The Untold Story of Mao’s Great Famine
Translated from the Chinese by Stacy Mosher and Guo Jian
Edited by Edward
Friedman, Guo Jian and Stacy Mosher
Introduction by Edward Friedman and Roderick
MacFarquhar
ALLEN LANE
an imprint of
PENGUIN BOOKS
Map
Introduction by Edward Friedman and Roderick MacFarquhar
Translators’ Note
A Chronology of the Great Famine
An Everlasting Tombstone
1. The Epicenter of the Disaster
2. The Three Red Banners: Source of the Famine
3. Hard Times in Gansu
4. The People’s Commune: Foundation of the Totalitarian System
5. The Communal Kitchens
6. Hungry Ghosts in Heaven’s Pantry
7. The Ravages of the Five Winds
8. Anxious in Anhui
9. The Food Crisis
10. Turnaround in Lushan
11. China’s Population Loss in the Great Leap Forward
12. The Official Response to the Crisis
13. Social Stability During the Great Famine
14. The Systemic Causes of the Great Famine
15. The Great Famine’s Impact on Chinese Politics
Notes
Bibliography
Tombstone describes and analyzes the worst famine in human history, the disaster inflicted upon the Chinese people between 1958 and 1962. Author Yang Jisheng, a distinguished journalist by profession and an inspired investigator by avocation, wrote this book in part to expiate his shame for watching his father die of starvation in 1959 and not understanding the cause. At the time, Yang was loyally supporting the policies of the Great Leap Forward. Only thirty years later did he accept that the state system and Chinese Communist Party (CCP) policies were the direct cause of his father’s death.
This book is about the murderous impact of the Great Leap policies and the CCP leaders who conceived them. Author Yang shows that the supreme leader, Mao Zedong, soon knew that his economically irrational policies were deadly. But Mao protected his power by reaffirming them against the few brave colleagues who questioned them. Had Mao continued to heed those criticisms, which he did briefly, the death toll would have been massively reduced.
Tombstone is about a hierarchical authoritarian system of concentrated power in which every official is, as Yang puts it, a slave facing upward and a dictator facing downward. At the bottom of the system were the Chinese people, mostly farm households, who suffered under the murderous brutality of the lower-level officials, proving an iron law of bureaucracy: the pettier the bureaucrat, the harsher his rule.
During the Great Leap Forward and its aftermath, CCP system harshness became murderousness: an incalculable number of Chinese chose to kill other Chinese. There were exceptions to that rule in famine-struck China, and Yang gives them their heroic due. For those officials, however, trying to save lives usually brought the end of their careers, often the loss of their freedom, and even the end of their lives.
Most of this book depicts the fate of the tens of millions of people like Yang’s father who died during the famine. Yang’s estimate is at least 36 million, somewhere between the 28 to 30 million estimated early on by demographers, the 42 to 43 million arrived at by an official fact-finding mission in the early 1980s, and the 45 million plus in one recent scholarly analysis.
All the estimates of the innocent dead are mind-boggling. It is the strength of Yang’s investigation that makes the statistics come alive as people confront death by a system and its policies. He also exposes horrific survival choices: to keep one child alive by starving the others; to eat a recently dead relative or even to dig up a corpse from a grave; to desert one’s family and flee to another province knowing this could lead the local CCP to kill one’s family members; to protect oneself by informing on one’s neighbors; to sell oneself to an official for a few scraps from his table (because, for officialdom, there was always plenty to eat). Yang helps us feel the anguish of immoral options.
What is extraordinary about the famine figures is not just their size but that, whichever figure is correct, this system, its leader, and his policies killed even more Chinese than did the brutal Imperial Japanese Army during the Sino-Japanese War of 1937–45. This is not an easy fact for patriotic Chinese to swallow.
The pathbreaking work of Nobel Prize–winning economist Amartya Sen has shown that famines are not necessarily the result of lack of food. But the argument that lack of information about shortages is often a cause does not apply in this case. While junior officials did falsify data to benefit their own careers, Mao had enough reports from senior colleagues to know that his policy of extracting an increasing percentage of grain from the countryside was causing millions of deaths. The lives of Chinese villagers in the tens of millions were sacrificed in the interest of other policy objectives, including Mao’s own retention of power.
Yang’s history builds on solid recent Chinese scholarship that has been published in China. Tombstone, however, is banned in China, perhaps because Yang’s material makes clear the culpability of the Chairman, his colleagues, his party, and their system that caused tens of millions of deaths. Perhaps also the authorities were appalled at the extent of Yang’s vivid documentation of the killing. This was not just one man’s history. Yang got people who experienced the famine to describe it in their own words. He found local journalists who’d witnessed and reported on murders and starvation and got them to write their memoirs. He located and interviewed local implementers of the fatal policies. He got surviving resisters to recount their experiences.
Using his privileged status as a high-ranking journalist, Yang culled dozens of archives throughout the country that contained contemporary secret party reports of the impact of the famine and the summary manner in which officials had ordered the killing of resisters. This English version highlights the voices that Yang alone sought out and captured so that the murderous impact of the Great Leap Forward could be experienced in the words and feelings of the survivors.
Yang’s two-volume masterpiece was originally published in 2008 in Hong Kong, running to 1,200 pages in Chinese and reprinted eight times in two years. The highly qualified Stacy Mosher translated the whole work. Guo Jian, wonderfully comfortable in the argot of both Chinese and American cultures, then polished the translation. Finally, Edward Friedman, a specialist on the politics of rural China, assisted the translators in condensing and editing the manuscript. Yang invited Friedman and Harvard’s specialist on Chinese elite politics, Roderick MacFarquhar, to write this preface to introduce the book to an English-reading audience.
As translators, we faced two major and interrelated challenges: the length of Yang Jisheng’s monumental work and the ordering of its chapters.
The original Chinese version of Tombstone totaled more than 800,000 Chinese characters and was published in two volumes totaling more than 1,200 pages. Recognizing that in today’s media environment no one would publish a translated work of that length, Mr. Yang reduced the Chinese version to something over 500,000 characters. We initially translated this version, but were advised that it was still an impractical length. With the assistance of our colleague Edward Friedman, and with Mr. Yang’s permission, we edited the book down to the version presented here. Our primary goal was to preserve the essence of Mr. Yang’s work in all respects—a representative sampling of his comprehensive coverage and the bulk of his analysis and reflections on this epic tragedy. We hope we’ve produced an edition of Tombstone that is accessible to a general reader while also enlightening to scholars and specialists.
In the initial process of reducing the length of Tombstone, Mr. Yang proposed reordering the chapters for a non-Chinese audience. In the original two-volume work, the first volume is largely microscopic, examining the calamity as it affected individual provinces all the way down to the grassroots level, while the second volume, macroscopic in design, covers the nationwide agricultural collectivization movement and analyzes the political system that was ultimately responsible for the disaster. Since the early chapters in the second volume could serve as an introduction to the overall situation of the famine, Mr. Yang considered starting the book with these chapters to better prepare Western readers for the provincial chapters.
In discussions among ourselves and with others, however, we found that placing the macroscopic “policy” chapters first reduced the drama and impact of the human stories that consequently followed much later in the book. The consensus we reached was that Mr. Yang’s initial instinct as a veteran journalist had been the best: that is, first to present the tragedy in all its horror so the reader comprehended the need to explore how the system and its practitioners brought about the disaster. We therefore arrived at a compromise: we have begun the book, as in Mr. Yang’s original Chinese version, with the chapter on Henan and the Xinyang tragedy, but rather than presenting the rest of the provincial chapters together in a block, we have alternated them with policy chapters that are particularly relevant to the conditions of each province. The book presented here consists of four of the original fourteen “provincial” chapters, the six “central,” or “policy,” chapters, and five (instead of eight) “analysis” chapters.
In addition to Edward Friedman’s
invaluable and multipronged effort to ensure the publication of Mr. Yang’s book in
English, we are indebted to a number of other people whose assistance was essential. We
would particularly like to thank the Keck Center for International and Strategic Studies
at Claremont McKenna College and its director, Minxin Pei, for their vital support as
the host institution for this project. We are grateful to the National Endowment for the
Humanities and a generous anonymous donor who funded the lengthy translation process. We
thank the translator of Tombstone’s French edition, Louis Vincenolles,
for collegial and helpful exchanges, and Nancy Hearst, librarian for the Fairbank Center
Collection of Harvard University’s H. C. Fung Library, for an expert reading that
saved us from many lapses. Most of all, we thank Mr. Yang Jisheng for the honor of
allowing us to translate his great work and for his patient replies to our many
queries.
Stacy Mosher and Guo Jian
October 1: The People’s Republic of China (PRC) is established.
April 17: The Shanxi provincial party committee submits a report advocating a cooperative “more advanced than the current mutual aid team” in the countryside, which Liu Shaoqi considers “an erroneous, dangerous, fantastical example of agricultural socialist thought.” Mao Zedong supports the Shanxi provincial party committee’s views and Gao Gang’s agricultural collective economy methods in the Northeast.
March 26: The Central Committee issues a resolution promoting mutual aid teams and the pooling of land for agricultural cooperatives.
October 16: An enlarged meeting of the CCP Central Committee passes the “Resolution Regarding the State Monopoly for Purchasing and Marketing.”
December: Centralized purchasing and marketing of grain commence nationwide.
December 27: The Xinhua News Agency reports that more than four hundred thousand agricultural cooperatives have been established throughout the country. Some peasants resist the new system.
March: Deng Zihui arrives in Zhejiang to rectify and consolidate the cooperatives.
July 31: Mao Zedong delivers his report “On the Question of Agricultural Cooperation,” criticizing the effort to shrink agricultural cooperatives and dismissing the concept of “rash advance.”
August 25: The State Council issues provisional measures for purchasing and marketing of grain in the countryside and setting grain supply quotas and a food ration system for urban residents.
September: Mao Zedong compiles Socialist Upsurge in China’s Countryside, published in December. His preface expresses pointed criticism of “right opportunism” and predicts doubled or tripled grain yields by 1967.
January: The Supreme State Conference passes “The Program for Agricultural Development from 1956 to 1967.” Agricultural minister Liao Luyan projects a total grain yield of 500 billion kilos in 1967. Mao says China will overtake the United States in steel production. State Council ministries hurriedly revise their targets for the Third Five-Year Plan (ending in 1967).
February 6: Zhou Enlai feels pressured by excessively high targets and points to the emergence of “rash advance.”
June 20: People’s Daily publishes an editorial revised and finalized by Liu Shaoqi, Lu Dingyi, and Hu Qiaomu entitled “It Is Necessary to Oppose Conservatism and Also Impetuousness.”
September 5–27: The political report of the Eighth National Party Congress states: “Our country’s main domestic contradiction is the contradiction between the people’s demands to establish an advanced industrial nation and the reality of a backward agricultural nation; it is the contradiction between the needs of the people for the rapid development of the economy and culture, and the present conditions under which the economy and culture cannot satisfy the people’s needs.”
December: By the end of 1956, 96.3 percent of the peasant population has joined cooperatives, and the socialist transformation of industry and business is completed. The abolishment of private ownership and the establishment of a comprehensive planned economic system allow the state to monopolize all means of production and all means of livelihood.
During this year, the Anti-Rightist Movement proceeds in the cities, while the Socialist Education Movement proceeds in the countryside. Ultimately more than six hundred thousand intellectuals are persecuted, and dissenting views are effectively eliminated.
Mid-April to late May: Peasants in twenty-nine of the thirty-three towns and villages in Zhejiang Province’s Xianju County demand to withdraw from or disband their cooperatives.
June 14: The CCP Central Committee and State Council handle mass starvation in Guangxi by disciplining and discharging twelve senior provincial leaders. Some replacement cadres are subsequently disciplined for blaming starving deaths on the Central Committee’s policies of collectivization and the state monopoly for grain purchasing and marketing.
October 9: During the enlarged Third Plenum of the Eighth CCP Central Committee, Mao Zedong criticizes those who oppose “rash advance” and overturns the resolution of the Eighth National Party Congress by declaring that the country’s main domestic contradiction is “between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie, and between the socialist road and the capitalist road.”
November: Mao Zedong leads a delegation to the International Congress of Communist and Workers’ Parties in Moscow, where he says that China will catch up with or surpass the United Kingdom in fifteen years.
A labor force of tens of millions is deployed to irrigation projects across the country. Small cooperatives are merged in line with Mao’s repeated endorsement of the “superiority of large cooperatives.”
January 11–22: The Nanning Conference continues criticism of opponents of “rash advance,” and Zhou Enlai undergoes self-criticism. The conference is followed by a new upsurge in “criticizing right deviation and struggling to leap forward.”
March–September: Luliang County, Yunnan Province, records 33,319 cases of edema, affecting 13 percent of the county’s residents and causing the deaths of 2.04 percent of the population.
March 9–26: At the Chengdu Conference, Mao Zedong is described as “in an invincibly advantageous position.” Zhou Enlai once again undergoes self-criticism and pronounces Mao “the representative of truth.”
April 7: The Central Committee issues “Opinions Regarding the Problem of Developing Local Industry,” leading to an upsurge of chaotic and unfocused industrial projects.
April 20: Chayashan Collective is formally established and on May 5 changes its name to become China’s first people’s commune.
May 5–23: The Second Session of the Eighth National Congress of the CCP passes a resolution to “unanimously endorse the CCP Central Committee’s General Line of ‘Go all out, aim high, and build socialism with greater, faster, better, and more economical results’ as proposed and recommended by Comrade Mao Zedong.”
May 29: People’s Daily publishes an editorial emphasizing speed as the “soul of the General Line.”
June 8: People’s Daily reports a per-mu yield of 1,007.5 kilograms of wheat at Sputnik Commune of Henan’s Suiping County, setting off waves of exaggerated reporting.
June 14: During a talk to the leading party group of the All-China Women’s Federation, Liu Shaoqi speaks of eliminating the family and establishing communal kitchens.
June 16: Missile scientist Qian Xuesen publishes “How High Will Grain Yields Be?” in China Youth Daily, convincing many who were previously skeptical of “Sputnik” grain yield reports.
June 17: In a report to the Central Committee, Bo Yibo says, “Apart from electrical power, all of our main industrial output will exceed that of the United Kingdom.” On June 22, Mao comments, “Surpassing the United Kingdom will not take fifteen years or seven years, but will only need two or three years, especially in steel production.”
June 19: A meeting of central leaders at the swimming pool of Mao’s Beijing residence leads to the launching of the great iron- and steel-forging campaign, which doubles the annual steel production target to 11 million tons.
June and July: A “purge of counterrevolutionary remnants” and a “counterattack against well-to-do middle peasants” in Shanghai’s Fengxian County is accompanied by arbitrary detentions and “struggle sessions.” Deep-plowing and irrigation campaigns involve around-the-clock labor, driven by verbal and physical abuse, resulting in 960 deaths.
July 1: Chen Boda introduces the concept of the people’s commune in an article in Red Flag magazine.
July 14–18: While on an inspection visit of Shouzhang County, Shandong Province, Liu Shaoqi accepts exaggerated crop-yield claims and praises the communes for “overpowering the scientists, who never dared to dream of what you have accomplished. This is revolution.”
July 19–August 6: Zhou Enlai makes inspection visits to Henan Province’s “wheat bumper harvest exhibitions,” where he endorses the claims of the Sputnik harvests and warmly praises Henan’s communal kitchens.
August: Liu Shaoqi sends people to Shouzhang County to gain a better understanding of high production levels there, and the investigation report proposes the slogan “Greater daring brings greater bearing.”
August 4: Mao makes an inspection visit of Xushui County and asks, “What will you do with so much extra food?”
August 6: A “Communist pilot project” is launched at Xushui under orders from the Central Committee, drawing 320,000 visitors from across the country and effectively launching the Communist Wind.
August 9: While inspecting Shandong Province, Mao says, “The people’s commune is good. Its advantage is in combining industry, agriculture, commerce, education, and the military for more convenient management.”
August 29: The enlarged Politburo meeting at Beidaihe passes the “Resolution Regarding the Establishment of People’s Communes in the Countryside” as a viable and quick transition to communism. By the end of October the number of rural communes has grown to 26,576, with an overall household participation rate of 99.1 percent.
September 10–29: Mao Zedong carries out inspection visits in several provinces. He endorses the practice of an Anhui commune that provides free meals to its members.
September 27: Liu Shaoqi promotes Jiangsu Province’s deployment of more than three million people in steelmaking: “They’ve put up shacks and gotten to work; their morale is high, and they don’t argue over trifles or wrangle over wages.”
September 30: During a visit to a Jiangsu commune, Liu Shaoqi endorses the grain supply system (as opposed to a wage system) and observes, “Not only have [the peasants] not become slackers, but they have experienced a boost to their morale and are even more passionate about production.”
October 25: A People’s Daily editorial promotes communal kitchens. Mao Zedong repeatedly endorses communal kitchens, which are established throughout the cities and countryside.
October 26: A “counterrevolutionary insurrection” arises at the Dasongshu New Village colliery in Yunnan’s Luquan County, followed by the arrest of 117 individuals, with 31 beaten to death and 50 sentenced to imprisonment.
November 2–10: The First Zhengzhou Conference affirms the current stage of socialism and collective ownership as the basis for the people’s communes.
November 21–27: The Wuchang Conference calls for suppression of unrealistic production targets, criticizes the trend toward wild exaggeration, acknowledges the need for pay according to work done, and proposes a pragmatic approach to economic matters.
November 25: Public security forces quell a “bandit rebellion” in Yunnan’s Zhaotong Prefecture that opposed communal kitchens and nurseries and around-the-clock hard labor.
November 28–December 10: The Sixth Plenum of the Eighth CCP Central Committee criticizes the Exaggeration Wind and utopian attempts to surpass the socialist phase, and calls for developing practical and realistic work styles.
December 6: A report by Yunnan’s Dehong prefectural party committee states that 14 percent of the population fled the prefecture’s border counties from January to November 20.
In the course of the year, China’s grain exports reach an all-time high, equivalent to 5 million tons of unprocessed grain, as compared to 200,000 tons of unprocessed grain imported. Large quantities of oil products, fresh eggs, meat, and fruit are also exported.
January: The “Guantao Incident” comes to light. Communal kitchens throughout Shandong’s Guantao County shut down or suspend operations as commune members forage for food or flee. Production grinds to a halt, mass starvation ensues, and many die.
January 27: The Guangdong provincial party committee submits a report stating that food shortages result from “false reporting of output and private withholding by the production teams and units.”
February: The State Planning Commission’s internal publication Jingji xiaoxi (Economic News) publishes an investigative report entitled “Is It a Food Shortage Problem or an Ideological Problem?,” which calls on all localities to criticize “right-deviating conservatives and apply themselves wholeheartedly to the current grain supply work.” Mao Zedong writes lengthy memos that give rise to a nationwide campaign against “false reporting of output and private withholding.”
February 27–March 5: At the Second Zhengzhou Conference, Mao Zedong proposes fourteen phrases for people’s commune ownership, which uphold production teams as the basic accounting unit and distribution according to work done, rectify indiscriminate distribution and excessive collectivization, and reaffirm the law of value and equal value exchange.
March: In Jining, Shandong Province, peasants eat wheat sprouts, tree bark, and chaff. Reports find 670,000 people suffering from edema, and many deaths.
March 25–April 5: An enlarged Politburo meeting and the Seventh Plenum of the Eighth Central Committee, both held in Shanghai, resolve to pay restitution on property affected by equal and indiscriminate transfer of resources. Steel output and other economic indicators are adjusted.
April 6: The State Council secretariat submits a report on food shortages in Shandong, Jiangsu, Henan, Hebei, and Anhui provinces, followed on April 9 by a statistical table on the spring famine in fifteen provinces, which states that more than twenty-five million people are without food. Mao and the Central Committee continue to consider the food shortages a localized and “temporary crisis,” and offer no letup on grain procurement.
April 18–25: The First Session of the Second National People’s Congress approves the 1959 National Economic Plan and formally announces the elevated economic targets.
April 29: Mao Zedong issues an “internal party memo” to all cadres from the provincial to production team level rectifying extremist views on output quota assignments, close-planting, economizing on food supplies, the size of cultivated areas, mechanization, and the need for truthful reporting.
May 7: The CCP Central Committee issues its “Urgent Directives on Agriculture,” addressing the sharp decrease in livestock with calls to combine individual rearing with collective rearing.
May 11: The Politburo approves Chen Yun’s proposal that 1959 steel production targets be lowered to 13 million tons.
June 11: The Central Committee issues a directive allowing commune households to resume raising livestock and fowl.
July 2–August 16: The Lushan Conference includes an enlarged Politburo meeting and the Eighth Plenum of the Eighth CCP Central Committee. The early phase of the enlarged Politburo meeting counters leftism; on July 14, Peng Dehuai writes a letter to Mao Zedong pointing out serious problems with the Great Leap Forward. On July 23, Mao delivers a speech attacking Peng. The Eighth Plenum passes a resolution against the “errors of the anti-party clique led by Comrade Peng Dehuai,” and another to “defend the party’s General Line and oppose right opportunism.”
August 30: The Central Committee transmits the Guizhou provincial party committee’s report on food supply and market conditions, which falsely claims that the food shortage has been completely resolved. Mao Zedong writes a lengthy memo linking the struggle against right deviation with the food supply issue.
October: A three-month campaign to “dig up grain and collect funds” is launched in Shanxi’s Shouyang County, during which 11,159 homes are ransacked and 3,116 people are subjected to physical abuse, resulting in at least 349 deaths.
October–April 1960: The “Xinyang Incident”: More than one million people starve to death in Henan’s Xinyang Prefecture.
Winter 1959 to spring 1960: The “Tongwei Incident”: Gansu’s Tongwei County loses a third of its population to starvation.
The number of starvation deaths in the Great Famine reaches its peak in spring during the gap in food supply between the planting and harvest seasons. Known cases of the disaster include the “Zunyi Incident” (in Guizhou Province), involving massive deaths and cannibalism, and the “Luoding Incident” (in Guangdong Province), during which more than seventeen thousand people die within a few months.
China exports more than 2.72 million tons of grain in the course of the year, along with large quantities of oil products, fresh eggs, meat, and fruit. Only 66,300 tons of grain are imported.
January 7–17: An enlarged Politburo meeting is held in Shanghai, during which 1960 is pronounced a Great Leap Forward year. The meeting proposes a three-year deadline for fulfilling the Forty-Point Program for Agricultural Development, and five years to surpass the United Kingdom, while at the same time organizing people’s communes in the urban areas and launching massive industrialization and irrigation projects. The Five Winds resume.
March 4: Mao Zedong and the Central Committee distribute a report by the Guizhou provincial party committee that extols communal kitchens and advocates eliminating plots of land for household cultivation.
March 18: The Central Committee recommends three reports with a memo from Mao Zedong calling for a focus on effective organization of communal kitchens.
March 24–25: Mao presides over an enlarged meeting of the Politburo standing committee in Tianjin, which discusses extending communal kitchens and people’s communes throughout the cities and countryside, making the iron and steel campaign more reliant on small enterprises, and bringing forward completion of the Forty-Point Program for Agricultural Development. The Tianjin Conference upholds the Three Red Banners while opposing the Communist Wind.
March 25: Massive starvation deaths in Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, known as the “Zhongning Incident,” come to light, and an autonomous region party committee work group carries out a massive purge in the Zhongning County party committee.
March 30–April 10: The Second Session of the Second National People’s Congress passes the “National Program for Agricultural Development 1956–1967” and the “Resolution to Strive to Bring About the National Program for Agricultural Development Ahead of Schedule.” People’s Daily publishes an editorial entitled “We Must and Can Continue Leaping Forward.”
May 28: A riot known as the Wanquantang Rebellion occurs in Sichuan’s Kai County. More than three hundred people are involved in looting shops, killing or wounding four party cadres and abducting sixteen others.
June: Rebellion, led in part by commune party secretaries, occurs in Jiangkou County, Guizhou Province. Following a military crackdown, the county head who opened the state granary for starving peasants commits suicide.
June 10–18: An enlarged Politburo meeting is held in Shanghai, during which Mao Zedong recommends lowering projected targets and stressing quality over quantity in iron and steel production. He writes a “Ten-Year Summary” in which he begins to reflect on the error of elevated production targets.
July 5–August 10: The Central Committee convenes a working conference at Beidaihe during which Sino-Soviet relations and domestic economic issues are discussed. The conference proposes adjustments to the national economy focusing on grain and steel production. It also calls for economizing and increasing exports.
July 6: The Central Committee advocates the development of food substitutes, and People’s Daily publishes an editorial entitled “Produce Large Quantities of Chlorella.”
July 16: The government of the Soviet Union tears up six hundred agreements with China and announces the withdrawal of its experts from the country. These agreements are not related to agriculture.
August: Li Fuchun, in charge of planning, proposes a policy of “rectification, consolidation, and enhancement” in response to the difficulties caused by the Great Leap Forward. His proposal is revised and formalized by Zhou Enlai into “adjustment, consolidation, replenishment, and enhancement.”
August 15: The Central Committee issues the “Directive on Ensuring the Fulfillment of the Grain Allocation and Transport Plan.”
September 7: The Central Committee issues the “Directive on Reducing Grain Ration Standards in the Countryside and Cities.”
October 23–26: Mao Zedong calls in regional leaders to hear their reports on agriculture. The discussion centers on how to rectify the Communist Wind. Wu Zhipu reports on the Xinyang Incident, which Mao attributes to “the inadequate thoroughness of the democratic revolution” at the local level.
November 3: The Central Committee issues the “Urgent Directive Regarding Current Policy Issues in the Rural People’s Communes” (also known as the “Twelve Agricultural Provisions”). This document rectifies leftist tendencies by emphasizing “three-level ownership, with production teams as the basic accounting unit,” but retains the communal kitchens.
November 10: The Central Committee convenes a national conference on food substitutes, followed by the launch of a nationwide campaign on November 14. Some peasants die from food poisoning and other effects of eating food substitutes.
November 15: After reading a report on the deployment of thousands of cadres to the countryside, Mao claims that scoundrels hold power in one-third of the regions, where incomplete revolution has resulted in starvation and cadre abuses.
November 16: The Central Committee endorses and transmits the “Summary of the Discussion on Resolutely Carrying out Autumn and Winter Food Supply Work at the National Conference on Financial and Economic Work.”
November 17: The Central Committee issues “Notice Regarding Immediately Focusing on Grain Allocation and Transport.”
December 24: A riot occurs at Adu Commune in Yunnan’s Xuanwei County and then spreads to other communes with calls for a “second land reform” that will return land to individual owners, the disbanding of communal kitchens, and resumption of free markets.
December 24–January 13, 1961: A Central Committee work conference discusses issues relating to the International Communist Movement and emphasizes rectification of the Five Winds and problems with the 1961 National Economic Plan.
Following the mass starvation deaths in 1960, grain imports are increased to nearly 5.81 million tons in 1961, while grain exports drop to 1.355 million tons.
January 14–18: The Ninth Plenum of the Eighth CCP Central Committee is held in Beijing, deciding on a national economic policy of “adjustment, consolidation, replenishment, and enhancement.”
January 18: Mao suggests making 1961 a year for investigating operational problems. On January 20 he sends out working groups headed by Chen Boda and others to carry out investigation and research in Zhejiang, Guangdong, and Hunan.
March: While in Guangzhou, Mao presides over the drafting of the “Work Regulations for Rural People’s Communes” (known as the Sixty Agricultural Provisions).
March 28: Anhui’s first party secretary, Zeng Xisheng, convenes a meeting of the provincial party standing committee to decide on implementing “responsibility fields.” The practice is to spread throughout the country and become the most effective means of saving peasant lives at the time.
April 19: With Mao’s permission, a Central Committee investigation group convenes a mass rally in Shaoshan (Mao’s hometown in Hunan Province) to announce the disbanding of the communal kitchens. Commune members rejoice.
April 26: The Central Committee transmits a letter by Hu Qiaomu and four related documents that formally advocate disbanding the communal kitchens.
May 21–June 12: The Central Committee convenes a working conference in Beijing to discuss questions raised by Mao on investigation and research, the mass line, restitution, and rehabilitation. The conference discusses and approves the revised Sixty Agricultural Provisions, effectively terminating the system of communal kitchens.
August 23–September 16: The Second Lushan Conference discusses food supply issues, market issues, the Two-Year Plan and industrial issues, and the management of industrial enterprises. Mao estimates that the economy reached its lowest point in 1961 and that the situation will improve from this point on.
November 10: At a conference of regional bureaus, the Central Committee ascertains grain procurement issues. Deng Xiaoping emphasizes the importance of ideology in the rectification of work styles, and the conference decides that procurement targets must be fulfilled without haggling.
January 11–February 7: At the Seven Thousand Cadres Conference, Liu Shaoqi sums up the party’s shortcomings and errors in economic construction since 1958 and proposes the formulation of “three parts natural disaster and seven parts man-made disaster.” Mao Zedong engages in self-criticism.
February 21–23: An enlarged Politburo standing committee meeting (the “Xilou Conference”) is convened in the Zhongnanhai compound. Chen Yun delivers a grim prognosis of the economic situation. Subsequent enlarged State Council and Politburo standing committee meetings propose measures to further adjust the economy and surmount existing difficulties. Mao Zedong, absent from all these meetings, agrees with the majority views and endorses Liu Shaoqi’s recommendation to appoint Chen Yun head of the Central Committee Finance Committee but believes it is wrong to paint a “uniformly bleak” picture of the situation.
April–May: In Guangdong Province, more than 110,000 people attempt to steal across the border to Hong Kong. Of the 60,000 who reach Hong Kong, 40,000 are deported back to mainland China.
Spring and summer: More than sixty thousand residents of the border areas of Xinjiang’s Ili Kazakh Autonomous Prefecture flee to the Soviet Union with their families, livestock, farming implements, and vehicles.
May 7–11: Liu Shaoqi presides over a Central Committee work conference, subsequently referred to as the “May Conference.” Discussion focuses on documents arising out of the Xilou Conference and subsequent meetings, and a plan is drawn up to restructure the economy along the lines of “emergency measures for times of emergency.”
July: Tian Jiaying, Chen Yun, Deng Zihui, and others discuss assignment of production to households with Mao; Mao insists on maintaining a collective economy. Afterward, at his swimming pool, Mao asks Liu Shaoqi, “Why can’t you keep things under control?” Liu retorts, “History will record the role you and I played in the starvation of so many people, and the cannibalism will also be memorialized!”
July 25–August 24: The Central Committee holds a work conference at Beidaihe. On August 6, Mao Zedong delivers a speech on class, criticizing the “wind of gloom,” the “individual-farming wind,” and the “verdict-reversing wind,” and calling for maintaining the Marxist-Leninist course through daily discussion of class struggle.
September 24–27: The Tenth Plenum of the Eighth CCP Central Committee is held in Beijing. The report of the plenum announces, “Throughout the entire history of proletarian revolution and dictatorship of the proletariat, and throughout the entire transition from capitalism to communism (this period requires several decades or even longer) there exists a class struggle between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie, and a struggle between the two roads of socialism and capitalism.”
The “Four Clean-ups” (siqing) Movement, focusing on purging capitalist roaders within the party, takes place.
The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution results from intensified internal divisions and struggles between the government’s “pragmatists” and “idealists.” The Cultural Revolution takes the standpoints of the idealists to a destructive extreme. The failure of the Cultural Revolution leads to a reversal that engenders the economic reforms launched at the end of 1978.
I originally intended to title this book The Road to Paradise, but eventually changed it to Tombstone. I had four reasons for choosing this title: the first is to erect a tombstone for my father, who died of starvation in 1959; the second is to erect a tombstone for the thirty-six million Chinese who died of starvation; and the third is to erect a tombstone for the system that brought about the Great Famine. The fourth came to me while I was halfway through writing this book, when a temporary health scare spurred me to complete the book as a tombstone for myself. Although my health concerns were subsequently put to rest, the risk involved in undertaking this project might yet justify its serving as my own tombstone. But, of course, my main intentions are the first three.
A tombstone is memory made concrete. Human memory is the ladder on which a country and a people advance. We must remember not only the good things, but also the bad; the bright spots, but also the darkness. The authorities in a totalitarian system strive to conceal their faults and extol their merits, gloss over their errors and forcibly eradicate all memory of man-made calamity, darkness, and evil. For that reason, the Chinese are prone to historical amnesia imposed by those in power. I erect this tombstone so that people will remember and henceforth renounce man-made calamity, darkness, and evil.
At the end of April 1959, I was spending my after-school hours assembling a May Fourth Youth Day wall newspaper1 for my school’s Communist Youth League. My childhood friend Zhang Zhibai suddenly arrived from our home village of Wanli and told me, “Your father is starving to death! Hurry back, and take some rice if you can.” He said, “Your father doesn’t even have the strength to strip bark from the trees—he’s starved beyond helping himself. He was headed to Jiangjiayan to buy salt to make saltwater, but he collapsed on the way, and some people from Wanli carried him home.”