Laura Fayer on the Cultural Revolution in China

By: Laura Fayer

December 18, 2009

For seven weeks of my stay in China I lived with a Chinese roommate. She was a 22-year-old biology major with a minor in economics. She was doing research on diabetes, and I was studying her native language. Despite the fact that she could barely speak English and my Chinese was not quite conversational, we managed to become great friends.

I told her all about my life in America and she told me about her life in China. She was from a small city outside of Shanghai, which was once known for its beautiful canals surrounding historic Chinese courtyard buildings, and her town is now known for its grey factories surrounding the high-rise apartment complexes. One weekend she invited me over to her house to meet her family. I was pretty nervous because they spoke a different dialect of Mandarin Chinese, and they had not met a foreigner before. However, I knew this was an opportunity I could not pass up.

The following weekend we jumped on a bus and rode the pollution-filled streets to meet her parents. Little did I know this would be one of the most interesting days of my life….

We sat down for one of the best meals I had in China. We had duck, fish, chicken, a variety of meat and vegetable dishes, and of course, rice. Her mother and father had been preparing the meal all day, and this became very evident from the variety of foods and the small size of their kitchen. Her parents were wonderful; her mother came up to my chest and her father to my shoulders. I brought a few books about Washington, D.C. and New York City to show them pictures and give them an idea about where I am from. The language barrier was less of an issue than I had anticipated, but it was still difficult at times to understand completely what they were saying.

After I told them about my life they told me about theirs. It was unbelievable. Both of her parents grew up during the Chinese civil war and China's Cultural Revolution. Her father's family had been separated because his father's family was members of the Chinese Nationalist Party (Kuomintang) and fled to Taiwan, and his family on his mother's side was members of the Communist Party and stayed in mainland China.

My roommate's mother then pulled out her Little Red Book. The pages were tattered and torn, and you could tell the book had been put to good use. She told me this was the book she read everyday and then told me to look inside and see if I could understand Mao's Little Red Book. To my surprise, I was able to translate the entire first chapter. As I continued to flip the pages I came across a piece of fragile yellowed paper with English writing on it. Her mother immediately got excited and exclaimed, “This is from my English class! This is my homework, this is what I learned to say in English!” So I took a look at what was written down and could not believe my eyes. Her vocabulary consisted of words like force, leading, Marxism, victorious, and core. At the bottom of the page was her homework assignment; it read:

What is the reddest thing in the world?

The sun on Tiananmen.

Who is the dearest person in the world?

Chairman Mao Tse-Tang.

What is the greatest happiness in the world?

Seeing Chairman Mao.

This was one of those times when you hear that a time period was a certain way but despite your previous knowledge, it is still shocking to actually experience it firsthand.

This single piece of paper captured the essence of the Cultural Revolution. My roommate's mother was about my age when she was given this homework assignment. When they asked a question, you did not give your own answer: you gave the right answer, the Communist answer. I have read many books and heard many stories about the Cultural Revolution, but this was the first time I truly realized how it influenced the common Chinese person. How it filtered in to every aspect of their lives: even the color of the ink was red. And then I wondered; if she could answer these questions on her own would the answers be the same? Was the Cultural Revolution that powerful? When I asked her if these were her own answers, she said, “Of course.”

Opens in a new window