MaoTse TungOnTheChineseRevolution ChenPo Ta 1953
MaoTse TungOnTheChineseRevolution ChenPo Ta 1953
MaoTse TungOnTheChineseRevolution ChenPo Ta 1953
MAO TSE-TUNG
OlT THE
CHINESB REVOI,UTIO]\
$(ritten in Commemoration of the 30th Annioersarg
ol the Comrnunist partg ol China
bg
- Chen Po.ta
Vice-presicjent qt the Academlo, slnlca
i1
t
CONTENfS
I. Comrade Mao Tse-tung Is the Most
Outstanding Exponent of Marxism-
Leninism in China I
IL Modern China Was the Focal Point of
the Many Contradictions in the East . 5
IIL The Chinese Revolution Is Part of the
World Revolution 14
2
struggles, Comrade Mao Tse.tung has proved him-
self a great master in propagating and applying the
revolutionary theories of Marx, Engels, Lenin and
Stalin. The series of struggles which he conducted
have served to strengthen and consolidate the Com-
munist Party of China.
Marxism-Leninism is characterised by its unity
of theory and practice. Following in the footsteps
of the great teachers-Marx, Engels, Lenin and
Stalin-Comrade Mao Tse-tung likewise pays the
utmost attention to the great creative power of the
revolutionary masses in revolutionary China. Com-
rade Mao Tse-tung has never separated his Marxist-
Leninist theoretical work from the revolutionary
movement of the masses. Under all circumstances
and at all times, he combines I'{arxist-Leninist theory
with the practice of the Chinese revolution and "uses
the basic Marxist viewpoint-the method of class
analysis," as Comrade Mao Tse-tung often says, to
study, absorb and clystallise the practical experiences
of the Chinese revolution. By so doing the correct-
ness of Marxism-Leninism ha-s been further demon-
strated and its boundless, living, revolutionary power
revealed.
It is precisely by relying upon the creative power
of the revolutionary masses of China, by relying upon
the many-sided, complex experiences of the Chinese
revolution (it is precisely otr this basis) that Com-
rade Mao Tse-iung has developed Marxism-Leninism,
forcing every kind of nonsense aimed at vitiating
or distorting Marxism-Leninism to declare its bank_
ruptcy before the masses.
In his famous article On the Signifi.cance of
Militant Materialism published in 1g22, Lenin said:
". . the dialectics which Marx. . . applied so
successfully that now every day of the awakening to
life and struggle of new classes in the East (Japan,
India and China)-i.e., the hundreds of millions of
fruman beings who form the greater part of the popu-
lation of the world and whose historical passivity and
historical torpor have hitherto been conditions re-
sponsible for stagnation and decay in many advanced
European countries-every day of the awakening to
life of new. peoples and new classes serves as a fresh
conflrmation of Marxism."
\\zithout doubt, the very fact that the Chinese
people under the leadership of the Chinese
working class rose to struggle and have recenfly won
great victories is a fresh confirmation of the iurg"-
scale, outstanding victory of Marxism-Leninism in
A.
(2) Modern China lVas the Focal Point ol the
Many Contradictions in the East
6
within the old ruling classes of China-the feudal and
comprador classes, leading to endless wars among
the warlords.
Cornrade Mao Tse-tung said in 1928:
10
gie., be they ntiiitary or politicai, economic oi
cultural, bloody or non-bloody, before the basic
success as that of today ;. ',ygn."[5J
That is to say, the process of the Chinese revolu-
tion has been an extremely ruthless, intricate and
circuitous one. And that is the reason why the
Chinese working class and the Chinese people are
thoroughly steeled; and why the party of the
Chinese working class-the Communist Party oi
China'-is thoroughly steeled. The rich experiences
of the revolution have become the precious treasure
ol the Chinese u,orking class and the Chinese people.
Such rich revolutionary experiences could Bot but
enrich the Marxist-Leninist theory.
The works of Comrade i\{ao Tse-tung and his
theory of the Chinese revolution are the crystallisa-
tion of China's rich revolutionary experiences.
In November 1919, Lenin pointed out to the
Communists of the East:
"You are facing a task which has never before
been faced by the Communists of the whole world:
basing yourselves on the general Communist theory
and practice and adapting yourselves to the peculiar
conditions which do not exist in European countries,
you must be able to apply this theory anel practice
to conditions in which the main mass will consist
of the peasantry, in which you must solve the task
2L
Revolution, and of the fundamental changes in
Chinese history brought about by the ascent of thc
modern Chinese proletariat to the political arena,
Comrade Mao Tse-tung pointed out that before thc
changes took place, the Chinese revolution was a
democratic revolution of the old category, i.e., a
democratic revolution under the Ieadership of the
bourgeoisie, and that after the changes had occurred
ihe Chinese revolution became a democratic revolu-
tion of a new category, i.e., a democratic revolution
under the leadership of the proletariat.
24
which became: "the revolution ci tirc lnassrri
. the
.Wh-at
are spoken of as the masses of flre people
in formula proposed by Comracle jVlao Tse_tung
are mainly the peasants. This revolution is based on
26
* L his report on the natiorral and colonial ques-
tion made at the Second Congress of the Communist
Intemational, Lenin proposed:
"it would be utopian to think that proletarian
parties, if indeed they can arise in such countries,
could pursue Communist tactics and a Communist
policy in these backward countries without establish-
ing definite relations with the peasant movement and
without effectively supporting it."
Stalin pointed out on several occasions: ,,. The
national question is, in its essence, a peasant ques-
f i9p." t10J
27
"The controversies between the two parties,
viewed from their social implications, really alf
hinge on the issue of agrarian relations."
To assume leadership in the peasant revolution
is a fundamental symbol of the leadership of the
proletariat. That the bourgeoisie cannot become the
leadel of the bourgeois-democratic revolution is
basically because it cannot lead the peasant re-
volution, because it iears the peasant revolution and
opposes the peasant revolution. There is no doubt
that only under the leadership of the proletariat, will
it be possible eff'ectively to organise the extremely broad
and disorganised peasant population into an un-
limited fighting force, to talk oi the alliance of the
,ivorkers and the peasants, to talk of uniting, on the
basis of this al1iance, all potential revolutionary forces
and rvinning them over to our side, and to talk of
the unity of Chinese revolutionary forces with the
international revolutionary forces.
As everybody knows, during the first revolution-
ary period Chen Tu-hsiu maintained that "if the
bourgeois-democratic revolution loses the assistance
of the bourgeoisie, it will cease to have any class
signiflcance and social basis in the revolutionary
cause." That is to say, he regarded "the class signi-
f,cance and social basis" of the bourgeois-democratic
revolution as pertaining to the bourgeoisie only. Chen
Tu-hsiu did not take the peasant problem into ac-
count. (See Chen Tu-hsiu's article, The Bourgeoit
28
Reuolution and the Reaolutionarg Bourgeoisie
published in 1923.) It should be pointed out that it
u'as in connection with the peasant question that the
opportunists of every description, beginning rvith
Chen Tu-hsiu, opposed and misrepiesented the
leadership of the proletariat. Either they direct-
ly denied the leadership of the proletariat and
acknowledged the Ieadership of the bourgeoisie,
thus of course directly rejecting the peasant re-
volution, as did Chen Tu-hsiu-ism in the flrst
revolutionary period and Right opportunism in the
initial stage of the War of Resistance to Japanese
Aggression. Or they adopted a "Left" form anC
actually denied the necessity of uniting r,,,ith the
middle peasants and the urban petty bourgeoisie, thus
in reality denying the leadership of the proletariat,
as did "Left" opportunism during the period of ten
years of civil war.
gr
the enemies are extremely powerful, the revolution-
ary Iorces, unless a1lou,ed a long period of tirne,
cannot be massed anci steelecl inr,o a i)c$/cr that wilt
finally crush them. Since the enenly's suppression of
the Chinese revolution is exceedingly ruthless, the re-
volutionary forces cannot hold their orvn positions
steadily and take over those of the enemy nnless they
steel themselves and develop their tenacity in the
course of steeling themselves. The vieu, that the
forces of the Chinese revoiution can be built up in a
twinklins and the Chinese revolutionarv struggle can
triumph in a moment is therefore incorrect.
"With the presence of such enemies, it becomes
certain that the principal means, the principai form
of the Chinese revolution cannot be a peaceful, but
must be an armed one. This is because our enem\/
allorvs to the Chinese people, ,,l,hc possess no political
freedorns and rights whatsoever, no possibility of
peaceful aciirriiies. Stalin said, 'In China, armed re-
volution is fighting against arnied counter-revolution.
This is one ol the peculiarities and one of the advant-
ages of the Chinese revolution.' This is a peiiecflv
correct formulation. That rzierv u,hich belitiles armed
struggle, revolutionary war, guerrilla war, and army
work is therefore incorrect.
"'With the presence of such enemies, the question
of revolutionary base areas also arises. Since the
powerful imperialism and its a11ies, the reactionary
forces in China, have occupied China's kei cities foi
.)i
a long time, if the revolutionary forces do not wish to
compromise rvith imperialism and its jackals but
want to persist ir-r the struggle, and if they
intend to accumulate strength and steel them-
selves, and avoid decisive battles with the powerful
enemy before they have mustered enough strength,
then they must build the backward villages into
advanced, consolidated base areas, into great miiitary,
political, economic, and cultural revolutionary posi-
tions, so that lhey can flght the fierce enemy who
utilises the cities to attack the rural districts, and
gradually win a complete victory for the revolution
through protracted fighting."t13l
To establish revolutionary bases by armed force
was the starting point of the road along which Com-
rade Mao Tse-tung led the revolution to nation-wide
victory. Comrade trtao Tse-tung pointed out that it
was necessary to establish revolutionary bases even
if thei, were only several small pieces of territory at
the beginning; and that if this course was persisted
in, then a spark might start a prairie fire. "Only thus
can we win the confidence of the revolutionafy fiiasses
throughout the countr1,, just as the Soviet Union has
done throughout the world. Only thus can we create
tremendous dif ficulties for the reactionary ruling
classes, shake their very ioundations, and precipitate
their internal disintegration. And only thus can we
3+
trians onlv, manv of which are even difficult for the
pedestrians.
{.0
war they wanted nothing short of ,,regular warfare,"
disregarding the circumstance thai the .r"*y;.
strength and ours were at great variance at the initlal
t19l.J. y.
Stalin,s speech d,eliaered on August 1" 7g2? at a
ioint p_Tenarg session of the Central Cimmittee onil tke
Central Control Commissxon o! the Coirnunist p;aria oi
the Souiet lJnlon.
In other words, it is possible for the proletariat
in the colonial and semi-colonial countries to establish
a revolutionary united front with the national bou'r-
geoisie under certain historical conditions.
Of course, in this united front, the proletariat
must not obscure its orvn independent face and must
absolutely maintain the independent character of the
proletarian movement. The proletariat must build
up its own leading position in the united front. This
principie was also laid down by Lenin and Stalin.
In accordance with the experience of the Chinese
revolution, especially the experiences of the united
front set up between the Communist Part,v and the
I(uomintang, Comrade Mao Tse-tung developed these
viewpoints of Lenin and Stalin and created a set of
complete and correct policies concerning the united
front in the Chinese revolution.
Comrade lilao Tse-tung called the policy of the
united front of the Chinese Communist Party with the
bourgeoisie, especially the policy towards the Kuo-
mintang big bourgeoisie in the period of the War of
Resistance to Japanese Aggression a policy of both
unity and struggle. The reason lr,hy it called for
both unity and struggle was tfrat the Chinese bour-
geoisie possessed a dual character. The closed-door-
ism of the "Left" did not realise the dual character
of the Chinese bourgeoisie and therefore denied tht
possibility and necessity of unity; the (ight oppor-
tunists also did not realise the dual character of the
40
Chinese bourgeoisie and therefore denied the neces-
sity for struggle. The correCt policy of Comrade Mao
Tse-tung was to carry out a resolute and serious
struggle on two fronts against both Right and "Left"
opportunism.
The dangerous character of these two forms ol
opportunism was different in various periods. The
history of the Chinese revolution proves that before
the united iront with the bourgeoisie was formed,
"Left" closed-door-ism was the main danger to the
Party; but after the united front was already formed,
Right capitulationism was often the main danger
to the Party. For instance, during the period oi the
Second Revolutionary Civil War in China, ltom 1927
to 1936, the "Left" opportunists even denied the pos'
sibility and necessity of a united front with the petty
bourgeoisie in general, and regarded as the most dan-
gerous enemies of the revolution some sma[1 parties
of the petty bourgeoisie and some sections of the
national bourgeoisie that u,ere not in power' In 1931,
the invasion of Northeast China by Japanese imper-
ialism gave rise to nerv changes in the political re-
lations of classes in China, but there was still no
change in the views of the "Left" opportunists' This
"Left" opportunism was the main danger at that time
because it hindered the Party trom linking itsell with
the broad masses and hindered the Party from having
the possibility of fuily utilising all contradictions to
facilitate the revoluticn. Bul in 1937 after the Anti-
Japanese National United Front was formed, some
comrades who had committed ,,Left,' opportunist
mistakes, as representec.l"by Comrade Chen ^Shao-yu,
began to commit Right opportunist mistakes
instead. These Right opportunist mistakes were
the main danger at that tlme because they
hindered
the_Party from struggling against reactionary
forces
a.nd reactionary trendi in the united
front and Lxposed
the proletariat to the danger ol losing its independ-
ence.
I23l Ibid.
t241 Problems o! Independence anil Autonomg wlthin the
United Front.
and its faithful lackey Chiang Kai-shek, overthrow
the last counter-revolutionary dynasty in China head-,
ed by Ch:rng Kai-shek and achieve the victory fon
which the Chinese people had striven for a hundred:
yca rs.
During the period of the War of Resistance, the
national bourgeoisie, the middle class, formed
a middle force betrveen the lvorkers, peasants and
other petti,-bourgeois elements on the one hand
and the big landlords, and big bourgeoisie represeitt-
ed by Chiang Kai-shek on the other. The Communist
Party of China 3flepted a policy ol wirrning over the
middle force. At that time, Comrade &lao Tse-tung
explained the situation: ,,Although there are class_
contradictions between it and the workers and it does
57
. A policy of unity rvas adopted towards the revolu-
tfonary potentialities of the national bourgeoisie and
a policy of criticisnr was adopted towards its waver-
ihg and compromising character, the policy of critic-
ism being another form of struggle. This policy of
eriticism was different from the form of struggle
against the diehard clique in the Kuomintang, because
the national bourgeoisie was not in power. It was,
hou,ever, also a kind of combined policy of unity and
struggle. This policy aimed at stifi'ening the attitude
of the national bourgeoisie in the struggle against
,imperialism.
,A.fter the \l,7ar of Resistance had come to an end
the national bourgeoisie continued to suffer from the
restriction and oppression of the big landlords and
bureaucratic bourgeoisie (the big bourgeoisie) re-
presented by Chiang Kai-shek. And after the Japa-
flese oppression was overthrorvn, American oppression
came in its stead, which also harmed the interests o[
the national bourgeoisie. 'lhus, there existed the pos-
sibititv oi the continuation of the united iront between
the proletariat and the national bourgeoisie. Titc
qtiestion remainei much the same: to adopt a policv oi
uniiy toi,vards its revolutionall, potentiali'Lies ar-id to
aciopt a policy of criticism and struggle tor,vards its
rvavering anci compromising character.
Comracie Mao Tse-tung also pointed out that
becel:se oi the backwardness of China's econornr,, il
q,ould stilt be nccessary after the victory oi the revolu-
58
tion to carry on an economic united front rvith the
national [rourgeoisie.
Of course, as explained by Comrade .\{ao
Tse-tung, the economic united front must conform to
,the twofold policy of both rrnity and struggle. A
policy of unity should n-e adopted towards the en-
thusiasm of the bourgeoisie to develcp industrial pro-
duction; while a policy of struggle should be arlopterl
tolarcls speculation, manipulation and monopol-t, hy
the bourgeoisie, and its rriolation of (lovernment
,laws, decrees and economic plans.
The events of the last ferv years have consistent-
ly proved the correctness of Cornrade Mao Tse-tung's
policy: "ln order to offset imperialist pressure and
to push her backward economv a step forward, China
rnust utilise all elements of urban and rural capital-
ism which are,;eneficial and not harmiul to the
national economy and the people's livelihood. She
must unite lvith the national bourgeoisie in the com-
,nron struggle." Its correctness can be discerned in
the irarious financial and economic achievements of
the People's Republic of China; anrl also in such
,massive people's movements as the Resist-American-
Aggression and Aid-Korea Movement, the suppres-
sion oi the counter-revolutionaries and the agrarian
ref orm.
'lhe events of recent years have continuously
prorreC ihat Right opportunism \\/as wrong because it
attempted to sacrifice tire rndependence, autonomy, and
leading position of the proietariat in thr: united front
60
iy defined objectives: to struggie lor the present new
bourgeois-democratic revoluticn and for the futurc
proletarian-Socialist revolntion. We have ophelcl
these r.t'o objectives despite the enmitv, 1ibel, sland-
er, and ridicule that are born out of ttre sheer igno-
rance and meanness of the enemies of Communism-.
All such attacks we must resclutely repulse. As itr
lell-intentioned skeptics, u'e shailnot attack them br-rt
e.rpiain to them rvith good interrt a,nd much patience.
All this is clear ancj ciefinite. There is nofl-ring am-
higuous abcut it."
This paragraph expounds rvith cctnplete clarity
China's ftrture-a iuture r,,,hicii, gcverned by the lal.,,s
of world histor_r,as weli as Clrinesc history, is
ahsc.,lutelr inevitable.
The Right opportunists either lost sight ol ilris
future or regarded it as extrereelv uncertain or ex-
tremell. gloomy. Regarding the bturgeoisie as lead-
er oi the bourgeois-democratic revolutior-r, the1, ss11_
sidered that the fruit of the revoiution should lall to
the bourgeoisie alcne. For instance, ir-r his article
1'he BotLrgeois Reuolutian ancl the [leoolutionary
Bourgeoisie, published in 1923, Chen Iu-hsiu wr.ote:
"The victor_y of such a democratic revolutiori certain-
lv means the rrictory of the bcurgeoisie.,, From th'e
Rightist standpoint, he flail1, rienied the iuture o[
Socialism. Conrrerselv, the,,Left,' opportunists ignor-
ed the diffcrence between the bourgeois-democratic
revolution and the Socialist revolution or con-
sidered that the initial victory of ihe revolution in cne
61
or severaI provinces would mark the begirrrrtng oI the
transition to thc realisation of Socialism. Cr they
considered that by the time the victory of the revolu-
tion had spread to the "major parts" of China, the'
fundamental task would be to carry out the Socialist
levolution and that the rule of the l(uominiang re-
actionaries and irnperialists could be overthrown onll,'
on the basis of realising Socialism. From the "Left'n
standpoint, "Left" impetuosity flatly denied ihe pos-
sibiiity of the victory of the democratic revolution,
thus denying in essence the possibilitv of the victory
of Socialism.
"Left" opportunism and Righi opportunism art:
interchangeable on this question, as on many others.
As has been stated above, when during the initial
stage ol'the War of Resistance to Japanese Aggres-
sion our Party, under the leadership of Comrade A{ar>
Tse-tung, was striving to prepare itself in every step
of its work to turn the outcome of the War of Resist-
ance into a victorv for the people, those comrades who
had committed "Leit" mistakes during the period of
the Second Revolutionary Civil War made a conclusion
eqtirely to the contrary, considering the victorious
"[uture" of the \Var of Resistance as belonging to
Chiang I(ai-shek's I(uomintang rather than to the
people. This conclusicn. obviouslr,, den'ed both the
victorious future of the democratic revolution and the
future of Socialism.
Follo,,ving 1927, Ccmrade Mao Tse-tung in-
cessantiy refuted the erron€ous "Le[t" ideology in
62
relation to problems concerning the nature of thc
revolution. He considered that the Chinese demo-
cratic revolution must be carried out to the end.
"Only by acting in this waj/ can a Socialist future of
the Chinese revolution be nursed. l-Iisconceptions
such as denying the period of rerrolution fcr the peo-
ple's rights and cal.,:idering that the Chinese revolu-
tion has reached the opportune moment for a Socialist
revolution are extremely detrimentai to the Chinese
revolution." Comrade Mao Tse-tung regarded as conl-
pletely, correct the opinion then held by the Com-
munist International that the nature of the Chirrese
rel'olution was still that oi a bourgeois-democratic
revolution: "The struggle which we have passed
through verifies the truth of the opinion of the Com-
munist International." t261
I29l tbid.
"{301 Ibid.
65
revolution, not itS whole outcome. Its whole out,
come will be the development oi the capitaliet Iactors
on the one hand, and of the Socialist factors on the.
other. " t31l
t31l tbid.
.66
country's economy and to turn it into the leading'
element of the entire peoplels economy. This section
of the econom)/ is an economy of a Socialist nature,
not a capitalist nature." The Common Programnrc,
following the teachings of Comrade Mao Tse-tung,
has also clearly stipulated this. It is stated in The
Common Programme: "State-owned economy is anr
economy of a Socialist nature' All enterprises relat-
ing to the economic life of the countr5r and exercising a
dominant influence over the people's livelihood shall
be under the unified operation of the State. A11 State-
owned resources and enterprises are the public pro-
perty of the people as a whole, are the main material
basis on which the People's Republic will develop
production and bring about economic prosperity, and
are the leading force of the entire social economy."
The mutual-aid teams, the agricuirural pro-
ducers' co-operatives and the supply and marketing
co-operatives of the labouring masses of tire peasants
rvhich have been developed in the course of the New'
Democratic revolution also contain Socialist factors
and serve as transitionai forms on the way to
Socialism.
It is true that we need a considerable length oi
time to bring about Socialist transformation
throughout the country. But we possess the
prerequisites. We have opened up the road' =Pre-
parations and struggles are still needed, but our llro'
gress is fuliy assured. As Comrade Mao Tse-tung
has pointed out:
sr"
tions are ready, and when agreement has been reache,I
by the people throughout the countrv after mature
deliberations, we shall embark ,pon ih. nerv era oI
Socialism deliberately and proper1y.,,rs2l
'\:
The Right opportunists attempted to make a
-museum piece of this great ideal of Communism,
-rvhile the "Left" opportunists attempted
to strip
.of its rich, living flesh and blood. Comrade lVlaoit
Tse-tung, taking into account all the roads which
'Chinese history had to traverse, combined rigidity in
matters of Communist principle with RexiSitity in
nratters of policy for the attainment of the ob;ective
.of Communism. Thus, Communism
in China is treither
Utopian nor unattainable; it is entirelv attainable,
irresistible and iull of living force.
70
€apable of leading the Chinese people from one vic-
tory to another, must flrst of all bring about Marxist-
Leninist.rdeological unity in its own ranks, raise the
ideologicil level oi Marxism-Leninism ir-r the whole o[
the Party and consolidate the correct leadership oi
Marxism-Leninism. Comrade Mao Tse-tung said: "To
.defeat the enem\r, rlur ranks must be in good order, our
steps in perfect co-ordinatiorl, our troops weli-trained,
and orrr weapons well-made."t34l As viewed by Com-
rade Xlac Tse-tung, what is the foundation for the good
order in our ranks ancl for our steps to be in perlect
.co-ordination? It is Marxist-I-eninist unit.v. How can
we become well-trained troops? FIow can our \veapofis
become g.rod rveapons? Onli, by raising the ideo-
Iogicai level of Marxism-Lenir-rism throughout the
Party. Comrade trIao Tse-tung said:
"But ii we can make ourselves masters of the
science of Xlarxism-Leninism and have faith in the
'masses, stand closely by them and lead them forrvarri,
rve shail be fullv able to surmount any obstacle antl
'overcome any difficulty. And our strength will he
,invincible." t35l
Thus, Comrade Mao Tse-tung could not but rnatr<e
considerable efforts to fight against various errone$us
ideologies and to build and consolidate our Parfy
ideologically.
73
thereby the tactics cf struggle and the methods cl
rvork, and mal<e conrrades understand that stral,ing
from the investigation of actual conditions the1, will
f all into ttre ab'yss oI phantasy and zrdventlpisp."[3eJ
7q
opinions and the nev,/ experiences of the masses, were
unable to conduct any research or to crystallise anrJ
svstematise tlie opinions of the masses. Al1 this
doonied tireir leadership to errors and doomed the
rvork uncie;' their ieaclership to faiiure.
The 3O-,vear history of our party is the history
of the struggie between the correct illarxist-Leninist
Ieaciership and the erroneous, anti-nlarxist-Leninist
leadership. It is also the histor-y in which Comrade
/tlao Tse-tung's correct lead,:rship has defeated thc
erroneous leadership, thereb,v overcoming the setbaci<s
a;rd difficulties encountcred. in the revolution, and
leaciing the r-cvolution finally to its great victor1,.
i'hc struggle carried crrt by this correct leader.
sirip in ideclogicaiilr opposing subjectivism and irr
politicaily, opposing opportunism was linked with tlr':
fight againsi sectarianism in organisational mattei-s.
Pett,v-bo,,rrgeois narro.v-mindedness takes the
form ol sectarianisrn in political liie and in organisa-
tion, in addition to one-sidedness in ideology. Sub-
jccti.,,ism rneans ideological isolation from the masses
both inside and outside the paruy, rvhiie sectarianl.,n-r
means politicai and organisational isolation from the
masses both inside and cutside the partv. Tliev are
tlo aspects of cne and the samc thing. Sucl, sectar-
ianism once produced eiril conseouences o\rer a Iong
period.
In 1929, (ic.ri,rrade Mao Tsc-tung severeiv attackcil
clirluism, pointing out that 'it is possessed cf a great
77
corrosi.,re and centrifugal
cffect.,, T'hc so-callr:il c1i-
quisrr means sectarianism. In I.c.)12, Cornrac_le Mao
Tse-tung said: ''
80
AE;out the Author
Clien Po-ta, a member of the Central Committee
,oI lire Communist Party of China, is concurrentli'
Vice-President of the Institute of Marxism-Leninisrn
in Peking and Vice-President of the Academia
Sinica. Before 1937, under the reactionary rule oi
I(uomintang, he carried on underground work in
North China ior the Party. Throughout the period
oi the \\'ar of Resistance to Japanese Aggression, he
'Y* worked in the Central Committee of the Pal't1', mak-
ing a special study of the Chinese problem. His
t
important n'ritings include: The Four Big Foruilies
B ol China; A Ceneral Studg of the Land-Tax in
lllodern China; Yuan Shih-kai, The Great Usurper;
and Chiang Kai-shek, the PubLic Enemy of the ClLin-
ese People.