Post Magazine

The story of a martyr in Mao's China: executed and her family billed for the bullet

If Djilas' book had been published earlier, it may have changed the life of Lin Zhao, a young political activist born Peng Lingzhao who met a tragic end 50 years ago on April 29, during the Cultural Revolution. The enthusiastic young revolutionary joined the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in 1948 and spent a decade as a loyal member before being arrested on suspicion of being a rightist, in January 1958.

Human cost of Mao's Great Famine and Cultural Revolution exposed in powerful novel

Djilas' critique of communist ideology was published the same year that the far-left went on a murderous rampage across China in the name of Mao Zedong's Anti-Rightist Campaign. As historian Lian Xi recalls in his new book Blood Letters: The Untold Story of Lin Zhao, a Martyr in Mao's China, the campaign targeted so-called "leading rightists" across the then new communist state. It resulted in hundreds of thousands of intellectuals being killed, jailed or persecuted.

The purge of rightists was part of a cleansing operation across China during the early years of the Cultural Revolution, a decade-long nightmare that saw about 1.5 million people die in an orgy of ideological violence.

The party defined rightists as any individuals or groups who called on the CCP to share power with nominally demo­cratic parties. But as Xi's meticulously researched book makes clear from the beginning, the Anti-Rightist Campaign would become the final nail in the coffin for any Chinese intellec­tuals or socialists who believed an independent and free-thinking China could be maintained under Mao.

Louisa Lim's timely reminder of Tiananmen crackdown cover-up

Author Lian Xi

Lin, though, was an exception. As Xi explains in the introduction: "Lin Zhao's defiance of the regime was unparalleled in Mao's China. The tens of millions who perished as the direct result of the CCP rule died as victims, their voices unheard."

Lin's initial punishment for defending friends denounced as rightists and refusing to comply with strict totalitarian socialist doctrine was three years in a labour re-education camp. But this failed to break her spirit or her thirst for individual freedom.

Book review: Frog - Mo Yan dramatises trauma of one-child policy in China

Lin was singled out over a long poem she contributed to the journal. Titled A Day in Prometheus' Passion, it mocked Mao by painting him as a villainous Zeus.

It's here that the second half - and most interesting section - of Blood Letters begins. It focuses on Lin's years as a prisoner of conscience up to her execution, on April 29, 1968, when she was shot in Shanghai's Tilanqiao Prison and, Xi writes, her family were likely made to pay for the bullet.

Blood Letters is a rewarding, extremely moving read, but it can be tough going. Especially the parts that document, in vivid detail, the physical and emotional abuse Lin was subjected to in the run up to her execution. Suffering from tuberculosis and coughing up blood, Lin was forced to wear a tight rubber hood called a "monkey cap". Covering the prisoner's entire face, the hood had narrow slits for the eyes and mouth. The purpose was to prevent outspoken prisoners from contaminating others with their ideology.

Eileen Chang's life in wartime Hong Kong and Shanghai laid bare in autobiographical novel

The title of Xi's book comes from the way Lin expressed her contempt for Mao's regime - letters written in her own blood. These were addressed to her mother, the United Nations and, most frequently, the People's Daily, the official newspaper of the CCP. The letters probably never made it past the prison gates, but they were kept by the party's bureaucratic machine as evidence.

Xi manages to keep a distance from his subject and strikes a balanced view of Lin's emotive and fragile person­ality. Parallels can certainly be drawn to books such as Nelson Mandela's Long Walk to Freedom (1994), Antonio Gramsci's Prison Notebooks (1926), The Diary of Bobby Sands (1981) and Gandhi: Prisoner of Hope (1989).

Lin Zhao. Picture: Alamy

Xi explains that Lin was seen as a martyr by many, and the sustained emotional and physical abuse took its toll on the dissident. She attempted suicide many times and her letters - some of which are reproduced in the book - reveal her descent into madness. In her cell, for example, she built a makeshift altar to her late father and held daily conversations with him.

Xi has clearly done his homework and the book makes use of a wide range of historical sources. These include numerous interviews with friends, classmates, counter-revolu­tionaries and fellow dissident inmates - who were particularly valuable when piecing together Lin's final days. Especially since her files remain under lock and key by the party today.

The story of China's opening up told through one family's history in Scott Tong's A Village With My Name - book review

A small collection of prison diaries and letters were returned to Lin's family after her posthumous rehabilitation, in 1981, and Xi was given a copy of the privately printed Collected Writings of Lin Zhao in 2013. But Xi's research also took him on a journey to the United Methodist archives in Madison, New Jersey; and to Lin's tomb in Suzhou. As Xi notes in the book's conclusion, surveillance cameras have been installed at the tomb in recent years to deter potential dissidents from paying their respects.

Xi ends Blood Letters with a subtle suggestion. Chinese citizens may now enjoy greater personal and political freedoms than they did during the Mao era, but the iron fist and watchful eye of the party are never far away, making this biography all the more important as we mark the 50th anniversary of Lin's execution.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2018. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from Post Magazine

Post Magazine2 min read
70% Of Hongkongers Not Confident Over Successful Waste-charging Scheme Roll-out In August, More Than 50% Urge Delay: Survey
About 70 per cent of residents are not confident about the successful roll-out of a waste-charging scheme in August, with more than half urging the government to postpone it, a think tank study has found. The New Youth Forum on Saturday said only 13
Post Magazine5 min readWorld
Joe Biden Accuses China Of 'Cheating' Amid Call For Added Steel, Aluminium Tariffs
US President Joe Biden criticised Beijing during a campaign stop on Wednesday as he called for a tripling of import tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminium in what analysts characterised as a classic election-year move designed to help win support fro
Post Magazine2 min readCrime & Violence
Hong Kong Police Arrest 29-year-old Man Over Rape, Sex Offences After He Tries To Flee City
Hong Kong police have arrested a 29-year-old man over rape and other sex offences after he tried to flee the city following allegations made by six women. Superintendent Cheung Ting-fung of the organised crime and triad bureau on Saturday said the fo

Related Books & Audiobooks