[A person answering the
telephone at the Tongxu County government offices said he did
not know anything about the demolition. He referred a caller to the county
propaganda department, where the telephone went unanswered. Another person
answering the telephone at the local Sunying township also said he had not
heard of the demolition.]
The 120-foot statue of Mao on Monday, as it was nearing
completion in
CreditAgence France-Presse — Getty Images
|
ZHUSHIGANG, China — Days after
photographs of a giant, golden statue of Mao spread across the Internet,
drawing ridicule for its grandiosity amid the bare fields of Henan Province,
the statue has been quickly torn down.
Demolition teams arrived Thursday morning, villagers said, and
by Friday morning only a pile of rubble remained.
The 120-foot-tall statue, erected at a cost of $465,000,
according to the local news media, had been under construction for months and
was nearing completion when it began to attract attention.
Some commenters on social media denounced the
extravagance of the
colossus in a poor, rural part of China , where the money might have been
better spent on
education or health care. Several quoted Shelley’s meditation on the ruins of a monument to a
long-forgotten autocrat (“Two vast and trunkless legs of stone stand in the
desert. …”).
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Others
pointed out the historical irony of
erecting the statue in one of the provinces worst hit by the famine caused by
Mao’s Great Leap Forward.
As mysteriously as the statue
arose, it disappeared.
Public Security officials and groups of unidentified men in
olive green greatcoats brusquely turned away visitors and blocked road access
to the site, outside the village of Zhushigang .
Villagers said the guards had been sent by officials of Tongxu County , which includes Zhushigang.
They said they believed the statue was torn down on orders from provincial officials.
A person answering the
telephone at the Tongxu County government offices said he did
not know anything about the demolition. He referred a caller to the county
propaganda department, where the telephone went unanswered. Another person
answering the telephone at the local Sunying township also said he had not
heard of the demolition.
According to villagers and reports on online chat sites, the
statue was the idea of a local businessman, Sun Qingxin, the head of the Lixing
Group, a conglomerate that owns food-processing facilities, hospitals and
schools, as well as makes machinery. Mr. Sun paid for it, they said.
Mr. Sun is also the deputy chairman of the County People ’s Congress Standing Committee,
a powerful local position.
“He is crazy about Mao,”
said a villager who identified himself as Mr. Wang, a potato farmer. “His
factory is full of Maos.”
Two miles from the village, a
guard outside the Lixing Group’s headquarters shooed away reporters, refused
interviews and ordered that no photographs be taken, warning that “cars of
people will arrive and make trouble” if a reporter lingered.
Facing the factory entrance,
inside the premises, was a 10-foot, golden statue of Mao, standing in a
traditional Chinese pavilion of cream stone.
Statues of Mao, the founder of the People’s Republic of China , were once ubiquitous in China , and many still survive.
President Xi Jinping has often praised Mao as a model for China today, saying Mao’s era was
one when officials were selfless and honest.
But some of his policies were disastrous, including the forced
agricultural collectivization and industrialization of the Great Leap Forward,
which historians blame for a famine in which tens of millions died.
Still, a woman named Ms. Yang, 75, said several villagers cried
when the statue was knocked down.
“Mao was our leader and ate bitterness for us,” she said.
On Friday, the site was shrouded in heavy fog, dense enough to
close the nearby highway. A pile of rubble and an orange crane were all that
remained.
Around the decay of that
colossal wreck, boundless and bare, the brown and frosty fields stretched far
away.
Follow
Didi Kirsten Tatlow on Twitter @dktatlow
Vanessa Piao contributed
research.