"Page0030" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bloom Howard - The Lucifer Principle (htm))24 24 s tudents were wounded with stones, blades and explosives. The more the blood flowed, the angrier each group became. One Red Guard faction came across a lone member of the rival gang on campus, dragged him to an empty dorm room, tied him up, and interrogated him, searching for the secrets to their adversaries' weak points. The captured student at first refused to talk. The interrogators beat him with a chair leg. They snared another student and hung him from the ceiling of the room for days. Yet another, they bludgeoned with a poker. This time, they made a mistake. The poker had a sharp projection at the end which punctured the imprisoned student's skin every time it struck. When the questioning session was over, the student's legs were bleeding profusely. He died a few hours later. Why had the tormentors used so much force? Their captive was a traitor to the precepts of Chairman Mao. The Chairman himself had said that revolution is not a dinner party. Sometimes it was hard to remember that the person hanging from the rafters had sat three chairs away from you in homeroom since the two of you were little kids. The commitment of students on both sides to the words of Mao was passionate. They spat phrases from the Great Leader like machine gun bullets, ferocious in their devotion to "dialectic truth." But in reality, the Maoist ideology--with its noble goal of liberating humanity--was being used by one Red Guard faction to seize power from another. Idealism transformed the rapacity of the students into a sense of selfless zeal. The Cultural Revolution threw China into chaos. Finally, the military took control of the country and restored order. The Red Guard members were drafted as they came of age. The teenagers who had fought each other went their separate ways. Gao Yuan entered military service, then studied in Peking. He met an American girl, moved to the U.S., and wrote a book about his experience--Born Red. Not long after, others who had suffered through the Cultural Revolution would pen memoirs revealing even greater horrors. 24 24 s tudents were wounded with stones, blades and explosives. The more the blood flowed, the angrier each group became. One Red Guard faction came across a lone member of the rival gang on campus, dragged him to an empty dorm room, tied him up, and interrogated him, searching for the secrets to their adversaries' weak points. The captured student at first refused to talk. The interrogators beat him with a chair leg. They snared another student and hung him from the ceiling of the room for days. Yet another, they bludgeoned with a poker. This time, they made a mistake. The poker had a sharp projection at the end which punctured the imprisoned student's skin every time it struck. When the questioning session was over, the student's legs were bleeding profusely. He died a few hours later. Why had the tormentors used so much force? Their captive was a traitor to the precepts of Chairman Mao. The Chairman himself had said that revolution is not a dinner party. Sometimes it was hard to remember that the person hanging from the rafters had sat three chairs away from you in homeroom since the two of you were little kids. The commitment of students on both sides to the words of Mao was passionate. They spat phrases from the Great Leader like machine gun bullets, ferocious in their devotion to "dialectic truth." But in reality, the Maoist ideology--with its noble goal of liberating humanity--was being used by one Red Guard faction to seize power from another. Idealism transformed the rapacity of the students into a sense of selfless zeal. The Cultural Revolution threw China into chaos. Finally, the military took control of the country and restored order. The Red Guard members were drafted as they came of age. The teenagers who had fought each other went their separate ways. Gao Yuan entered military service, then studied in Peking. He met an American girl, moved to the U.S., and wrote a book about his experience--Born Red. Not long after, others who had suffered through the Cultural Revolution would pen memoirs revealing even greater horrors. |
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