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CHINA: A STATE OF FEAR
When the Communist Party came to power in 1949, China rapidly turned
into a state that spread terror throughout the world. Its policies
based on violence and pressure have continued unabated since those
early days. Communist ideology's unfeeling and ruthless conduct
towards people and its materialist views that turn relationships
between people into purely mechanical intercourse, has led to a
ruthless and cruel government instead of a compassionate and just
one.
In the communist China established by Mao Tse
Tung the belief that order and stability can only be maintained
by means of fear and violence prevails. As a result, the state tightly
controls all aspects of individuals' lives and ruthlessly punishes
anyone it deems appropriate. It is not just citizens who commit
serious crimes in China that are punished. The Chinese state even
arrested women who sent newspaper cuttings to their husbands abroad,
accusing them of disclosing Chinese state secrets.1
It can accuse someone who gave what would appear to be a perfectly
harmless quote to a foreign journalist of committing treason and
send him to a labor camp. It is perfectly understandable that under
conditions such as these fear and insecurity should prevail instead
of peace, security, and stability. In the same way that it is not
possible to talk about feelings such as love, self sacrifice and
compassion in such a social structure, so it is also out of the
question to speak of democracy and human rights. Chinese citizens
are unable to criticize freely mistakes by the government or freely
express their thoughts, and as a result they are unable to effectively
push for change or renewal. The fate of those who try is usually
a sufficient deterrent.
No matter how much the Western media cite the liberal reforms being
carried out in the economy and the claim that China is turning to
democracy, the Red Chinese government does not have the slightest
intention of giving up its total control over the people. Those
living in Chinese territory are the proof, and the peoples of both
China and East Turkestan are now the major victims of these ruthless
practices.
THE COMMUNIST PARTY
OLIGARCHY
The People's Republic of China is a totalitarian regime. Its entire
executive and legislative bodies are tied to one single administrative
organ, the Chinese Communist Party. Nationally and locally, the
major leaders in the police, the army, and civilian organizations
are all the Communist Party administrators. Such people are often
as influential after their retirement as they are while in office.
Thanks to their powerful organization, the Communist Party controls
just about all aspects of life. For this reason, it is difficult
to deviate from communist ideology in political and social life.
Each individual's thoughts, beliefs, and actions must be in line
with communist ideology and the instructions of the party. Deviation,
and even the possibility of deviation, can be heavily punished.
The British journalist John Mirsky, who has become an expert on
China, describes that communist rule in the following terms:
. But to them [Communist Party], stability meant
an order in which the elders and the Communist Party were incontestably
in charge. Any threat to that would have to be met with
what they wielded most effectively: force.2
The most striking example of this occurred during Mao's "Great
Leap Forward" and the "Cultural Revolution" campaigns. Ruthless
and cruel methods were resorted to in order to make the people submit
to communism and translate communist ideology into daily life. Peasants
were deliberately left to starve until they handed over their produce
to communes and accepted the communist interpretation of production.
Those who opposed communism at a time when that practice cost millions
of lives were inevitably eliminated. During the Cultural Revolution,
which was aimed at the educated and intellectual sections of society,
all voices of opposition in China were silenced in the cruelest
possible manner. The Cultural Revolution began with Mao's instruction
that "There are still people at the highest levels of the state
who have not fully turned to communism, and these need to be educated."
This instruction became a campaign in which educated people were
humiliated, beaten and tortured, and even killed for trivial justifications
such as not wearing the uniform expected by Mao, or for being unable
to learn communist marching songs by heart. Mao eventually got what
he wanted, and communism finally completely entered peoples' minds.
(For more detail on the savagery experienced during the Mao period,
see Harun Yahya Communism
in Ambush, Global Publishing, Istanbul, 2003).
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Mao's Cultural Revolution
led to savagery, the like of which has seldom been seen anywhere
before. The revolution's particular targets were educated
individuals and intellectuals. The young people known as the
Red Guards killed, often by torture in full public view, people
who failed to carry Mao's Little Red Book with them or who
had not learned communist anthems by heart. In that period
walls were covered with the copies of the Red Book to ensure
that people read its content. |
This regime of oppression, which has lasted since Mao first established
it in 1949 until the present day, has been maintained by virtue
of the wide-reaching organization of the Communist Party. In such
an environment, where there is almost one plain-clothed police officer
for every five to ten people, and where everyone has come to be
an informer on everyone else, the Communist Party has maintained
its authority with force and violence. That is why right from the
start a ruthless police force and army were established. The People's
Armed Police (PAP) and the People's Liberation Army (PLA), attached
to the State and Public Security Ministry, assumed this responsibility.
Ever since the day it was set up the PLA has operated as the armed
wing of the Communist Party, and is today the largest army in the
world, with 6 million members.

During the Cultural Revolution,
tens of thousands of teachers, politicians and artists were
tortured and killed by the Red Guards. Often good public servants
were destroyed in the process. This First Party secretary
is just one of the thousands of people to have insulting placards
hung around their necks and be publicly humiliated. |
THE IDEOLOGY OF
SAVAGERY IN COMMUNIST CHINA
In the following chapters of this book, we shall be considering
examples of the repression and torture inflicted on the Muslims
of East Turkestan. We shall also be looking at the Chinese administration's
oppression of its own people. We will show that ruthlessness is
a normal policy tool, and cruelty is regarded as nothing out of
the ordinary. In societies where the existence of God is denied,
where people believe that they have no other responsibility than
to themselves, and where there is no belief in the hereafter, selfishness,
ruthlessness and cruelty take the place of love, compassion, forgiveness,
and sympathy.
The surest way of putting an end to the cruelty and torture is
for people of good conscience to explain religious morality as part
of their duty of enjoining good and forbidding evil, and invite
others to learn about the teachings of God. In one verse of the
Qur'an, God has also revealed that "Let there
be a community among you who call to the good, and enjoin the right,
and forbid the wrong. They are the ones who have success." (Qur'an,
3: 104). In carrying out that important duty, one important
stage of the war of ideas is the total exposure of all aspects of
anti-religious ideologies and the destruction of their very foundations
in order that proper morality may come to replace them. In the case
of East Turkestan and China, that ideology is communism.
According to communist ideology, matter is all that exists and
all events, historical, economic and sociological included, are
nothing but reflections of different forms of matter. This view
holds that everything is in a constant process of change and development.
The force behind the change is conflict. The entire universe, including
human history, has developed as a result of conflict, which has,
in turn, led to human progress. (see Communism
in Ambush by Harun Yahya, Global Publishing, Istanbul,
2003)
Maintaining that conflict is the key to development is a step in
the direction of endless bloodshed. Followers of such ideologies
will be in constant conflict, oppress each other and spill one another's
blood (all in the name of progress). Human feelings upheld by religion
(such as love, respect, sacrifice and sharing) disappear entirely,
together with any possibility of peace and security. In fact, communist
philosophy teaches that virtues such as these actually hold a society
back. Mao, who brought this philosophy to China, left behind him
some 60 million dead, tens of millions of people who had suffered
torture, and a ruthless society.
However, the real contradictions and opposites that exist do not
justify savagery and slaughter. Opposites exist everywhere: Day
and night, dark and light, hot and cold, good and bad. Yet these
have been created to emphasize the beauty of the world and to allow
moral virtues such as tolerance, peace and forgiveness to emerge.
The same thing applies to the world of ideas. The fact that people
think or believe differently is no reason for them to ruthlessly
slaughter each other. God commands people to behave with kindness,
even to their enemies, and to speak good words to people. All contradictions
can be resolved in an atmosphere of peace and toleration by people
who possess the reason and good conscience that Qur'anic morality
brings with it.
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Communism relies on force
and violence for its survival. Conflict and war are intrinsic
elements of communism. |
Communism, however, maintains the exact opposite. In fact, when
conflict, which is one of the most important components of communism,
joined forces with Darwinist thought, which regards human beings
as a species of animal, the result was the deaths of millions of
people and the ruining of many more lives. That is why the policies
of Mao and his followers were not changed by the sufferings they
caused their people, whom they regarded as just a herd of animals.
The Darwinist world view which caused Mao to regard those who opposed
communism as animals is emphasized in the book China and Charles
Darwin by James Reeve Pusey, a historian from Harvard University:
Mao Tse-Tung in an angry moment (as late as 1964)
swore that "all demons shall be annihilated." He
dehumanized his enemies, partly in traditional hyberbole, partly
in Social Darwinian "realism." Like the Anarchists, he saw
reactionaries as evolutionary throwbacks, who deserved extinction.
The people's enemies were non-people, and they did not deserve to
be treated as people.3
Mao's own words confirmed those of Pusey. One
of the slogans of the founder of Red China at that time was "The
basis of Chinese socialism rests on Darwin and the theory of evolution."4
The Muslims of East Turkestan came to be one of those societies
that Mao, inspired by the Darwinist World view, thought had no right
to "be treated as human." The reason was because the beliefs of
the people of East Turkestan led them to fiercely oppose communism.
However, their rightful protest was put down with utter ruthlessness
and as a result millions of its children have been killed by the
communist regime. East Turkestan is still living under this repression.
Hundreds of thousands of Muslims have been tortured in Chinese prisons,
cast out of their homes, and obliged to leave their land.
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As Mao himself confessed,
the most important ideological support of the communist regime
in China is Darwin's theory of evolution. In his book China
and Charles Darwin, the Harvard University historian
James Reeve Pusey describes the great influence of Darwinism
in China and how it prepared the intellectual foundations
of communism. |
1. A Remarkable Woman is Suppressed,"
The Guardian, "March 15, 2000 
2. Jonathan Mirsky, "Revolution's Dark Legacy,"
Asiaweek, Vol. 27, No. 2, January 19, 2001 (emphasis
added)
3. James Reeve Pusey, China and Charles Darwin,
p. 455 (emphasis added)
4. M. Mehnert, Kampf um Mao's Erbe, Deutsche
Verlags-Anstalt, 1977 (emphasis added)
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