U569 Modern Inner Mongolia
Lecture, Tuesday, Week 13
Roots of the Cultural Revolution
Environment of violence: campaigns, the work units, class struggle
Campaigns>>winners/losers>>legacy of suppressed hatred
Chinese work unit system: units control housing, records, transfers
Moving out of work units very difficult
Former campaign opponents like "scorpions in a jar"
Class struggle rhetoric: encouraged ruthless destruction of enemies
Question: who is part of the people, who is not
Call for intra-party class struggle>>anything goes
Educational tensions
Revolution brought un-intellectual rurals into high position
Educational system highly competitive (1 out of 20-40 to college)
Question: would un-intellectual cadres be able to hand on their positions?
"Red" vs. "Expert": how much inefficiency tolerated for class solidarity?
Leadership tensions: Mao vs. Liu Shaoqi, Deng Xiaoping
Liu built up Mao cult in 1940s Rectification Campaign
1960: Liu replaces Mao as Head of State (Mao still party chair)
Wulanfu allied with Liu Shaoqi and his deputy Deng Xiaoping
1966: CR group: Lin Biao (PLA), Kang Sheng (Security), Jiang Qing (wife)
Ideology and Minority Policy: why Maoists hated minority autonomy
Mao's views: anti-intellectual agrarian anarchism (Daoist?)
Leftist/Maoist position intensely hostile to cultural diversity & hierarchy
Campaigns build on small-group uniformity
Utopian achievement of "great unity"
Minority cadres generally of bad class background
Minority policy>>limits on Han cadre promotion
Minority students favored in college, hurt Han cadre children
Leftist line associated with intense Chinese nationalism
Sino-Soviet polemics extremely intense: "Soviet revisionists"
MPR on Soviet side, attacks "Maoist chauvinism"
Minority autonomy associated with legacy of Soviet imitation
Minority cadres in IM and Xinjiang had strong Soviet ties
Conflict over terms: Chinese or Russian
Criticism of "Flowers in the Snow": not harsh enough
Wulanfu holds on
Cultural revolution beings early 1966: red guards set up
Wave of systematic vandalism; encouraged by targets as diversion
Wulanfu is IM's main target, resigns in May, 1966
Wulanfu's crony's survive in power to January 1967
Supported by Mongol cadre/intellectual alliance
Wulanfu supporters>>"conservative faction"
Opponents: recent immigrants, Han "red" classes>>"rebel faction"
Due to Wulanfu's strength, "conservative," "rebel" opposite to rest of China
Shanghai commune, rebellion, and almost civil war, 1967
In Shanghai, "bad class" red guards challenge "good class" red guards, "rebels" start
In IM, exactly opposite, "good class" red guards overthrow "bad class" red guards
Through 1967-1968 develops into red guard civil war, PLA involved
Finally, Mao cans it, sends all red guards to countryside
Revolutionary Committees formed; heavy PLA influence
IM: new chief, Teng Haiqing, new PLA commander, Revcom head
Decapitating the Mongols: New Nei-Ren-Dang case and "redrawing class lines"
New winners pursue vengeance against Mongols who had blocked them
Some Mongol allies, e.g. writer Ulaanbagana, new poor cadres
Nei Nei-Ren-Dang case: Wulanfu was secret PRPIM supporter
Served to wipe out Mongol cadres, virtually all labeled counter-rev
Struggle avoided "dead tigers," looked for hidden cases
Redrawing class lines
In Shili-yin Gool, Hulun Buir, had been no class struggle>>communes
Here, class lines drawn retrospectively
Elsewhere past compromises rejected, aim to make Mongols landlords
Throughout, titular autonomy policy retained
Mao's works, newspapers in Mongolian language
Mongolian schooling removed where it could be elsewhere left alone
Preferential policy for Mongols hurt Han cadres
Redrawing Inner Mongolia's borders: 1969-1979
1969: Height of Sino-Soviet war scare
Inner Mongolia (and military regions) shrunk, only center left to IMAR
Increased military control, strategic depth, in case of Soviet invasion
Eased immigration in areas given to provinces
Reduced percentage of Mongols in IM (~7%)