2015 China
13 March,
Chaozhou
Home Inn 168CNY
We
overslept in our windowless room, awaking after 10h00. So we were late
backtracking via Shantou, through which we had passed yesterday, to the
Cultural Revolution Museum at the top of one of the hills in pretty Tashan
Park. This museum, founded and funded privately, is the only one in all of
China to honour victims of the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976) during which
over a million people were murdered or hounded into committing suicide. The
revolution’s stated goal was to preserve communist ideology and purge “remnants
of capitalist and traditional elements from Chinese society”. At Mao’s urging,
China’s youth formed the Red Guard, carried Mao’s Little Red Book of quotations, and
persecuted millions of people, displacing large segments of the population
during the Down to the Countryside Movement. “Historical relics and artifacts
were destroyed. Cultural and religious sites were ransacked.” Although the
Party subsequently “declared that the Cultural Revolution was ‘responsible for the most
severe setback and the heaviest losses suffered by the Party, the country, and
the people since the founding of the People's Republic’”, discussion and
analysis of the Cultural Revolution is discouraged in China. We were pleased,
therefore, to find that this museum exists. Despite the lack of English
captions, many of the etched photographs were disturbing, and told their own
wordless tale.
(Quotes
from Wikipedia)
Cultural Revolution Museum
Cultural Revolution Museum - burning books
Cultural Revolution Museum - denunciation
Cultural Revolution Museum - denunciation
Cultural Revolution Museum - denunciation
Cultural Revolution Museum - denunciation
Chaozhou
Chaozhou
Chaozhou - Guangji bridge
Chaozhou - Guangji bridge