海角大神

The mystery of Confucius' disappearance from Tiananmen Square

When a 31-foot statue of Confucius was recently unveiled, it symbolized the Chinese government鈥檚 new embrace of traditional values. But then it was dismantled in the dead of night.

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Andy Wong/AP
In this Jan. file photo, Chinese policemen stand guard in front of a sculpture of Confucius near the Tiananmen Square in Beijing. The mysterious removal of the statue has left many Chinese looking for an explanation.

As politically significant tea leaves go, a 31-foot statue of the Chinese sage Confucius is an unusually large tea leaf. But scholars, political analysts, and bloggers are reading a lot into its sudden disappearance from Tiananmen Square.

Four months ago, when the gleaming bronze was unveiled just across the road from the famous portrait of Mao Zedong, it was widely interpreted as a dramatic sign of the Chinese government鈥檚 embrace of traditional values.

Perhaps not. In the dead of night last Thursday, the statue was dismantled. Workers left some ugly blue corrugated iron fencing in its place.

鈥淭his may mean the left wing is growing more powerful in China,鈥 speculates Kong Weidong, spokesman for the International Reunion Association of Confucius鈥 Descendants. 鈥淭his was definitely a government decision.鈥

Confucius is a controversial figure in China. For centuries his philosophy guided the country鈥檚 rulers, but Mao branded him a feudal and backward influence. During the Cultural Revolution young radicals destroyed and defaced Confucian temples and artifacts.

More recently, though, the Communist authorities have rehabilitated Confucius, who lived more than 2,500 years ago. His teachings, which stress respect for ones elders and for authority and the importance of social harmony, bolster the government鈥檚 message very satisfactorily.

Beijing has adopted Confucius as a national brand, attaching his name to hundreds of official institutes around the world teaching Chinese language and culture.

This has not gone down well with everybody here. An online survey by the ruling Communist party鈥檚 official organ, the People鈥檚 Daily, found earlier this year that 70 percent of respondents opposed the erection of Confucius鈥 statue on the edge of Tiananmen Square, the politically symbolic heart of the country.

鈥淒oes anyone still want China to go back to feudal autocracy?鈥 asked 鈥淛idushan Houjue鈥 in a comment on an article about the statue鈥檚 fate on the website of Hong Kong-based Phoenix TV. 鈥淪hould we promote science and rationality or stupidity and ancient fashions?鈥

Mr. Kong says he is disappointed but not entirely surprised by the fate meted out to the statue of his famous ancestor. 鈥淐onfucius is not yet firmly enough established in the mainstream of Chinese society to have a place in Tiananmen Square,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t happened five years too soon.鈥

Although 鈥渢he left wing has won the debate for now,鈥 Kong believes, the statue has not gone far. It has been moved into a statuary garden in the newly re-opened National Museum.

Well out of Mao鈥檚 sight.

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