China
is a nation that’s never less than fascinating. I first visited in
1994, and have spent my summers here more or less yearly since 2000,
when my wife and I bought a house in Suzhou, the region where she
grew up.
In
the ensuing nineteen years, I’ve written many, many thousands of
words about China, whether for newspapers, for my syndicated column,
or for my blog. Yet each time I return to the People’s Republic, I
find a whole new China to talk about.
If
there’s one thing that’s stood out in my last few visits—since
America’s Great Recession, perhaps not coincidentally—is that the
Chinese no longer view the West as its smarter big brother. After a
century of humiliation at the hands of the West, after enduring
Second World War atrocities by the Japanese, China closed its doors
and turned turned its back on the world. Communism salvaged the
nation’s sense of sovereignty, but ironically, it also further
afflicted China by unnaturally suppressing the nation’s ancient
mercantile instincts for thirty years.
One of the less nauseating images of Japan's atrocities again the Chinese during the Nanjing Massacre, which began December 13, 1937. During the next two months, between 100,000 and 300,000 Chinese died at the hands of Japanese soldiers, including uncounted women and children. |
This
wouldn’t trouble me in the least if China was not such a profoundly
homogeneous nation, and also one that has not lost its equally
ancient xenophobia, nor its incredible tenacity in holding a grudge.
I’m speaking, of course, about China’s relationship with Japan—a
nation that has undeniably inflicted unspeakable suffering on the
Chinese people. Yet China had no monopoly on suffering during the
Second World War. The United States was not occupied by Imperial
Japan as China was, but given the course of the war following the
attack on Pearl Harbor, Americans certainly had reason to hold a
grudge. Yet within five years of the war’s end, Japan was under
reconstruction, and within ten the antagonism of the war years was
largely left behind.
Propaganda poster from the time of the Cultural Revolution, which turned China's most learned citizens into political enemies to be persecuted. |
As
a frequent visitor to the People’s Republic, one thing that’s
always in the back of my mind is the speed at which things can change
there. In all the time I’ve spent there, I’ve seldom met a
Chinese person who has been less than generous and hospitable—it’s
an innate cultural trait. Yet it’s also true that it would only take a
single edict from Beijing to change this benevolent attitude toward
foreigners, much as Mao’s bizarre initiation of the Cultural
Revolution sparked mayhem against China’s own most learned people.
Xi Jinping: One Belt, One Road, One Leader for the foreseeable future. Which path will China choose? |
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