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China Witness: Voices from a Silent Generation

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NEW YORK: PANTHEON, 2009
448 PAGES, ISBN: 978-0375425479, HARDCOVER

Reviewed by John F. Copper

There is no shortage of history about China. In fact, there are more publications written about China than all other countries in the world combined prior to about a hundred and fifty years ago. However, books written about China’s past are almost exclusively about past dynasties and interpretations of them by present rulers. More recent historians, and even Western scholars, write about war, politics, economics—they seldom talk to ordinary people or look at history from their perspective.

China Witness is an account of bits of China’s past that might otherwise have become history lost. In fact, the author feared there was much about China the younger generation would never know or understand—especially the past generation’s struggle for China’s national dignity. That fear motivated Xinran to write this book.

Indeed, countless Chinese sacrificed everything in the Cultural Revolution. Many now are mocked for their “misplaced loyalty.” Many, of course, died or were otherwise victimized and are forgotten. The numbers are staggering, and so are the sad stories.

Xinran could only scratch the surface. She wrote from notes that she took after interviews, mainly with older people throughout China in 2005 and 2006. She spoke to twenty people whose ages averaged in the 70s. Some were famous, but most were not. From what they told her, Xinran wove a picture that few Chinese or outsiders have seen.

The author is eminently qualified to write about the neglected people of China. She was born in China. She is an accomplished writer, having authored two successful books on China, The Good Women of China and Sky Burial. In both, she demonstrated that she knows the Chinese soul. Working as a foreign journalist for a number of years, she also demonstrated that she can explain China to the West.

Xinran traveled from east-central China to the north, to the east and to south China. She spent considerable time in minority areas and places that are usually left out of Chinese history. She interviewed a number of women who tell of the sorrow and tribulations their families experienced. She talked to one local heroine called “Double-Gun Woman,” whose fame was for her a double-edged sword. She spoke to a “news singer,” a profession now gone in China.

During her travels, the author learns about the world’s largest prison from local people in Xinjiang Province in the northwest. They told her that Mao sent 200,000 Nationalist troops there after he came to power, plus perhaps 300,000 others for “reform through education.” His real purpose, Xinran was told, was to transform the predominantly Muslim and Caucasian area into a predominantly Chinese area. The interviewees said that during this time, in the early to mid-1950s, Mao might have been preparing for a future when China’s relations would soon deteriorate with the Soviet Union, which indeed happened.

Cover of "China Witness"Xinran interviewed a person who went on the Chinese Communist Party’s epic long march. She asked him if the march was really as long as claimed, and if there were as many battles as reported. He confirmed the official version of the event, but he also mentioned that there was a sad ending for most of those who survived. Many were left in the countryside when the top party members went to Beijing. Many were later purged during party factional struggles; some even became enemies of the state. Some even became scapegoats for Mao’s failed policies.

The author delves into the private lives of Chinese. She read love letters between a young couple that revealed how they viewed their relationship. They were supposed to be politically compatible, and they wrote of this. But underneath this façade they had deep feelings of love for each other—something they did not want to speak of, but understood.

Xinran writes of the life of a woman who grew up and was educated in the United States, and returned to China after it was “liberated,” to help the communist cause. The author notes her extreme devotion and utter disappointment. She writes of a policeman who had inside information about decisions made at the top. The policeman spoke of how local officials acted according to their own whims, sometimes based on cruelty and jealousy, while “following instructions from above.”

In the concluding chapter of China Witness, Xinran talks to Chinese students who offer their help and want to tell about their own parents and grandparents. Her ending thought in the book is the song “Dyed with my Blood” and the appropriateness of China’s flag being red.

China Witness is interesting and instructive, easy to read, and presents a side of Chinese history not available in other books. It gives the reader a unique human side to the past. It is recommended for high school students, undergraduate, and even graduate students in the US, who unfortunately know so little of a nation that will have more influence on our future than any other, and one that does not fit it into the mold of multiculturalism and political correctness.