“For some time now economists have been predicting that China will
probably have the largest aggregate economy in the world by the second decade
of the next century. To the extent that any individual can be held responsible
for the massive transformation of a communist party state into the world's most
dynamic economy, then that person was Deng Xiaoping. The reform era that
started in 1978 indelibly bears his name, even though that change in the
direction of the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) policies was brought about and
sustained by a collective leadership in which Deng Xiaoping, though regarded as
'primary architect' (of reform) or 'paramount leader', was never chairman or
general secretary of the CCP, or president of the People's Republic of China,
or premier of the State Council. Together with Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai, Deng
is usually regarded, with reason, as one of the key figures in the evolution of
communism in China. Whatever else he may have achieved, more than anyone else
it was he who was responsible for reversing the political and economic lunacy
of Mao's later years, and for starting the process of bringing China into the
twentieth century.”
-Society
for Anglo-Chinese Understanding
"...unlike after the death of Mao and of Chou En-lai, Deng's mentor, Beijing did not grind to a halt in a display of grief for the leader who had so radically changed the course of Chinese history"
February 20, 1997AP
BEIJING - China lowered its red flags to half-staff
in Tiananmen Square today and declared "eternal glory" to Deng
Xiaoping, the revolutionary who helped transform the country into an economic
power.
The government announced a six-day period of
mourning and said 10,000 people have been invited to a "memorial
meeting" Tuesday at Beijing's Great Hall of the People, the national legislative
chambers.
Deng's family has asked that the mourning
activities be kept simple, requesting that no mourners be allowed to make the
traditional three bows in front of Deng's corpse.
Organs donated
His eyes are to be donated, his organs dissected for
scientific research and his ashes scattered at sea.
Deng, 92, died yesterday of a lung infection and
complications of Parkinson's disease.
"Eternal glory to Comrade Deng Xiaoping!"
the state-run Xinhua News Agency proclaimed in an 11-page tribute to his career.
Xinhua's eulogy declared that China would "unswervingly adhere" to
Deng's policies.
News of Deng's death came while China was asleep.
Word spread slowly throughout the Chinese capital, with many incredulous that
the ailing leader, long rumored to be dead or dying, had finally gone.
As on any normal day, hundreds of people gathered
on Tiananmen Square at dawn to watch soldiers hoist the red, five-starred
Chinese flag before a giant portrait of Mao Tse-tung. It was only when the flag
was lowered that the crowd sensed something had happened.
"It's a big loss for China. Even though life
in China is hard, under Deng things improved," said a 64-year-old retired
official taking an early-morning walk on the square. "It feels as if
something is missing."
State-run television repeatedly broadcast the
eulogy, accompanied by a funeral dirge, occasionally switching to a
revolutionary war film.
Difference from Mao's death
But unlike after the death of Mao and of Chou
En-lai, Deng's mentor, Beijing did not grind to a halt in a display of grief
for the leader who had so radically changed the course of Chinese history.
Deng had rejected the slavish personality cult that
marked the last years of Mao's rule, and the Chinese no longer feel the need to
publicly demonstrate their political loyalties.
The roads filled with cars and bicycles as people
bustled to work. Young, well-dressed Chinese, products of an era shaped by
Deng's insistence that making money and getting ahead are perfectly acceptable,
were too busy for interviews.
In Shenzhen, a former fishing village turned
metropolis in southern China, thousands streamed to a park to lay wreaths and
weep before a huge picture of Deng.
They were China's pioneer capitalists, grieving for
the leader who made their city the crucible of his economic revolution by
making it a special capitalist enclave.
"Deng is like my real grandpa," said Wang
Xinen, 16, weeping. "Without him, we couldn't have what we are enjoying
today."
Old and young agree
Praise for Deng spanned generations. Older Chinese
remember the destitution and political turmoil they endured before Deng took
power. Younger Chinese grew up under his market reforms and appreciate the
comparative affluence and opportunities they have brought.
Deng exercised power from behind the scenes after
retiring from his last official post in 1990. But his increasingly frail health
- his last public appearance was three years ago - ended his direct involvement
in day-to-day politics.
"The generation above us had a tough life. But
our generation has been luckier, and that's because of Deng," said Johnson
Chiu, a 17-year-old student munching on a burger and fries at a McDonald's.
Source: The Seattle Times.
1 comment:
Unlike Deng, Dictator Hun Sen will die, probably by
the hands of the Vietnamese as THE TRAITOR to the Khmer people.
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