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GeneChing
10-10-2011, 09:58 AM
A few of our staff have returned to Taiwan to celebrate. I'm hoping to celebrate by seeing 1911 (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=58231) sometime this week.


Awkward Anniversary: China Marks the Centenary of the 1911 Revolution (http://globalspin.blogs.time.com/2011/10/10/awkward-anniversary-china-marks-the-centenary-of-1911-revolution/)
Posted by Hannah Beech Monday, October 10, 2011 at 4:06 am

In a country that claims five millennia of history, what's a mere century? Oct. 10 marks the 100th anniversary of the start of China's 1911 Xinhai Revolution, which ended 2,000 years of imperial rule. The fall of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) was precipitated by an uprising in the central Chinese city of Wuchang (now part of Wuhan) that eventually led to the formation of a Chinese republic under the tenuous leadership of Sun Yat-sen.

This milestone was celebrated on Sunday by China's leaders, who gathered under a massive portrait of Sun, the so-called founder of modern China whose republic was soon engulfed by warlord battles, struggles between the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the Kuomintang, plus the Japanese invasion during World War II. At the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, President Hu Jintao proclaimed that the 1911 event was “a thoroughly modern, national and democratic revolution.” Xinhua, China's state-run news agency, opined that “the 1911 Revolution not only rid Chinese men of humiliating ponytails and women of the excruciatingly painful foot-binding, but also removed the people's blind faith in the emperor, as well as fear of foreign powers. The event has since been emancipating people's minds from thousands of years of oppression and self-enclosure.” (Sunday's televised ceremony was also notable for the appearance of retired leader Jiang Zemin, Hu's 85-year-old predecessor, who had missed a July celebration of the Chinese Communist Party's 90th anniversary, leading to rumors about his illness or even death.)

Imperial China may have officially come to an end in 1911. But is the 62-year-rule of the Chinese Communist Party akin to that of another dynasty whose “mandate of heaven” is being challenged? In his excellent book The Party, Richard McGregor notes that China's secretive leadership is bereft of ideology but is highly skilled at ensuring its own survival. As a result, the material gains made in the past two decades have turned China into the world's second-largest economy. But inequality and corruption have proliferated, too. The biggest scandals in China today tend to either involve errant officials—grabbing land from peasants or money from state coffers—or misbehaving fuerdai, the coddled “second-generation rich” who have acted with impunity in traffic accidents and other intersections with society.

And no matter what lip service Hu paid to 1911 as a “democratic revolution,” democracy in China is a dream deferred. The political upheavals in the Middle East and North Africa have spooked China's leaders, who have unleashed a human-rights crackdown that has netted everyone from artists and dissidents to journalists and lawyers. Even attempts in recent weeks by some independent candidates to run for local People's Congress positions—something that is allowed by law—have been foiled by official interference.

By contrast, little Taiwan—where the Communists' enemy, the Kuomintang, fled in 1949—has transformed from an island cowering under martial law to a functioning democracy. Taiwan, which calls itself the Republic of China, has long labeled Oct. 10 “National Day.” For decades, Beijing ignored the date, celebrating Oct 1, when the Communist People's Republic of China was officially founded, as its “National Day.” But in recent years, Xinhai fervor has been authorized in China, albeit with some constraints. Sunday's festivities in Beijing were splashed across the front pages of state newspapers, but they paled in comparison to those of Oct 1. A portrait of Sun may have been temporarily placed in Tiananmen Square near the permanent, iconic image of Chairman Mao Zedong, the founder of the People's Republic; but an opera commemorating Sun was cancelled at the last-minute for “logistical reasons” in Beijing, presumably because his life hardly conformed to an idealized Communist storybook. One of Sun's political philosophies, for instance, was the Three Principles of the People: nationalism, democracy and the people's welfare. Sun died in 1925, and his legacy is claimed by both Taipei and Beijing. But the Chinese leadership hasn't gone out of its way to highlight the democracy part of Sun's vision.

In his Oct. 9 speech, Hu called for China's peaceful reunification with Taiwan. A day later, Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou rebuffed any such political union for now and instead urged Beijing to emulate Taiwan's democratic reforms. But there's one aspect of the Qing's dying days that is rarely mentioned in China. The Oct. 10 uprising that signaled the end of China's imperial tradition happened in part because of ideas that flourished during a reformist era led by certain members of the Qing court. Beijing's rulers are thought to have learned the same lesson from perestroika and the dissolution of the Soviet Union: reforms can bring troublesome consequences. For the Chinese Communist Party, birthed during political upheaval yet ruling for more than six decades, revolution isn't quite what it used to be.

David Jamieson
10-11-2011, 07:41 AM
Cool that it coincided with Canadian Thanksgiving this year.
There were people wondering why the Chinese restaurants were filled with Chinese folk celebrating Thanksgiving in a non traditional way. lol

GeneChing
10-11-2011, 09:44 AM
...or as we call it 'round our parts here, Native American Day...;)


Taiwan, China Warily Celebrate Centennial (http://www.npr.org/2011/10/10/141209480/taiwan-china-warily-celebrate-centennial)
by The Associated Press
October 10, 2011

Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou urged China's government on Monday to pursue democracy and respect his island's self-governance as the two sides mark the centennial of a revolution that ended 2,000 years of imperial Chinese rule.

Both Taiwan and China — which split amid civil war in 1949 — commemorate the Oct. 10, 1911, start of an uprising against the Qing dynasty as a seminal event, and both have sought to use the centennial as an opportunity for dialogue.

But Taiwanese authorities have rejected suggestions to jointly host events, fearing that Beijing will use them to highlight its "one-China principle" that places the island under mainland rule.

On the eve of the centenary, Chinese President Hu Jintao made an appeal in Beijing for the two sides to move beyond the history that divides them and work together to achieve a peaceful reunification. Taiwanese are wary of those calls, fearing they may lose their freedoms and democracy if they are reunited.

At a ceremony in front of the presidential office building, Ma said the Beijing government "must not forget the ideals of our founding father and should move boldly toward freedom, democracy and the fair distribution of wealth."

His brief speech was followed by an hourlong arms display in which jet fighters flew in ranks over the spacious square and tanks and missile-carrying trucks rumbled past. Pilots in red jumpsuits parachuted from helicopters in front of Ma.

China's centenary commemorations have had clear political and nationalistic undertones, but Taiwanese public interest in the event has been lukewarm. Most Taiwanese don't want to come under China's control, and don't see the events of 100 years ago as particularly relevant to their future.

The ceremony marks the centennial of an armed uprising led by rebels associated with revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen on a Qing dynasty garrison. The attack set in motion events that led to the overthrow of imperial rule and raised hopes that China could emerge from more than a century of national humiliation at the hands of foreign powers.

The Republic of China was established after 2 1/2 months. It later fled in disarray to Taiwan in 1949 following the victory of Mao Zedong's Communists over Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists in the Chinese civil war.

China regards Taiwan as part of its territory and threatens to invade should it seek formal independence.

Under Ma's initiative, Taiwan has moved closer to China economically but has refused any political dialogue to settle the island's future.

China's president said Sunday that the two sides should work together to achieve the "great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation."

"Achieving reunification by peaceful means best serves the fundamental interests of all Chinese, including our Taiwan compatriots," Hu said.

Ma did not respond to Hu's call, but instead urged China to "respect history and recognize the existence of the Republic of China."

David Jamieson
10-11-2011, 11:36 AM
Columbus day should be celebrated by walking into some random person's home and telling them that you live there now. :)

GeneChing
10-13-2011, 09:27 AM
I caught a little of The Revolution of 1911, a 12-part series to commemorate the 100th Anniversary of the Revolution of 1911, on CCTV last night. Follow this link (http://cctv.cntv.cn/lm/journeysintime/special/1911revolution/index.shtml) - looks like CCTV will post the whole series. This might be good prep before watching Jackie's new 1911 (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=58231) film. Imagine that - a Jackie film that needs a preparatory history lesson.

Any members in China now? Love to hear what the anniversary looks like from that perspective. Here there's barely a whimper.