guard Generation University of Washington Press 1985 Chesneaux J China The People s Republic Since 1949 Harvester Press 1979 Howard R Red Guards are always right New Society 2 February 1967 pp169 70 Karnow S Mao and China Inside China s Cultural Revolution Penguin 1984 Meisner M Mao s China and After A History of the People s Republic Since 1949 Free Press 1986 Teiwes F Mao and His Followers A Critical Introduction to Mao Zedong Cambridge University Press 2010 Van der Sprenkel S The Red Guards in perspective New Society 22 September 1966 pp455 6 Walder A Fractured Rebellion the Beijing Red Guard Movement Harvard University Press 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Red Guards amp oldid 1136130245, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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