Who are our enemies? Who are our friends? This is a question of the
first importance for the revolution. The basic reason why all previous
revolutionary struggles in China achieved so little was their failure
to unite with real friends in order to attack real enemies. A
revolutionary party is the guide of the masses, and no revolution ever
succeeds when the revolutionary party leads them astray. To ensure that
we will definitely achieve success in our revolution and will not lead
the masses astray, we must pay attention to uniting with our real
friends in order to attack our real enemies. To distinguish real
friends from real enemies, we must make a general analysis of the
economic status of the various classes in Chinese society and of their
respective attitudes towards the revolution.
What is the condition of each of the classes in Chinese society?
The landlord class and the comprador class.
[1] In economically backward and semi-colonial China the
landlord class and the comprador class are wholly appendages of the
international bourgeoisie, depending upon imperialism for their
survival ant growth. These classes represent the most backward and most
reactionary relations of production in China and hinder the development
of her productive forces. Their existence is utterly incompatible with
the aims of the Chinese revolution. The big landlord and big comprador
classes in particular always side with imperialism and constitute an
extreme counterrevolutionary group. Their political representatives are
the
Étatistes [2] and the right-wing of
the Kuomintang.
The middle bourgeoisie. This class represents the capitalist
relations of production in China in town and country. The middle
bourgeoisie, by which is meant chiefly the national bourgeoisie,
[3] is inconsistent in its attitude towards the Chinese
revolution: they feel the need for revolution and favour the
revolutionary movement against imperialism and the warlords when they
are smarting under the blows of foreign capital and the oppression of
the warlords, but they become suspicious of the revolution when they
sense that, with the militant participation of the proletariat at home
and the active support of the international proletariat abroad, the
revolution is threatening the hope of their class to attain the status
of a big bourgeoisie. Politically, they stand for the establishment of
a state under the rule of a single class, the national bourgeoisie. A
self-styled true disciple of Tai Chi-tao
[4] wrote in
the
Chen Pao,
[5] Peking, "Raise your left
fist to knock down the imperialists and your right to knock down the
Communists." These words depict the dilemma and anxiety of this class.
It is against interpreting the Kuomintang's Principle of the People's
Livelihood according to the theory of class struggle, and it opposes
the Kuomintang's alliance with Russia and the admission of Communists
[6] and left-wingers. But its attempt to establish a
state under the rule of the national bourgeoisie is quite
impracticable, because the present world situation is such that the two
major forces, revolution and counter-revolution, are locked in final
struggle. Each has hoisted a huge banner: one is the red banner of
revolution held aloft by the Third International as the rallying point
for all the oppressed classes of the world, the other is the white
banner of counterrevolution held aloft by the League of Nations as the
rallying point for all the counter-revolutionaries of the world. The
intermediate classes are bound to disintegrate quickly, some sections
turning left to join the revolution, others turning right to join the
counter-revolution; there is no room for them to remain "independent".
Therefore the idea cherished by China's middle bourgeoisie of an
"independent" revolution in which it would play the primary role is a
mere illusion.
The petty bourgeoisie. Included in this category are the
owner-peasants,
[7] the master handicraftsmen, the
lower levels of the intellectuals -- students, primary and secondary
school teachers, lower government functionaries, office clerks, small
lawyers -- and the small traders. Both because of its size and class
character, this class deserves very close attention. The owner-peasants
and the master handicraftsmen are both engaged in small-scale
production. Although all strata of this class have the same
petty-bourgeois economic status, they fall into three different
sections. The first section consists of those who have some surplus
money or grain, that is, those who, by manual or mental labour, earn
more each year than they consume for their own support. Such people
very much want to get rich and are devout worshipers of Marshal Chao
[8]; while they have no illusions about amassing great
fortunes, they invariably desire to climb up into the middle
bourgeoisie. Their mouths water copiously when they see the respect in
which those small moneybags are held. People of this sort are timid,
afraid of government officials, and also a little afraid of the
revolution. Since they are quite close to the middle bourgeoisie in
economic status, they have a lot of faith in its propaganda and are
suspicious of the revolution. This section is a minority among the
petty bourgeoisie and constitutes its right-wing. The second section
consists of those who in the main are economically self-supporting.
They are quite different from the people in the first section; they
also want to get rich, but Marshal Chao never lets them. In recent
years, moreover, suffering from the oppression and exploitation of the
imperialists, the warlords, the feudal landlords and the big
comprador-bourgeoisie, they have become aware that the world is no
longer what it was. They feel they cannot earn enough to live on by
just putting in as much work as before. To make both ends meet they
have to work longer hours, get up earlier, leave off later, and be
doubly careful at their work. They become rather abusive, denouncing
the foreigners as "foreign devils", the warlords as "robber generals"
and the local tyrants and evil gentry as "the heartless rich". As for
the movement against the imperialists and the warlords, they; merely
doubt whether it can succeed (on the ground that the foreigners and the
warlords seem so powerful), hesitate to join it and prefer to be
neutral, but they never oppose the revolution. This section is very
numerous, making up about one-half of the petty bourgeoisie.
The third section consists of those whose standard of living is
falling. Many in this section, who originally belonged to better-off
families, are undergoing a gradual change from a position of being
barely able to manage to one of living in more and more reduced
circumstances. When they come to settle their accounts at the end of
each year, they are shocked, exclaiming, "What? Another deficit!" As
such people have seen better days and are now going downhill with every
passing year, their debts mounting and their life becoming more and
more miserable, they "shudder at the thought of the future". They are
in great mental distress because there is such a contrast between their
past and their present. Such people are quite important for the
revolutionary movement; they form a mass of no small proportions and
are the left-wing of the petty bourgeoisie. In normal times these three
sections of the petty bourgeoisie differ in their attitude to the
revolution. But in times of war, that is, when the tide of the
revolution runs high and the dawn of victory is in sight, not only will
the left-wing of the petty bourgeoisie join the revolution, but the
middle section too may join, and even tight-wingers, swept forward by
the great revolutionary tide of the proletariat and of the left-wing of
the petty bourgeoisie, will have to go along with the "evolution. We
can see from the experience of the May 30th Movement
[9] of 1925 and the peasant movement in various places
that this conclusion is correct.
The semi-proletariat. What is here called the semi-proletariat
consists of five categories: (1) the overwhelming majority of the
semi-owner peasants,
[10] (2) the poor peasants, (3)
the small handicraftsmen, (4) the shop assistants
[11] and (5) the pedlars. The overwhelming majority of
the semi-owner peasants together with the poor peasants constitute a
very large part of the rural masses. The peasant problem is essentially
their problem. The semi-owner peasants, the poor peasants and the small
handicraftsmen are engaged in production on a still smaller scale than
the owner-peasants and the master handicraftsmen. Although both the
overwhelming majority of the semi-owner peasants and the poor peasants
belong to the semi-proletariat, they may be further divided into three
smaller categories, upper, middle and lower, according to their
economic condition. The semi-owner peasants are worse off than the
owner-peasants because every year they are short of about half the food
they need, and have to make up this deficit by renting land from
others, selling part of their labour power, or engaging in petty
trading. In late spring and early summer when the crop is still in the
blade and the old stock is consumed, they borrow at exorbitant rates of
interest and buy grain at high| prices; their plight is naturally
harder than that of the owner-peasants' who need no help from others,
but they are better off than the poor' peasants. For the poor peasants
own no land, and receive only half the harvest or even less for their
year's toil, while the semi-owner` peasants, though receiving only half
or less than half the harvest of land rented from others, can keep the
entire crop from the land they own. The semi-owner peasants are
therefore more revolutionary than the owner-peasants, but less
revolutionary than the poor peasants. The poor peasants are
tenant-peasants who are exploited by the landlords. They may again be
divided into two categories according to their economic status. One
category has comparatively adequate farm implements and some funds.
Such peasants may retain half the product of their year's toil. To make
up their deficit they cultivate sidecrops, catch fish or shrimps, raise
poultry or pigs, or sell part of their labour power, and thus eke out a
living, hoping in the midst of hardship and destitution to tide over
the year. Thus their life is harder than that of the semi-owner
peasants, but they are better off than the other category of poor
peasants. They ate more revolutionary than the semi-owner peasants, but
less revolutionary than the other category of poor peasants. As for the
latter, they have neither adequate farm implements nor funds nor enough
manure, their crops are poor, and, with little left after paying rent,
they have even greater need to sell part of their labour power. In hard
times they piteously beg help from relatives and friends, borrowing a
few
tou or
sheng of grain to last them a few days, and
their debts pile up like loads on the backs of oxen. They are the worst
off among the peasants and are highly receptive to revolutionary
propaganda. The small handicraftsmen are called semi-proletarians
because, though they own some simple means of production and moreover
are self-employed, they too are often forced to sell part of their
labour power and are somewhat similar to the poor peasants in economic
status. They feel the constant pinch of poverty and dread of
unemployment, because of heavy family burdens and the gap between their
earnings and the cost of living; in this respect too they largely
resemble the poor peasants. The shop assistants are employees of shops
and stores, supporting their families on meagre pay and getting an
increase perhaps only once in several years while prices rise every
year. If by chance you get into intimate conversation with them, they
invariably pour out their endless grievances. Roughly the same in
status as the poor peasants and the small handicraftsmen, they are
highly receptive to revolutionary propaganda. The pedlars, whether they
carry their wares around on a pole or set up stalls along the street,
have tiny funds and very small earnings, and do not make enough to feed
and clothe themselves. Their status is roughly the same as that of the
poor peasants, and like the poor peasants they need a revolution to
change the existing state of affairs.
The proletariat. The modern industrial proletariat numbers about
two million. It is not large because China is economically backward.
These two million industrial workers are mainly employed in five
industries -- railways, mining, maritime transport, textiles and
shipbuilding -- and a great number are enslaved in enterprises owned by
foreign capitalists. Though not very numerous, the industrial
proletariat represents China's new productive forces, is the most
progressive class in modern China and has become the leading force in
the revolutionary movement. We can see the important position of the
industrial proletariat in the Chinese revolution from the strength it
has displayed in the strikes of the last four years, such as the
seamen's strikes,
[12] the railway strike,
[13] the strikes in the Kailan and Tsiaotso coal mines,
[14] the Shameen strike
[15] and
the general strikes in Shanghai and Hongkong
[16]
after the May 30th Incident. The first reason why the industrial
workers hold this position is their concentration. No other section of
the people is so concentrated. The second reason is their low economic
status. They have been deprived of all means of production, have
nothing left but their hands, have no hope of ever becoming rich and,
moreover, are subjected to the most ruthless treatment by the
imperialists, the warlords and the bourgeoisie. That is why they are
particularly good fighters. The coolies in the cities are also a force
meriting attention. They are mostly dockers and rickshaw men, and among
them, too, are sewage carters and street cleaners. Possessing nothing
but their hands, they are similar in economic status to the industrial
workers but are less concentrated and play a less important role in
production. There is as yet little modern capitalist farming in China.
By rural proletariat we mean farm labourers hired by the year, the
month or the day. Having neither land, farm implements nor funds, they
can live only by selling their labour power. Of all the workers they
work the longest hours, for the lowest wages, under the worst
conditions, and with the least security of employment. They are the
most hard-pressed people in the villages, and their position in the
peasant movement is as important as that of the poor peasants.
Apart from all these, there is the fairly large lumpen-proletariat,
made up of peasants who have lost their land and handicraftsmen who
cannot get work. They lead the most precarious existence of all. In
every part of the country they have their secret societies, which were
originally their mutual-aid organizations for political and economic
struggle, for instance, the Triad Society in Fukien and Kwangtung, the
Society of Brothers in Hunan, Hupeh, Kweichow and Szechuan, the Big
Sword Society in Anhwei, Honan and Shantung, the Rational Life Society
in Chihli
[17] and the three northeastern provinces,
and the Green Band in Shanghai and elsewhere
[18]
One of China's difficult problems is how to handle these people. Brave
fighters but apt to be destructive, they can become a revolutionary
force if given proper guidance.
To sum up, it can be seen that our enemies are all those in league with
imperialism--the warlords, the bureaucrats, the comprador class, the
big landlord class and the reactionary section of the intelligentsia
attached to them. The leading force in our revolution is the industrial
proletariat. Our closest friends are the entire semi-proletariat and
petty bourgeoisie. As for the vacillating middle bourgeoisie, their
right-wing may become our enemy and their left-wing may become our
friend but we must be constantly on our guard and not let them create
confusion within our ranks.
NOTES
[1] A comprador, in the original sense of the word, was the
Chinese manager or the senior Chinese employee in a foreign commercial
establishment. The compradors served foreign economic interests and had
close connection with imperialism and foreign capital.
[2] The Étatistes were a handful of shameless
fascist politicians who at that time formed the Chinese
Étatiste Youth League, later renamed the Chinese Youth
Party. They made counter-revolutionary careers for themselves by
opposing the Communist Party and the Soviet Union and received
subsidies from the various groups of reactionaries in power and from
the imperialists.
[3] For further discussion of the role of the national
bourgeoisie, see "The Chinese Revolution and the Chinese Communist
Party", Chapter 2, Section 4, Selected Works of Mao Tse-tung,
Vol. II.
[4] Tai Chi-tao joined the Kuomintang in his youth and for a
time was Chiang Kai-shek's partner in stock exchange speculation. After
Sun Yat-sen's death in 1925 he carried on anti-Communist agitation and
prepared the ground ideologically for Chiang Kai-shek's
counter-revolutionary coup d'état in 1927. For years he was a
faithful running dog to Chiang Kai-shek in the counter-revolution. He
committed suicide in February 1949, driven to despair by the imminent
doom of Chiang Kai-shek's regime.
[5] The Chen Pao was the organ of the Association for
the Study of Constitutional Government, a political group which
supported the rule of the Northern warlords.
[6] In 1923 Sun Yat-sen, with the help of the Chinese Communist
Party, decided to reorganize the Kuomintang bring about
Kuomintang-Communist co-operation and admit members of the Communist
Party into the Kuomintang. In January 1924 he convened in Canton the
Kuomintang's First National Congress at which he laid down the Three
Great Policies -- alliance with Russia, co-operation with the Communist
Party and assistance to the peasants and workers. Mao Tse-tung, Li
Ta-chao, Lin Po-chu, Chu Chiu-pai and other comrades attended the
Congress and played an important part in helping the Kuomintang to take
the road of revolution. Some of these comrades were elected members,
and others alternate members, of the Central Executive Committee of the
Kuomintang.
[7] By owner-peasants Comrade Mao Tse-tung means the middle
peasants.
[8] Marshal Chao is Chao Kung-ming, God of Wealth in Chinese
folklore.
[9] The May 30th Movement was the nation-wide anti-imperialist
movement in protest against the massacre of the Chinese people by the
British police in Shanghai on May 30 1925. Earlier that month, major
strikes had broken out in Japanese-owned textile mills in Tsingtao and
Shanghai, which the Japanese imperialists and the Northern warlords who
were their running dogs proceeded to suppress. On May 15 the Japanese
textile mill-owners in Shanghai shot and killed the worker Ku
Cheng-hung and wounded a dozen others. On May 28 eight workers were
slaughtered by the reactionary government in Tsingtao. On May 30 more
than two thousand students in Shanghai agitated in the foreign
concessions in support of the workers and for the recovery of the
foreign concessions. They rallied more than ten thousand people before
the British police headquarters, shouting such slogans as "Down with
imperialism!" and "People of China, unite!" The British imperialist
police opened fire, killing and wounding many students. This became
known as the May 30th Massacre. It immediately aroused country-wide
indignation, and demonstrations and strikes of workers, students and
shopkeepers were held everywhere, forming a tremendous anti-imperialist
movement.
[10] By "the overwhelming majority of the semi-owner peasants",
Comrade Mao Tse-tung is here referring to the impoverished peasants who
worked partly on their own land and partly on land rented from
others.
[11] There were several strata of shop assistants in old China.
Here Comrade Mao Tse-tung is referring to the largest. There was also
the lower stratum of shop assistants who led the life of
proletarians.
[12] The seamen's strikes were staged by the seamen at Hongkong
and by the crews of the Yangtse River steamers early in 1922. The
Hongkong seamen held out for eight weeks. After a bitter and bloody
struggle, the British imperialist authorities in Hongkong were finally
forced to raise wages, lift the ban on the Seamen's Union, release the
arrested workers and indemnify the families of the martyrs. The crews
of the Yangtze steamers went on strike soon afterwards, carried on the
struggle for two weeks and also won victory.
[13] Immediately after its founding in 1922-23 the Chinese
Communist Party set about organizing the railway worker. In 1922-23
strikes took place under the Party's leadership on all the trunk lines.
The best known was the general strike on the Peking-Hankow Railway
which began on February 4, 1923. It was a fight for the freedom to
organize a general trade union. On February 7 the Northern warlords Wu
Pei-fu and Hsiao Yao-nan, who were backed by British imperialism,
butchered the strikers. This became known as the February 7th
Massacre.
[14] The Kailan Coal Mines was an inclusive name for the large
contiguous Kaiping and Luanchow coalfields in Hopei Province, then
employing over 50,000 workers. During the Yi Ho Tuan Movement of 1900
the British imperialists seized the Kaiping mines. Subsequently the
Chinese organized the Luandhow Coal Mining Company, which was later
incorporated into the Kailan Mining Administration. Both coalfields
thus came under the exclusive control of British imperialism. The
Kailan strike took place in October 1922. The Tsiaotso Coal Mines,
situated in Honan Province, are also well known in China. The Tsiaotso
strike lasted from July 1 to August 9, 1925
[15] Shameen, a section of the city of Canton, was held on
lease by British imperialism. In July 1924 the British imperialists who
ruled it issued a new police regulation requiring all Chinese to
produce passes with photos on leaving or entering the area. But
foreigners were exempt. On July 15 the workers in Shameen went on
strike to protest against this preposterous measure, which the British
imperialists were finally forced to cancel.
[16] Following the May 30th Incident in Shanghai, general
strikes broke out on June 1, 1925 in Shanghai and on June 19 in
Hongkong. More than 200,000 workers took part in Shanghai and 250,000
in Hongkong. The big Hongkong strike, with the support of the people
throughout the country, lasted 16 months. It was the longest strike in
the history of the world labour movement.
[17] Chihli was the old name for Hopei Province.
[18] The Triad Society, the Society of Brothers, the Big Sword
Society, the Rational Life Society and the Green Band were primitive
secret organizations among the people. The members were mainly bankrupt
peasants, unemployed handicraftsmen and other
lumpen-proletarians. In feudal China these elements were often
drawn together by come religion or superstition to form organizations
of a patriarchal pattern and bearing different names and some possessed
arms. Through these organizations the lumpen-proletarians sought
to help each other socially and economically, and sometimes fought the
bureaucrats and landlords who oppressed them. Of course, such backward
organizations could not provide a way out for the peasants and
handicraftsmen. Furthermore, they could easily be controlled and
utilized by the landlords and local tyrants and, because of this and of
their blind destructiveness, come turned into reactionary forces. In
his counter-revolutionary coup d'etat of 1927 Chiang Kai-shek made use
of them to disrupt the unity of the labouring people and destroy the
revolution. As the modern industrial proletariat arose and grew from
strength to strength, the peasants, under the leadership of the working
class, gradually formed themselves into organizations of an entirely
new type, and these primitive, backward societies lost their raison
d'etre.