Thread: 17,000 people pay homage to Mao's Mausoleum on his birth anniversary

Results 1 to 7 of 7

  1. #1
    Join Date Sep 2007
    Location Venice, Los Angeles
    Posts 314
    Rep Power 0

    Default 17,000 people pay homage to Mao's Mausoleum on his birth anniversary

    I just discovered this:
    http://english.people.com.cn/90001/9...2/6328050.html
    Thirty one years on after his death, public reverence for late Chinese leader Mao Zedong remains strong. More than 17,000 people visited the Chairman Mao Memorial Hall in Beijing on Dec. 26, his 114th birthday anniversary.

    The Mausoleum on the Tian'anmen Square received has been receiving some 5,000 visitors each day in the morning. It is closed in the afternoon for a large scale interior decoration.

    However, the memorial hall was open for a full day Wednesday to receive the increased number of pilgrims, including Li Min, Mao's elder daughter, and Mao Xinyu, Mao's grandson.

    The Maos braved the chilly winter air and arrived at 8:40 am. They bowed to the statue of Mao at the north hall and then paid a respect to Mao's relique.

    There are also regular visitors outside the Mao family. Zhao Juxiao, a train driver in his 50s from suburban Beijing, came at around 6 am. "I came here to pay respect to Mao's remains every year," he said.

    "Mao Zedong was a great man. When I saw him, I was shaken to tears," said Gao Fei, a 26-year-old girl from the eastern Province of Shandong.
    Larif Hajer and her husband Ridha, from Tunisia, have been in China for 11 days. "I've read him on books. Mao was a great chairman, a great man. We respect him," she said.

    Li Boyun, in his 80s, was probably the eldest waiting in the five long lines. Wearing two Mao' badges, Li said, "I came to see Chairman Mao every Sept. 9 and Dec. 26." Sept. 9 is Mao's birthday.

    A lady surnamed Wei came all the way from eastern Hangzhou city, accompanying her son to pay reverence to the great leader.

    "I hope my child can be familiar with our country's history, especially how it struggled to become prosperous and strong. I told my son it was Chairman Mao that led the Chinese nation to the way of prosperity."

    In Mao's home village of Shaoshan in central Hunan Province, people organized host of activities to commemorate Mao, including music and firework performances and an exhibition to fete tourists who come to pay tribute.

    In northwestern Shaanxi Province, where Mao used to lead his army to fight Japanese invaders and the Kuomintang troops, locals swarmed to exhibitions featuring his revolutionary times.

    Mao died in 1976, aged 83.
    Last edited by Sky; 12th February 2008 at 00:32.
  2. #2
    Join Date Nov 2002
    Location São Paulo, Brasil
    Posts 8,017
    Rep Power 29

    Default

    those are some pretty small numbers, eh?
  3. #3
    网上翻译者是没用的,傻瓜 Committed User
    Join Date Jan 2005
    Location Canada
    Posts 2,012
    Organisation
    Young Communist League Canada
    Rep Power 27

    Default

    I would think Mao is more a symbol of anti-imperialism to the average Chinese than anything else.

    I myself consider him a brilliant rebel who "turned the table around". Probably the most successful rebel there ever was.

    But as a "leader of the revolution", he leaves much to be desired.
    Last edited by RedStarOverChina; 12th February 2008 at 00:55.
    Do not say that we have nothing,
    We shall be masters of all under heaven!
  4. #4
    Join Date Aug 2007
    Location Cymru
    Posts 2,268
    Rep Power 13

    Default

    The Chinese Bureaucracy must be proud that their state approved education system still makes 17, 000 Chinese turn out to pay homage to a man who's countries economic system resembles nothing of what he envisioned, but actually what he fought against (Capitalism).
    Last edited by spartan; 12th February 2008 at 03:16.
    "No references to the need to fight terror can be an argument for restricting human rights." Vladimir Putin

    "The strengthening of our statehood is, at times, deliberately interpreted as authoritarianism." Vladimir Putin

    "We shall fight against them, throw them in prisons and destroy them." Vladimir Putin
  5. #5
    Join Date May 2005
    Location United States
    Posts 2,992
    Rep Power 18

    Default

    The Chinese Bureaucracy must be proud that their state approved education system still makes 17, 000 Chinese turn out to pay homage to a man who's countries economic system resembles nothing of what he envisioned, but actually what he fought against (Capitalism).
    You're actually kind of right for once. Chinese history during the Mao era is heavily suppressed by the state.
  6. #6
    Join Date Jul 2007
    Location Michigan
    Posts 530
    Organisation
    PLP
    Rep Power 0

    Default

    The Chinese Bureaucracy must be proud that their state approved education system still makes 17, 000 Chinese turn out to pay homage to a man who's countries economic system resembles nothing of what he envisioned, but actually what he fought against (Capitalism).
    My thoughts exactly. The revisionists and capitalist roaders like Deng threw out new democracy and made China a socialist state in name only. They did more to disturb the revolutionary movement in China than the USA or CCCP combined.
    我们的原则是党指挥枪,而决不容许枪指挥党.
  7. #7
    Join Date Jan 2008
    Posts 1,483
    Rep Power 16

    Default

    Mao as a communist or even a socialist was a failure, but as guerrilla fighter he was one of the greatest. So I would pay my respects for him too, but only for his military contributions.
    [FONT=Arial Black]WAR IS PEACE!
    FREEDOM IS SLAVERY!
    IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH!
    [/FONT]

    -INGSOC slogans

Similar Threads

  1. Lenin's Mausoleum
    By Lenin's Law in forum Learning
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 25th September 2006, 21:50
  2. Opinions on Mao's Cultural Revolution
    By anti machine in forum History
    Replies: 10
    Last Post: 11th June 2003, 11:09
  3. Replies: 1
    Last Post: 2nd January 2003, 22:32

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts