made `serve the people' the central platform of the Communist Party, that's how they won popular support and came into power. If they still want the people to support them then they'd better stick with this policy."
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A 45-year-old intellectual opined: "The best thing about Mao's theories was the line `serve the people.' All that stuff about combining theory with practice has nothing to do with us. But `serving the people,' that's a theory for the masses, everyone can arm themselves with it."
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This wide-ranging survey left us with a very strong impression that 17 years after his death Mao Zedong still has a place in the hearts of the Chinese people. This is not only because of the massive impact he had on the development of China during his lifetime, and because of the power of his thought and personality, but also because he continues to exert an influence on Chinese life today. We were particularly struck by the fact that Mao led the Chinese out of internecine strife and forged unity in what was a poor and backward nation to achieve a sense of national dignity. These are the reasons why people now still have such a high regard for him.
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It is evident that for the Chinese strength and unity, as well as national dignity, are extremely important factors in political life. These are and will remain central to the feelings and actions of the Chinese. From what we heard about Mao it is also obvious that the Chinese hold out expectations for a strong political leader and rely on such figures. Political strength and authority are still central features of life in China today.
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| 1. Yang Ping, "Miandui Mao Zedong."
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| 2. The terms in Chinese are chongbai and reai. Reai, literally "hot-love," is a term that has been used to describe popular adulation of Mao for many decades.
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| 3. Ross Terrill, Mao: A Biography.
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| 4. Not all university students were fans of Terrill's work, however. Mao Xinyu, Mao's grandson and a student in the Department of History at People's University in Beijing at the time, was highly critical of "the works of Americans regarding my granddad. Those books [he names Terrill and Schram's work] are biased and ridden with errors." He preferred the more "reliable" memoirs of Mao's bodyguard Li Yinqiao and the works of other Mainland writers like Quan Yanchi and Wang Hebin which all conform with official dogma on Mao. See Zhao Zhichao, "Yingmian zoulai Mao Xinyu," part 1, pp. 11-12.
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| 5. For this material, see "Mao Zedong he tade xiangqinmen" in Liu Jianguo, Shaoshande zuotian yu jintian: Mao Zedong zhi gen.
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| 6. This latter work, Lun Gongchandangyuan xiuyang, was written by Liu Shaoqi. See Liu Shao-ch'i, How to Be a Good Communist.
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| 7. A Party formulation that kept the vehicle of Mao Thought intact while its dated contents were effectively jettisoned. See "Mao: The Body Corporate" above.
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