{"id":29446,"date":"2008-12-08T18:02:52","date_gmt":"2008-12-09T01:02:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/?p=29446"},"modified":"2008-12-08T20:25:07","modified_gmt":"2008-12-09T03:25:07","slug":"chinas-long-march-from-mao-to-modernity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/2008\/12\/chinas-long-march-from-mao-to-modernity\/","title":{"rendered":"China’s Long March from Mao to Modernity"},"content":{"rendered":"
This month marks thirty years since the launch of China’s reform and opening policy. For Reuters<\/a>, Jonathan Sharp remembers reporting from China just before the reforms, at the tail end of the Cultural Revolution:<\/p>\n \nThe worst excesses of the Cultural Revolution that broke out in 1966 and formally ended in 1976 were over. In fact Beijing-based foreign reporters in the early 1970s wrote about the Cultural Revolution as if it finished in 1969, and they were not corrected by their minders in the Foreign Ministry.<\/p>\n But the decidedly un-comradely battle which foreign observers believed was being fought out between hardliners and moderates was still going full tilt.<\/p>\n According to those attempting to read the Chinese tea leaves, this conflict pitted hard-left firebrands led by Jiang Qing, wife of the increasingly enfeebled Mao Zedong, and a more moderate group, presumed to be led by Premier Zhou Enlai.<\/p>\n And Jiang and her cohorts, later demonised as the Gang of Four, appeared to be winning.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n