A New Statue for Chairman Mao

You may have heard they called Chairman Mao the Great Helmsman. The epithet is exceedingly apt, if one extends it to a mental image of a massive, ragged ship. Yawing in a maelstrom of historic chaos, the ship is packed to the poop deck with desperate crew and passengers. Too many to count are lost in the storm. Somehow, the Helmsman guides the craft to placid waters, albeit in unfamiliar territory. He wants his brand of ship’s order at any cost, to get to the golden shore. The shipmates’ trials are just beginning.
Too exculpatory? OK. How would you have gone about steering a broken people through all their internecine squabbling and external threats to a re-unified country, with nothing more than a dog-eared copy of Das Kapital and some like-minded buddies? Sure, you can get back to us on that.
Wait – hear that? It’s an Asian Studies major huffing, “Where do you get the effrontery to defend a man who all but eradicated China’s cultural heritage during the…. Lord knows how many people perished in the…..” Whoa, whoa, whoa. Please understand that Chairman Mao is not for China Expat to defend, or prosecute. When China is invited to host a retrospective tribunal for the massacre of Native Americans or the Boer Wars, we’ll throw our hat in the ring and flail our verdicts about.
For now, we’d like to do what we’re here for, to explore Chinese culture in its infinite aspects. A recent news item concerning the Great Helmsman seems a milestone in terms of where the Chinese have been and where they’re going. A new twenty-meter statue of Mao at Chongqing Medical University is rocking China’s collective boat. Many criticize the statue as extravagantly wasteful, at an estimated cost of five million RMB. Some are scandalized that people dare speak out against a commemoration of Mao.
It’s a safe bet the scandalized are among the older generations, the ones who can remember a time when Mao enjoyed a cult-of-personality mojo unfathomable to a westerner, a celebrity/deity aura equal to ’89 Jordan + ’84 Jackson x Winston Churchill10. Wherever their quiet, gated socialist apartment communities, a statue of Mao still dominates the public square, smiling distantly over their morning exercises and evening strolls.
These elder Chinese can also likely recall the Mao-statue contests of the Cultural Revolution. University students across China strove to build the biggest statue in the most difficult pose. A waving Mao garnered more revolutionary points than one with hands behind the back. A hat in the waving hand entitled the students to a victory dance of the type still practiced by vigorous Chinese seniors on warm summer evenings, the one with the martial drumbeat.
But a dip in Q-rating can play havoc with even the greatest legacy. After the ’78 reforms, many of those statues, so fervently built, were furtively dismantled. Some were even blown up in acts of pent-up aggression released two years too late. So what does a shiny, costly new stainless-steel tribute to a man so ideologically at odds with China’s current direction indicate? Oops, far be it from us to editorialize. Instead, we’ll take some quotes directly from Mao’s writings and speeches, quotes that pertain to the flap at hand.
On spending five million RMB for a statue:
“Wherever we happen to be, we must treasure our manpower and material resources, and must not take a short view and indulge in wastefulness and extravagance.”
On the necessity of medical students loitering about campus looking at a big statue:
“Medical education should be reformed. There’s no need to read so many books… It will be enough to give three years to graduates from higher primary schools. They would then study and raise their standards mainly through practice. The more books one reads the more stupid one gets.”
On what medical students should be planning for their futures:
“We should leave behind in the city a few of the less able doctors who graduated one or two years ago, and the others should all go into the countryside.”
And on the positive nature of this statue wrangle in general:
“Opposition and struggle between ideas of different kinds constantly occur within the Party, contradictions between classes and between the new and the old in society. If there were no contradictions in the Party and no ideological struggles to resolve them, the Party life would come to an end.”
Of course, we’d hardly be giving Mao his due if we didn’t allow the masses to rise up and speak. Here are some representative comments floating around the People’s Message Boards:
- - Whoever spent five million RMB erecting this more than ten-story statue would definitely be chided by Chairman Mao as a “black sheep”.
- - The greatest monument stays in the people’s hearts. It’s nonsense building a statue. Officials had better invest funds in and devote themselves to the people’s welfare.
- - It’s unquestionably worth it, building a statue of the great leader. We should pay homage to him forever.
- - The statue only cost five million. No reason to blame the builders and call them “black sheep”.
- - The medical university abuses financial funding by building this huge Mao statue, which reflects mishandling of limited educational resources in China.
- - Creating gods in the 21st century is ridiculous.
- - Better to spend the five million on a Mao statue than on beer and snacks for the officials.
- - There are still earthquake damaged schools that need rebuilding. Due to lack of money? Nah, a new giant joss has just been erected. Well done!
- - Let’s make sure generation-after-generation remember Chairman Mao’s great achievements, and do not forget our roots. It’s well worth the cost.
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China Expat is a cultural and literary forum for expatriates interested in China and has been published by Asia Briefing Ltd since 2001. The sites resident China culture writers have included such expatriate luminaries as

We thank our readers for their balanced, rational commentary.
Five million renmimbi (RMB 5 million) for a statue, any statue, when thousands are still homeless from earthquakes, etc., with nothing to eat but Melimine, not to mention for a leader with the blood of hundreds of thousands of workers on his hands, can only be called an abomination.
You can read a poignant essay about Mao statues and Cultural Revolution by a first-hand observer here: http://www.danwei.org/books/swimming_with_mao.php
In the meantime, the Party does not allow any public discussion on the launching of the “Cultural Revolution” 40th anniversary, and what did that period represent to China, its people, its neighbours and the whole “revolutionary struggles” around the world…
Despite it being controversial to some, the statue still looks good. I wonder what type of metal they used.
Thanks for keeping us young.
Really interesting post. If anybody has an interesting articles you can share with me.
Thanks,
Mao led the Communist Party of China (CPC) to victory against the Kuomintang (KMT) in the Chinese Civil War, and was the leader of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) from its establishment in 1949 until his death in 1976. Commonly referred to as Chairman Mao, he has been regarded as one of the most important figures in modern world history,and named by Time Magazine as one of the 100 most influential people of the 20th century.
This is nice site to watch.University students across China strove to build the biggest statue in the most difficult pose. A waving Mao garnered more revolutionary points than one with hands behind the back. A hat in the waving hand entitled the students to a victory dance of the type still practiced by vigorous Chinese seniors on warm summer evenings.Thanks for shareing the posts.
Regards,
In the meantime, the Party does not allow any public discussion on the launching of the “Cultural Revolution” 40th anniversary, and what did that period represent to China, its people, its neighbours and the whole “revolutionary struggles” around the world…
Thanks for the information i liked it a lot.nice blog.great thanks.
regards.
Too exculpatory? OK. How would you have gone about steering a broken people through all their internecine squabbling and external threats to a re-unified country, with nothing more than a dog-eared copy of Das Kapital and some like-minded buddies? Sure, you can get back to us.
he deserves to have a statue..
The statue is too big and the architecture is too nice i did really appreciate the civil team but was in hurry searching for some tower defense games…….
Excellent building. Chairman Mao deserves this.
The credit needed by the Chinese government is too big and the statue is telling every one and giving a message that we should be one who identifies us.
Regards,
Kiju..
Mao remains a controversial figure to this day, with a contentious and ever-evolving legacy. He is officially held in high regard in China as a great revolutionary, political strategist, military mastermind, and savior of the nation. erezione
Many Chinese also believe that through his policies, he laid the economic, technological and cultural foundations of modern China, transforming the country from a backward agrarian society into a major world power. eiaculazione precoce
I want to take some free photographs for the statue you have here and also the other you have also.
Regards,
Collection agent….
Mao is viewed by many as a poet, philosopher, and visionary, owing the latter primarily to the cult of personality fostered during his time in power. allungamento pene
Mao is regarded as one of the most influential figures in modern world history, and named by Time Magazine as one of the 100 most influential people of the 20th century. disfunzione erettile
As a consequence, his portrait continues to be featured prominently on Tiananmen and on all Renminbi bills.
Allungare il pene
nice statue..
The Statue of Chairman Mao the Great Helmsman was built very nice. The statue was too high.
Building a Statue of Mao means that this will serve that we will remember the things that he did. Every Hero has its own monument as his remembrance to the good things to his country and fellowmen. lefe coaching
The statue is really great. From here, we can know that China people have a very high respect for their leader. They are truly a big nation. We must learn from them at this case.
Once, a great leader ever say,”A great nation is a nation that has a great respect for their hero.” China already prove it through this statue. Salute for the China.
the statue is nice..
There is a need in the good structural designs for the construction of these type of structures.
Regards,
King……..
the credit needed by the Chinese government is too big and the statue is telling every one and giving a message that we should be one who identifies us and should have knowledge about real estates and construction of homes and buildings ….. Regards…. Rahul….
Interesting. Thanks for sharing.