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ChinaтАЩs youth are embracing Mao’s message

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They read him in libraries and on subways. They organized online book clubs devoted to his works. They uploaded hours of audio and video, spreading the gospel of his revolutionary thinking.

Chairman Mao is making a comeback among ChinaтАЩs Generation Z. The Communist PartyтАЩs supreme leader, whose decades of nonstop political campaigns cost millions of lives, is inspiring and comforting disaffected people born long after his death in 1976. To them, Mao Zedong is a hero who speaks to their despair as struggling nobodies.

In a modern China grappling with widening social inequality, MaoтАЩs words provide justification for the anger many young people feel toward a business class they see as exploitative. They want to follow in his footsteps and change Chinese society тАФ and some have even talked about violence against the capitalist class if necessary.

The Mao fad lays bare the paradoxical reality facing the party, which celebrated the centenary of its founding last week. Under President Xi Jinping, the party has made itself central to nearly every aspect of Chinese life. It claims credit for the economic progress the country has made and tells the Chinese people to be grateful.

At the same time, economic growth is weakening and opportunities for young people are dwindling. The party has nobody else to blame for a growing wealth gap, unaffordable housing and a lack of labor protections. It must find a way to placate or tame this new generation of Maoists that it helped create, or it could face challenges in governing.

тАЬThe new generation is lost in this divided society, so they will look for keys to the problems,тАЭ a Maoist blogger wrote on the WeChat social media platform. тАЬIn the end, theyтАЩll definitely find Chairman Mao.тАЭ

In interviews and online posts, many young people said they could relate to MaoтАЩs analysis of Chinese society as a constant class struggle between the oppressed and their oppressors.

тАЬLike many young people, IтАЩm optimistic about the countryтАЩs future but pessimistic about my own,тАЭ said Du Yu, 23, who is suffering from burnout from his last job as an editor at a blockchain startup in the tech-obsessed Chinese city of Shenzhen. MaoтАЩs writing, he said, тАЬoffers spiritual relief to small-town youth like me.тАЭ

Military band members practice before the event marking the 100th founding anniversary of the Communist Party of China, in front of a portrait of late Chinese chairman Mao Zedong on Beijing's Tiananmen Square on July 1. | REUTERS
Military band members practice before the event marking the 100th founding anniversary of the Communist Party of China, in front of a portrait of late Chinese chairman Mao Zedong on BeijingтАЩs Tiananmen Square on July 1. | REUTERS

Chinese technology workers are often expected to work 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. six days a week, a practice so common that they call it тАЬ996.тАЭ DuтАЩs schedule was worse. After he slept only five hours over three days late last year, his heart raced, he was short of breath and he grew sluggish. He quit shortly after. He hasnтАЩt looked for a job in three months and seldom ventures outside. A doctor diagnosed mild depression.

тАЬMost of my peers I know still want to succeed,тАЭ Du said. тАЬWeтАЩre simply against exploitation and meaningless striving.тАЭ

While Mao never went away, he was once out of fashion. In the 1980s, as freedom and free markets became buzz words, young people turned to books by Friedrich Nietzsche, Jean-Paul Sarter and Milton Friedman. Studying Mao was required in school, but many students blew off those lessons. After the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, martial arts novels and books by successful entrepreneurs dominated bestseller lists.

But China has become fertile ground for a Mao renaissance.

Nominally a socialist country, China is one of the worldтАЩs most unequal. Some 600 million Chinese, or 43% of the population, earn a monthly income of only about $150. Many young people believe they canтАЩt break into the middle class or outearn their parents. The lack of upward social mobility has made them question the purity of the party, which they believe is too tolerant of the capitalist class.

The partyтАЩs growing presence in everyday life has also opened doors for Maoism. Intensifying indoctrination under Xi has turned the youth both more nationalistic and more immersed in communist ideology.

тАЬDying for the country? Yes,тАЭ goes one online slogan. тАЬDying for the capitalists? Never!тАЭ

New catchphrases among the young reveal this Mao-friendly mindset. With wages stagnant, young people talk about a тАЬconsumption downgrade.тАЭ Their employers work them so hard that they call themselves тАЬwage slaves,тАЭ тАЬcorporate cattleтАЭ and тАЬovertime dogs.тАЭ A growing number are saying they would rather become slackers, using the Chinese phrase тАЬtang ping,тАЭ or тАЬlie flat.тАЭ

People eat in front of an image of late Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong at a restaurant in Shaoshan, in China's central Hunan province, on May 26. | AFP-JIJI
People eat in front of an image of late Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong at a restaurant in Shaoshan, in ChinaтАЩs central Hunan province, on May 26. | AFP-JIJI

Those attitudes have helped make the five volumes of тАЬThe Selected Works of Mao ZedongтАЭ popular again. Photos of fashionably dressed young people reading the books on subways, at the airports and in cafes are circulating online. Students at the Tsinghua University library in Beijing borrowed the book more than any others in both 2019 and 2020, according to the libraryтАЩs official WeChat account.

тАЬIтАЩll definitely reread the тАШSelected WorksтАЩ again and again in the future,тАЭ a young blogger named Mukangcheng wrote on Douban, a Chinese social media service focused on books, film and other media. тАЬIt has the power to make a person searching in darkness see the light. It makes my weak soul strong and broadens my narrow worldview.тАЭ

Mukangcheng, who declined to give me his real name, uses an email account named тАЬLeft Left.тАЭ His portrait is a red Mao badge. His posts concern high pork prices and lack of money for his phone bills. In 2018, when he visited the site of the Communist PartyтАЩs first national congress in Shanghai, he wrote on the visitorsтАЩ book, quoting Mao, тАЬNever forget class struggle!тАЭ

Others commenting online about тАЬSelected WorksтАЭ said they saw themselves in the young Mao, an educated village youth from a backwater province trying to make it in the early 1900s in the big city then known as Peking. They usually call Mao тАЬteacher,тАЭ a term he preferred to call himself.

Many social media users like to quote the first sentence of the first volume. тАЬWho are our enemies? Who are our friends?тАЭ Mao wrote in 1925. тАЬThis is a question of the first importance for the revolution.тАЭ

Many say their biggest enemies are the capitalists who exploit them. The biggest target of their ire is Jack Ma, the co-founder of the Alibaba e-commerce empire. He was once cheered as the embodiment of the Chinese dream. Now they jeer at his comments supporting the 996 work culture and saying business itself is the biggest philanthropy.

тАЬWorkers are only moneymaking tools for people like him,тАЭ said Xu Yang, 19, who went as far as to say people like Ma тАЬneed to be eliminated physically and spiritually.тАЭ Ma later walked back his remarks, saying he wanted only to pay tribute to workers who put in long hours out of love for their jobs.

Similar online calls for violence against capitalists тАФ such as the French RevolutionтАЩs cry to hang the aristocrats from lampposts, тАЬa la lanterne!тАЭ тАФ go uncensored on ChinaтАЩs internet.

Statues of late Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong are seen at a factory in Shaoshan, in China's central Hunan province, on May 27. | AFP-JIJI
Statues of late Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong are seen at a factory in Shaoshan, in ChinaтАЩs central Hunan province, on May 27. | AFP-JIJI

Xu, a high school graduate in southern Zhejiang province who wants to major in fashion design in college, said he read Mao because he wanted to change China for the better. The portrait on his Douban account is an old poster of Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin and Mao with the slogan, тАЬLong live Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought!тАЭ тАЬA revolutionary proletarian soldier,тАЭ his bio reads.

The Maoist youthsтАЩ anti-establishment sentiment doesnтАЩt stop at the capitalist class. The radical ones are also questioning why the party allowed deepening social inequality.

тАЬDidnтАЩt the proletariat win the revolution?тАЭ Xu asked. тАЬBut why are the masters of the country now at the bottom while the targets of the proletarian dictatorship are on top? What has gone wrong?тАЭ

After a classmate introduced MaoтАЩs books to him last year, Xu sought out dark facts about China by using software to visit censored websites. He learned how the Chinese government had crushed the efforts of young Marxist activists to help workers organize labor unions and arrested a meal-delivery worker who organized his peers to seek better labor rights protection.

тАЬThe bureaucracy and the capital are highly integrated,тАЭ he said. тАЬOur rebellion is unlikely to stop at the capitalists.тАЭ

The government is wary of the intensifying sentiment and has begun censoring some Maoist posts and discussions. A widely circulated and since-deleted article analyzed why MaoтАЩs revolution was unlikely to succeed in China today. The reasons: government surveillance and background screening.

тАЬPeople like Mao could write in newspapers 100 years ago,тАЭ Xu said. тАЬNow if we make any loud noises, we could disappear instantly.тАЭ

Images of Chinese President Xi Jinping and late communist leader Mao Zedong are displayed at a hotel in the city of Nyingtri, in China's Tibet Autonomous Region, on June 4. | AFP-JIJI
Images of Chinese President Xi Jinping and late communist leader Mao Zedong are displayed at a hotel in the city of Nyingtri, in ChinaтАЩs Tibet Autonomous Region, on June 4. | AFP-JIJI

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