"Stalin cared about what his subjects did (or might do); Hitler, about who they were. Mao cared about what they thought. China's landlords were eliminated as a class (and many of them were killed in the process); but they were not exterminated as a people, as the Jews were in Germany. Even as his policies caused the deaths of millions, Mao never entirely lost his belief in the efficacy of thought reform and the possibility of redemption. ‘Heads are not like chives’, he said. ‘They do not grow back again.’ What was achieved at the cost of such bloodshed and pain? Mao's own judgement, that his two major accomplishments were his victory over Chiang Kai-shek and the launching of the Cultural Revolution, offers a partial answer, though not quite in the sense he had intended. The one reunified China after a century of division and restored its sovereignty; the other gave the Chinese people such an overdose of ideological fervour as to immunise them for generations to come. Mao's tragedy and his grandeur were that he remained to the end in thrall to his own revolutionary dreams. Where Confucius had taught harmony – the doctrine of the mean – Mao preached endless class struggle, until it became a cage from which neither he nor the Chinese people could escape. He freed China from the straitjacket of its Confucian past. But the bright Red future he promised turned out to be a sterile purgatory."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Anti-fascistsPoets from ChinaGeneral Secretaries and Chairmen of the Communist Party of ChinaAnti-imperialistsNon-fiction authors from China
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Philip Short, Mao: The Man Who Made China (2017), Epilogue
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Mao_Zedong
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Mao Zedong
1893 – 1976
chinesischer Revolutionär
338 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Mao Zedong →
Related Quotes
"Despise the enemy strategically, but take him seriously tactically."
"Mao then rose from guerrilla chief in the late 1920s to a party leader in the mid-1930s on the Long March, the flight…"
"The question of how to deal with the legacy of Mao Zedong, how to separate man from myth, ranged among the most diffi…"
"One of the paradoxes in Mao as a revolutionary thinker is that despite the emphasis in his teaching on the need for r…"
"As he approached his death in 1976, Mao ruminated that he could claim two great victories: the conquest of China and …"
"Mao lies a-mouldring in his tomb, but his soul and his body of work will keep marching on as long as the C.C.P. remai…"
"Paradoxes are found in all great men. One need think only of the contradictory principles and impulses that motivated…"
"Mao’s key idea about the need for violent rebellion to sweep away social injustice and his practical strategies to ac…"
"The adulation Mao received during his lifetime and the outpouring of national grief evoked by his death may have appe…"
"The ever-growing historiography devoted to Mao does not present the clearest of pictures. Often depending on the poli…"