More

Confucius Statue Shows Up On China's Tiananmen Square (PHOTOS)

First Posted: 01/14/11 10:43 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:25 PM ET

Confucius Iii

BEIJING (AP) - There's a new face keeping Chairman Mao company on Tiananmen Square. (Scroll down for photos)

A mammoth sculpture of the ancient philosopher Confucius was unveiled this week off one side of the vast plaza. It's a jarring juxtaposition for a square the ruling Communist Party treats as politically hallowed ground: a mausoleum holding revolutionary leader Mao Zedong's body sits in the middle and his giant portrait hangs at one end.

Placing the statue at China's political heart is the authoritarian government's most visible endorsement yet of the 2,500-year-old sage and, selectively, his teachings.

Confucius is enjoying a revival, in books and films, on TV and in classrooms. His message of harmonious social order and deference to authority is unthreatening to the party, while his emphasis on ethics resonates among Chinese coping with fast-paced social change on the back of torrid economic growth.

The government is increasingly marshaling his popularity to bolster national identity. "The rise of a big country requires a cultural foundation, and Chinese culture upholds the spirit of harmony," said Wu Weishan, the sculptor, who has made more than 200 statues of the philosopher. "The essential thoughts of Confucius are love, kindness, wisdom and generosity. And peace and prosperity are what the people are striving for."

The 31-foot (9.5-meter) bronze sculpture depicts a robed Confucius with a serious expression and sits on the east side of the square, facing in the direction of Mao's portrait and amid the bustle of Beijing. Chinese tourists busily snapped photos and agreed that Confucius' teachings bear a message for modern China, where "money worship" and consumerism feel like national preoccupations.

"Confucianism has been governing the lives and ethics of Chinese for thousands of years," said 25-year-old engineer Cui Xiaozhan, on a business trip from the eastern city of Qingdao. "We should study it. But everyone is too busy and tired."

Confucius laid down a code of ethics that was adopted as a quasi-religious national philosophy of governance and personal behavior. His teachings emphasized duty to family, respect for learning, virtuous behavior and obedience of individuals to the state.

At the center of Chinese civilization for nearly two millennia, Confucianism suffered under Mao, who spent much of his rule destroying traditional culture. "Criticizing Confucius" -- as a symbol of the old society believed to be holding China back -- was one of Mao's campaigns.

"Now the party leaders have resurrected Confucius and practically put Mao and Confucius side by side. Mao must be turning in his grave," said Minxin Pei, a China expert at Claremont McKenna College.

But Mao has been dead for 35 years. His political heirs have repudiated his radical policies, embraced capitalism and reinterpreted him as a founding-father figure who spearheaded the revolution that ultimately led to China's fantastic current rise.

When student protesters erected a Statue of Liberty-like "Goddess of Democracy" on the square in 1989, tanks toppled it in the violent crushing of the Tiananmen democracy movement.

Later, Chinese leaders largely turned to nationalism to fill the void after the collapse of the Communist bloc in Europe. Over the past decade, interest in Confucius has grown among parents, educators, government officials and intellectuals.

Books about his teachings are best-sellers. A movie about Confucius last year featured Chow Yun-fat, a veteran actor known for starring in stylish gangster thrillers.

The flip side of economic development is "increased individualism and increased sense of competition and anxiety," said Daniel A. Bell, a philosophy professor at Tsinghua University and author of "China's New Confucianism." "There's a need for ethics and morals and promoting social responsibility."

For the government, there's appeal in a philosophy that preaches harmony at a time when a yawning rich-poor gap and anger at corruption have fueled instability and when unbridled nationalism has boiled over into raucous protests in recent years.

Top leaders "certainly realize the absence of a value system," said Cheng Li, an expert on Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution. "It's a desperate search for ideology, for a new value system."

So far, the government hasn't made any overt proclamations pushing Confucianism, though one of its favorite recent slogans is "harmonious society." It has backed the creation of hundreds of Confucius Institutes to spread Chinese language and culture abroad. A proposal to amend the law on protecting the rights of the elderly would make clearer that children have the duty to visit and care for their aged parents.

What's next? "You will see some top leaders more explicitly talking about reinforcing, promoting ... Confucian values," Li said. "It's such a big basket you can select whatever you want. They will ask people to behave appropriately, not too aggressive, not use violence and don't pursue revolution."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST WORLD

BEIJING (AP) - There's a new face keeping Chairman Mao company on Tiananmen Square. (Scroll down for photos) A mammoth sculpture of the ancient philosopher Confucius was unveiled this week off one s...
BEIJING (AP) - There's a new face keeping Chairman Mao company on Tiananmen Square. (Scroll down for photos) A mammoth sculpture of the ancient philosopher Confucius was unveiled this week off one s...
Filed by Curtis M. Wong  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 28
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
12:52 AM on 01/17/2011
Did they mix up Confucius with Stalin? I wonder...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sam Badger
07:47 PM on 01/16/2011
Confucius obviously had some ideas which are useful and applicable to modern China, but one of the things I think Mao disliked about it was its belief in harsh, feudal hierarchies as far as things like gender is concerned. It would be a shame if they returned to Confucius's older values. If anything, they should view him as a sort of Chinese Aristotle; on one hand he was a founding figure of reason in the west and many ideas of his were profound and still useful to us, but just as many were naive and are anachronistic by today's standards.
11:25 AM on 01/16/2011
I wish it were a statue of Lao Tzu
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sam Badger
07:43 PM on 01/16/2011
I thought the same thing
photo
Indigo1941
Time Traveler
09:58 AM on 01/16/2011
What does Confucius have to say about the value of the yuan, I wonder.
photo
BrassOnes
Hasa Diga Eebowai
11:14 PM on 01/15/2011
Man who stands on toilet is high on pot.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rjhuntington
left is right and right is wrong
04:46 PM on 01/15/2011
Confucianism possibly should be the state religion of China. The party could quietly fade Mao out of the picture and enshrine wise and beloved Confucius and Confucian ideals. Confucius is the anti-Mao. It would be a brilliant move for the Chinese to break free of Mao's legacy and at the same time unite the people under the harmonious ideals of Confucianism. Imagine a capital, investment based economy (obviously where the Chinese are going) governed by Confucian inspired and moderated policies and practices. It could make for a different kind of world order kind of thing. It would boost tourism as well.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BHD
The last great Victorian thinker.
09:58 AM on 01/16/2011
That'd be too close to the right thing to do. If I was to bet, I'd bet on the new oligarchs deciding to consolidate their power by dredging up Mao to purge all critics of the loot and plunder "rule of the few." Confucius was too into the RESPONSIBILITY of power; people with power always hate that.
photo
Max Headroom
Your micro-bio is empty
11:38 AM on 01/15/2011
It is a bit sad that China has had to bring back their cultural heritage in Confucianism due to the purges of Mao, but I'm happy to see that they are doing that.

Confucianism will dovetail quite nicely with the control the party wants and the guidance the people need.

What would really shock me would be if the Chinese gov. decided to promote the other Chinese cultural heritage practices of Taoism and Buddhist Chan/Zen, that are not such a good fit with party control.
photo
Indigo1941
Time Traveler
10:04 AM on 01/16/2011
Taoism and Buddhism were never a good fit with traditional Confucianism anyhow. They were tolerated because people like them. As long as the Beijing government holds onto power, that's most likely to be the continuing policy. Putting Confucius back in place looks like a smart move to stabilize Beijing's power for another century at least. It will be interesting to see how Taiwan responds.
09:05 AM on 01/15/2011
Confucius says:

Education Without Class.

Thus the rise of Meritocracy. In my mind it is the most critical social turning point in human history.
05:43 AM on 01/15/2011
Chinese and many other asian cultures have been influenced for centuries by confucius's teachings. China still is even during communism, influenced by confucius.
09:11 AM on 01/15/2011
Most concepts in Confucius teaching still shine today, not through zealous religious push but by common family daily practice. This is the indication of time tested value.
12:37 AM on 01/15/2011
The Chinese government's idea's on society mirror that of Confucious' teachings. The Confucianism is not so much a belief system (much like abrahamic religions), but rather tennents or rules by which man should conduct himself in society. Confucian ideas aren't morals - There is no moral compass which guides Chinese society - it is deference to law and order instead.
07:18 PM on 01/14/2011
Oddly enough, my World History students consistently write it as "Confusionism."
photo
LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
06:55 PM on 01/14/2011
now I'm all Confuced
04:30 PM on 01/14/2011
Well, Confucius did promoted respect for bureaucracy.
photo
VeryGrood
only class worse than micro-bio was molecular-bio
03:16 PM on 01/14/2011
Let the "Confucius say" jokes begin!
03:11 PM on 01/14/2011
I find it interesting the implicit fact in Confucianism, is recognition of the Merchant.