childhood of Mao Zedong
about the destructive childhood of Mao Zedong, I had only a brief statement in housed basic text this I have now been extended again, the new section now looks like this:..
Also on the other side of the world, include such relationships over the Chinese dictator Mao Zedong -. Ch = Mao Tse-tung - (who is responsible for 70 million deaths in peacetime) was reported that his father beat him and him "lazy and useless" called (. see Chang / Halliday, 2005) The enormous hatred that Mao felt as a result of sustained violence of his father, The following quote is clear: "When he took revenge on his political opponents in 1968, he told the commander of the Red Guards, he would have liked, though his father had been ill-treated so brutally," My father was poor. If he were still alive, should be with him, "the aircraft" make "- a painful position in which the victim's arms were wrenched behind his back and his head was pressed down" (ibid., p. 21). On the basis of this quotation is - I think - frightening, "textbook-like" shows how Mao tyrannized his people on behalf of his father.
Mao's father demanded obvious - which is at a Mao scene reported significantly - often as a sign of submission to the Koutou in which it is to fall on both knees and hit his head on the ground. Mao later described a scene where he ran furiously against the insults of his father's guests of the house outside. The father followed him. Mao threatened him to jump into a pond, if he would come closer (therefore probably suicide). The father demanded the Koutou. He, Mao had then agreed not to implement the Koutou only on one knee as if in return, the father did not hit him. As Mao proudly reported, thus ending the war between him and his father through this open rebellion. Mao himself said in the same breath that he beaten before the more, was if he had shown modest and submissive. (See Adolphi, 2009, p. 23ff) Here is the full extent of paternal power is clear. The more helpless, Mao was, the more he was beaten. This shows, I mean, clearly the sadism of Mao's father. Adolphi also writes that Mao was referring frequent beatings and his father very negative and hostile described. (Ibid., p. 26) also
between Mao's parents have often been serious conflicts. His mother was a devout Buddhist, while his father was one to the skeptics. Mao stood between the two sympathetic, but more with the views of his mother, whom he adored and nur positiv von ihr berichtete. (vgl. Spence, 2003, S. 20ff, auch Adolphi, 2009, S. 24ff ) In den verwendeten Quellen finden sich allerdings keinerlei Hinweise darauf, dass seine Mutter ihm in irgendeiner Weise helfend und schützend gegen den gewalttätigen Vater zur Seite stand. In der damaligen chinesischen Kultur war die bedingungslose Unterordnung unter den Vater auch etwas, was allgemein akzeptiert wurde, sicherlich auch von Maos Mutter. Was fühlt ein Kind gegenüber der Mutter, wenn es vor ihren Augen und mit ihrem Wissen vom Vater ständig schwer verprügelt wird, ohne dass eingegriffen wird? Vielleicht Verrat, Hass, Wut, Ohnmacht? Wie passt dies mit Maos späterer Verehrung seiner Mutter zusammen? Mao fand in seiner Mother obviously not quite helping witness, that can be recorded.
was six years Mao had to work on the family farm, but visited a school in which "the teacher hands out plenty of beatings. (Adolphi 2009, p. 27) At the age of thirteen left Mao - like most boys in China - the school now and had the full work of an adult do on the court of his father. At fourteen he was forced to marry, his bride was eighteen. (See Spence, 2003, p. 22) His wife died, however, after about two or three years of living together. At the age of about seventeen, Mao visited again a new school in Xiang Xiang. Mao was there, however, because his clothes and his humble rural origins despised and treated as outsiders. (Ibid., p. 26)
developed as a young man Mao "an admiration for strong men such as Napoleon or the legalists Shan Yang, the strict laws and draconian penalties as a form of government advocated." (Cf. Wemheuer, 2010 , p. 23)
New sources:
Spence, J. 2003: Mao. Classen Verlag, Munich.
Adolphi, W. 2009: Mao. A Chronicle. New Life Publishing.
Wemheuer, F. 2010: Mao Zedong. Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag, Reinbek.
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