Saturday, the ninth of September, marked the 47th anniversary of Mao Zedong’s death. It used to be a big occasion in China. Still, it seemed like a low-key event this year, as the country faces a nest of economic problems that include, among other things, the devaluation of the yuan, which reached a groundbreaking low last August.
Social inequality is high, and many attribute that to the social-market policies of post-Maoist China. Undoubtedly, life was far simpler under Chairman Mao – and cheaper – and although people were far poorer than they are today, many still look back on his era with a smile and nostalgic whim.
In the United States, he is often described as a brutal autocrat who sent his opponents to the gallows, and caused millions to perish, first during the Great Leap Forward and then under the Cultural Revolution. In China, however, millions still see him as a hero.
In 2019, Chinese President Xi Jinping excited Maoists, calling for a new “Long March” during his country’s trade war with the United States. It was a term ripped straight out of the Maoist dictionary; the original Long March being carried out by the communist party’s Red Army back in 1934-136, evading pursuit of by their opponents.
The Chinese president was trying to say that we as a nation had been there before, in a far more difficult struggle, and yet, we survived and emerged victorious.
And that is precisely what Mao is all about for the people of China: a fighter who never gives up; a leader to whom nothing sticks: no failure, no criticism, and no death toll, no matter how staggering.
He was not only the founder of modern China, but also a political theorist, military strategist, poet, and revolutionary figure who inspired millions across the globe, no less iconic than Fidel Castro and far more substantial than Che Guevara.
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