THE TURNING POINTS IN THE HISTORY
OF COMMUNIST CHINA
by Jianing YANG
Professor Karen Ray, Marianopolis
College (Winter 2001)
The present communist regime in China was not established overnight
: blood was shed at its birth, people have starved in moments of crisis
and millions of others were killed in its coming of age. However, it
is possible and utterly enlightening to fully understand the history
of Communist China, namely to understand the ideologies that shaped
certain major steps of its chronology.
At the turn of the 20th century, China was for the first time led by
a non-imperial government. The Nationalist Party (Guomindang), thru
a nationwide uprising, ousted the Qing dynasty which just left from
a century of decay. Meanwhile, Marxist ideologies reached most of Asia
and, in 1920, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) was founded. Being still
a quite small organization, it first worked in cooperation with the
Guomindang, but was eventually shattered as they differed ideologically.
Threatened by massive executions, the heads of the CCP fled to Hunan
where they joined Mao Zedong,
the peasant representative of the Communist Party.
In the 1930s, the Guomindang armies pursued the CCP as they retreated
and later engaged in the Long March.
Meanwhile, Japan invaded large Chinese territories forcing both parties
to form a United Front at the start of World War II. Showing more devotion
while defending the country, the communists gained more influence among
the Chinese. After the Allied victory, the civil war resurfaced, but
this time at the advantage of the CCP. In 1949 after years of struggle,
the People's Republic of China was proclaimed while the KMT fled to
the island of Taiwan with most of the national treasures.
From 1949 to 1958, the CCP tried to establish socialism in China. The
first attempt of the program resulted in the Five-Year Plan, an economic
reform partially based on the Soviet model that clearly failed in the
chiefly agricultural country that China was. Then, in 1958, with full
command of the Party, Mao announced what is known as The
Great Leap Forward, symbolizing decisively the independent path
of the CCP. However, radical measures of the plan brought a disastrous
outcome that led the party into factional disputes.
At the same time, as the internal politics were struggling, China wanted
to reorganize its Foreign Policies,
but quickly felt into isolationism. Then, in the mid 1960s, witnessing
a shift to capitalism in the population, the CCP engaged into a vast
thought reform under the name of the
Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. This perhaps represented
China's last attempt towards Communism as its great proponents all died
during the famous year of 1976. This rapid decline was seized by the
moderate wing of the Party which took over the country. Today, these
people clearly embody the fall of Communism in China as they are more
concerned in modernizing the country than by the means they employ to
do so.
In conclusion, the rise of communism in China occurred in a series
of unpredictable episodes, but always following the audacity of revolutionary
thoughts. Ironically, it is the same radical ideology that led to the
disillusion of the masses and ultimately, the emergence of a more moderate
socialist government in Red China.
For more information:
cybrport@er.uqam.ca
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