A Chinese Half-Century of Satire and Dissent
We often use the terms
"reining in" and "letting out" to describe the political climate
in
-Wang Ruowang, autumn,
1988 By Kyna Rubin
Exactly two years have passed since the Chinese Communist Party launched
its latest political cam-paign against intellectuals it perceived as too
liberal-minded and anxious for political democratization. In January 1987, the party
expelled three controversial but eminently, popular figures. Fang Lizhi, the
internationally known astrophysicist who recently wrote an open letter to Deng Xiaoping
asking for the release of Chinese political prisoners; Liu Binyan, the
reporter/whistle-blower on party corruption, and Wang Ruowang, the satirical essayist,
who is scorned by the authorities for his exceedingly audacious broadsides against
the party and its pace of reform. All three are veterans of political
persecution, having earlier been victims of
Despite or because of this continuing victimization, Liu Binyan has gained a hero's status among the Chinese populace for his courageous exposure of the dark side of party ethics. Fang Lizhi has built an almost universal respect among Chinese students and other intellectuals for his liberal political philosophy, expressed openly during his vice presidency of one of China's leading science universities.
Wang Ruowang, too, has had his audience, mainly in literary magazines, legal Journals and newspapers, and by the mid-1980s, at the podiums of standing-room-only university halls. ~
World reaction to the 1987 expulsion of these three men for their
alleged encouragement of university student demonstrations in December 1986 was
swift and effective. In response to the international outrage that took Chinese
government leaders by surprise in 1988, the authorities permitted Fang and Liu
to travel abroad. Wang has been consistently denied permission to leave
Wang is the oldest of the three and had been a party member longest--50 years. Since his satirical criticism of the Kuomintang government in the 1930s (he was imprisoned as a youth of 16), Wang has always taken great pleasure in launching direct, humorous attacks against authority, speaking out for the underdog, advocating good over evil, "truth" over fiction and a change from the status quo.
Liu became known outside
Wang's great popularity in
Shanghai, free to speak with foreigners and
to publish' once again, although he must still resort to publishing anything of
a political nature outside of
What follow are translated excerpts from a 'lengthy interview Wang
recently granted to Chen Yige of the Nineties (a
Wang Ruowang is now 71 years old. These excerpts suggest that the youthful Wang who poked vicious fun at the nationalist government of Chiang Kai-shek in the early 1930s is very much alive-in his own words, still “the naïve” person he has always been, compelled to speak out despite the odds against him and his convictions.
For clarity, I have grouped these excerpts topically; the subtitles are my own.
The Advantages of Capitalist Democracies and the Hypocrisy
of Socialism:
Capitalist political democracy is an intelligent and noble system. It has the function of regulating contradictions among different classes and it bestows upon political party equal rights to free elections and free activities. Yet in socialist countries ruled by proletarian dictatorship, these superior features not only do not exist, they are perceived as reactionary and are summarily rejected.
The character of the Russian and later the Chinese Revolution was not actually proletarian at all. The proletariat in these two countries has not obtained any of the rights accorded to masters of one’s own country, since even the labor unions are run by the state.
Wherever the socialist model of state ownership has been implemented, people have become destitute and the nation backward. We must have the courage to discard this harmful model. Ready-made models are all around us …… All we have to do is let go of two premises: that the leadership of the Communist Party is infallible, and that socialism is wonderful.
The Party’s Road to self-Destruction:
I think the Chinese Communist Party is the process of accelerating its own decline. Perhaps it’s more accurate to say that it is in a crisis of being down on all fours, neither dead nor alive. There is a new concept, new for china, at least, that asks, “Why should a whole nation and a whole people die because of the degeneration and deterioration of one party?” In a multiparty nation, if a party has lost the support of the people, its organization disintegrates, but this does not affect the everyday political and economic workings of the country. The party doesn’t get elected and no longer participates in politics and that’s the end of it.
Looking back at wounds left by Mao on modern Chinese history, one must agree that his series of perverse acts and policies paved the way for the death of the Chinese Communist Party. Even today, what we have is the implementation of the Maoist line without Mao Tse-tung. The regime won’t tamper with the Mao-era system of one-party, one-man rule.
One thing that people are very dissatisfied with is the fact that the party leaders can’t be trusted to tell the truth. They say one thing and do another. Take this year’s National Day editorial, for example. Recognizing how alienated they’ve become from the masses, the editorial was entitled “Our strength is in the masses.” On the very same day …the Public Security Bureau entered university and college campuses to set up police stations and permanent public-security organizations. This was a clear case of deeds betraying words.
The Problem with the Current Reform
Strategy:
To regulate the economic environment without attempting to improve the old political system of one-party dictatorship is like walking on one leg, like sending an isolated force into enemy territory.
After five years of purging within the party ranks, there are still no results. Can corruption be conquered by relying on the Maoist practice of down work groups, survey groups, price investigators and the like? Making this a temporary task by ferreting out a few corrupt elements and making a big deal about one or two major cases and imposing heavy sentences on few, while not dealing with serous corruption at the roots, only creates the following:
- Loud thunder small rain: things get better for a while, then spout up again as soon as the rain tapers off.
- The bottom gets purged while the top left alone; a few living targets are nabbed as an example, a few companies whose papers are not complete are decapitated while large powerful companies that perpetrate outrageous crimes go their merry way.
Honest advice is grating on the ears. I suspect that these words from the heart of an expelled former party figure will not sit well with the higher-ups. I would be forever grateful if only they do not censure me for inciting student demonstrations again.
In reform, Learn From Gorbachev:
I think
Gorbachev’s reform strategy is worth emulating. The
The
difficulties of Soviet reforms are much greater than
Third, Gorbachev is stressing political openness and encouraging public participation in policy-making and unrestrained criticism and discussion, relying first on intellectuals and granting large-scale freedom to previously shackled newspapers, television, film, literature and art.
Fourth, he is thoroughly repudiating Stalin’s wholesale murder of Bolsheviks and rehabilitating all wronged victims.
Kyna Rubin is a
professional associate at the Committee on Scholarly Communication with the
People's Republic of