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Zhou Enlai and the modernization of the Communist Party of China

Aepsilons

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Zhou Enlai (1898-1976) was, for decades, one of the most prominent and respected leaders of the Communist movement. Born into an upper-class family, he was drawn into the vortex of Chinese politics during the May Fourth Movement. In 1920 he traveled to Europe on a work-study program in which he met a number of future CCP leaders. He joined the Party in 1922 and returned to China in 1924, becoming the political commissar of the Whampoa Military Academy in Canton during the first united front with the Nationalists. He was in charge of labor union activity in Shanghai when Chiang Kaishek attacked the CCP in April 1927 and helped to plan the Nanchang Uprising against the Nationalists in August — the event now celebrated as the founding of the CCP's Red Army.

But Zhou was always most prominent during periods in which the CCP reached out to otherwise hostile political forces. He played an important role in securing Chiang Kaishek's release during the Xian (Sian) Incident of December 1936. Once the Nationalists and CCP had formed a second united front to oppose Japanese imperialism, it was Zhou who headed the CCP liaison team. Similarly, Zhou represented the CCP in negotiations with the Nationalists during the mediation effort of U.S. General George Marshall.

After the founding of the People's Republic in 1949, Zhou became premier of the Government Affairs (later State) Council and foreign minister. In 1955 he acted as China's bridge to the nonaligned world at the Bandung Conference, and in the same year helped engineer initial contacts with the U.S. He passed the foreign minister portfolio to Chen Yi in 1958 but continued to play an active role in foreign policy.

Zhou supported Mao Zedong in the latter's Cultural Revolution attack on the entrenched Party bureaucracy, and subsequently played a critical role in rebuilding political institutions and mediating numerous political quarrels. With the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, Zhou advocated an opening to Japan and the West to counter the Russian threat. Zhou welcomed President Nixon to China in February 1972, and signed the historic Shanghai Communiqué for the PRC. That same year Zhou was diagnosed as having cancer, and he began shedding some of his responsibilities, especially to Deng Xiaoping who was rehabilitated in April 1973. Zhou was also a strong advocate of modernization, particularly at the Fourth National People's Congress in January 1975. Amid radical attacks on him during the Anti-Confucius Campaign, Zhou entered the hospital during 1974 and died on January 8, 1976.

Zhou continued to affect Chinese politics even after his death. In April 1976, the removal of memorial wreaths placed in Tiananmen Square in Zhou's honor sparked riots that led to the second ousting of Deng Xiaoping. With the purge of the "Gang of Four" in October 1976, his policy of "four modernizations" received the full endorsement of the new leadership. His selected works were published in December 1980, and three years later a memorial room for him was established in Mao's mausoleum.
 
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Restoration of Japanese-Chinese Relations under Zhou Enlai


Meeting Premier Zhou Enlai




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Although ailing, then Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai insisted on meeting Ikeda in 1974.

Ikeda's commitment to restoration of Sino-Japanese relations was clear to the Chinese leadership from early on. In the early 1960s, Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai instructed his aides to learn more about the Soka Gakkai as an emerging people's movement within Japanese society. Zhou took immediate and positive note of Ikeda's 1968 call for normalization. In December 1974, when Ikeda visited China for the second time, he met with Premier Zhou. Although the Chinese premier was hospitalized with terminal cancer at the time, he insisted on meeting with Ikeda.

Lin Liyun, a member of the Chinese Communist Party Central Committee who interpreted for the Zhou-Ikeda meeting, recalls the encounter:

"Not only was President Ikeda eager to meet Premier Zhou, but Premier Zhou, though his serious illness left him in no condition to see anyone, went out of his way to meet President Ikeda . . . The premier's illness had taken a severe toll on his body, so the Soka Gakkai president naturally took the elder man's arm in support. Premier Zhou held President Ikeda's gaze in silence for some time before he said, 'We meet at last.' Communicated in his gaze was an unspoken expectation that President Ikeda, with his insight and dynamism, would assume in the years ahead a leading role in Japan in the promotion of peace and goodwill between their countries. Premier Zhou entrusted that task to him.

"That, I feel certain, was what passed between the two at the time."

Ikeda has indeed continued to passionately promote the cause of peace between China and Japan. The many academic awards he has received from Chinese universities are testament to his efforts, as are the more than 15 research centers that have been established at different Chinese universities to study his ideas and philosophy.

Ikeda continues to remind Japanese youth, in particular, of the great cultural and spiritual debt they owe to China and other Asian countries, and has encouraged them to address the historical realities that continue to cast a shadow over Japan's relations with its neighbors. Youth within the Soka Gakkai have developed active programs of international exchange, both on the personal and organizational levels.

"International relations should not be limited to the political or economic planes," Ikeda writes. "It is absolutely vital that there be educational and cultural exchanges that enhance mutual understanding between ordinary citizens of different countries. This is why I have worked to open a path for young people through dialogue that brings people together in the dimension of their shared humanity."

Sun Pinghua, a former chair of the China-Japan Friendship Association, once remarked upon Ikeda's diplomatic efforts as follows: "The 'golden bridge' erected by President Ikeda has a peculiar construction. The more people cross it, the more solid it becomes."
 
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The book above roughly based on the Chinese book 晚年周恩来 is the most authoritative and best book on Zhou Enlai.

Zhou Enlai: The Last Perfect Revolutionary, is a book written by Gao Wenqian. Before escaping to the United States in 1993, Gao had been a researcher at CPC Central Party Literature Research Center, where he penned the official biographies of Zhou Enlai and Mao Zedong. The book was published in 2008 by Public Affair in English. As the book is based on secret and classified Chinese archives, upon emigrating to the United States Gao realized it would not be possible to take all the necessary documents and notes with him, so for a decade he had friends of his in China send and smuggle them out in chunks.

The book is a biography of Zhou Enlai, the Premier of China from 1949 to 1976, one of the most important Chinese leaders of his generation. Zhou is portrayed as "a conflicted, even tragic, figure",succeeding in remaining at the center stage of Chinese politics for fifty years, through the troubled years of the Long March and Cultural Revolution. In 2003 Gao wrote a similar book in Chinese, Zhou Enlai's Later Years (晚年周恩来), using similar research materials.
 
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The book is a biography of Zhou Enlai, the Premier of China from 1949 to 1976, one of the most important Chinese leaders of his generation. Zhou is portrayed as "a conflicted, even tragic, figure",succeeding in remaining at the center stage of Chinese politics for fifty years, through the troubled years of the Long March and Cultural Revolution. In 2003 Gao wrote a similar book in Chinese, Zhou Enlai's Later Years (晚年周恩来), using similar research materials.


Out of all the leaders, I have the most respect for Zhou Enlai.

Shall we engage in discourse on this topic ?

I'm ready if you are up for it.
 
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Why was sino-Japanese relations better when zhou en lai was around.

Was it because japanese people of that time felt a great guilt towards china? Something that is lacking in Japanese domestic politics today.
 
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