Title: To create a Socialist Utopia: Dazhai Commune
1To create a Socialist Utopia Dazhai Commune
2- ORGANIZE POPULATION INTO PRODUCTION UNITS
- TOTAL CARE -- HEALTH,
- EDUCATION, WELFARE
- INSPIRE WITH CONTUNOUS
IDEOLOGICAL WORK
3- Mao believed the country should focus on industry
and food. Mao made a five year plan and called it
The Great Leap Forward
4Great Leap Forward
- The Commune is Like a Mighty Dragon, Production
is awe-inspiring
5Communes and Collectivization
6Great Leap Forward Second Five Year Plan
(1958-1962)
- Collectivization became the official policy.
Chinas land was divided into 70,000 communes - He hoped that it would help unemployment and
cause a genuine communal unity - He accused peasants of hiding grain and used
force against them - The food would be traded for money to buy weapons
or used for fuel
7How did the Great Leap Forward affect China?
- Mao believed that both industry and agriculture
had to grow to make the other work. The industry
had to be well fed to be good industry workers,
and agriculture needed industry to make good
tools for them. - In order to make the industry and agriculture
grow, China was reformed into a series of
communes. - A commune is a relatively small, often rural
community whose members share common interests,
work, and income and often own property
collectively.
8The Great Leap Forward
- Maos second Five-Year Plan is known as the Great
Leap Forward, and involved utilizing the massive
amounts of human labor to avoid having to import
industrial machinery. - Who needs a bulldozer when youve got a few
hundred people with shovels, right? - Mao believed that steel and grain would make
China great, and these endeavors were complete
and total disasters.
9Great Leap Forward, 1958-60
- In 1958, Mao decided that the Russian strategy of
industrial development was not suitable for
China. - This urban, large-factory system was not having
enough of an impact on the mass of the population
in the countryside. - Mao decided to opt for a unique Chinese method of
industrialization.
10THE GREAT LEAP FORWARD - THE COMMUNES
- Develop Agriculture as well as Industry
- Chinese Commune System - All Encompassing
Collective Farm Work Units - Purpose Releasing the Workers Tremendous Energy
11How? Peasants placed into communes Mass
mobilization
12THE GREAT LEAP FORWARD - THE COMMUNES
- The advantage of Peoples Communes lies in the
fact that they combine industry, agriculture,
commerce, education, and military affairs. - - Mao
- Peoples Time Managed Effectively for Work
- Commune in Control of All Activities - Hierarchy
- Commune Creation Extremely Speedy - More than
25,000 at end of 1958
13- Communes were made up of many families ( often as
many as five thousand families) - The commune owned everything, tools, animals, and
land. - People worked for the commune, not for
themselves. - The commune provided schools, nurseries and
healthcare so workers could work instead of
taking care of babies and older parents - Would any of these things help your family?
14The Great Leap Forward
- Farming was further collectivized into larger
farms called communes. 26,000 communes were
created, each covering 15,000 square miles,
supporting about 25,000 people each. - Life on the communes was strictly controlled,
peasants worked the land together, ate together
in cafeterias, slept in communal dorms, and
raised their kids in communal nurseries.
15- Propaganda posters often use symbolism
- The dragon in this picture symbolizes steel
production - The bird symbolizes grain production
- How does this poster make you feel?
16THE GREAT LEAP FORWARD - PROPAGANDA ENTHUSIASM
- Propaganda a Key Element
- Goal to Inspire Workers to Overachieve Goals
- Impressive Construction Projects Completed
17- Write at least two sentences that you think this
poster might be saying.
18The Great Leap Forward
- Funerals, weddings, and religion were replaced
with meetings and propaganda. - Only work points, not pay, were awarded.
- Only the state profited from this labor, and
peasants had no reason to work hard. - Criticism of the commune would label you as
dangerous, and escape was next to impossible.
19Effects of Communes
Economic difficulties Most peasants had
lost their incentives to produce ?get
everything in the people communes ?communal
eating halls provided the peasants with very
generous meals free of charge lower
productivity food crises, decline in
production, devaluation of money, high inflation
and a huge national deficit
20Effects Great Famine
21Causes of the Famine
- 1958 had particularly good weather for growing
food. Party leaders claimed that the harvest for
1958 was a record 260 million tons - which was not true.
- Still the leaders over-reported their harvests to
their superiors in Beijing, and what was thought
to be surplus grain was sold abroad.
22The Famine
- What factors contributed to the famine of
1959-62? - Encouraged by expectations of a great leap in
agricultural productivity from collectivization,
the government diverted massive amounts of
agricultural resources to industry and sharply
raised grain procurement from the peasants,
eventually leading to malnutrition among peasants
and decimation of their labor productivity in
growing next year's crops. The consecutive years
of bad weather also aggravated the fatal economic
policies. The decline in food availability was
indeed a cause of the GLF famine. But other
institutional factors, including urban bias in
China's food distribution system, radical local
policies, and grain exports, were also major
contributors of the excess mortality. By and
large, the GLF catastrophe was the result of a
series of failures in central planning. - While the inflated numbers reported by communes
contributed to the famine, what is more
disturbing is that the top CCP officials knew it
was happening, and yet continued to take large
portions of the grain yields.
23Causes of the Famine
- The excellent growing weather of 1958 was
followed by a very poor growing year in 1959. - Some parts of China were hit by floods.
- In other growing areas, drought was a major
problem. The harvest for 1959 was 170 million
tons of grain well below what China needed at
the most basic level. - In parts of China, starvation occurred.
24Results
- Famine!
- When there is not enough to eat people starve to
death. It is better to let half of the people die
so that the other half can eat their fill. -Mao
25The Famine
- 1960 had even worse weather than 1959.
- The harvest of 1960 was 144 million tons. 9
million people are thought to have starved to
death in 1960 alone many millions were left
desperately ill as a result of a lack of food. - The government had to introduce rationing.
- This put people on the most minimal of food and
between 1959 and 1962, it is thought that 20
million people died of starvation or diseases
related to starvation.
26The Famine (con.)
- Estimates range from 30-45 million deaths it is
the worst famine in recorded history - 2-3 million of those were beaten to death or
buried alive - The power of the local cadres also played a
role-they could deny food to anyone not on
board with the GLF - In 1962, having lost about ten million people in
Sichuan, provincial leader Li Jingquan compared
the Great Leap Forward to the Long March in which
only one in ten had made it to the end We are
not weak, we are stronger, we have kept the
backbone
27???? - The Great Famine
28Birth Death Rates
29Great Sparrow Campaign
30Great Sparrow Campaign
- The Great Sparrow Campaign (?????) was part of
Mao Zedongs Four Pests Campaign (?????, Chú Sì
Hài Yùndòng). - A part of the Great Leap Forward (???, Dà Yuèjìn)
from 1958-1962, the goal of the Four Pests
Campaign was to get rid of rats, flies,
mosquitoes, and sparrows. - Sparrows were considered pests because they ate
grain seeds. - Farmers were encouraged to tear down sparrows
nests, break sparrow eggs, and bang pots and pans
to scare sparrows away. - Later, Chinas authorities discovered that
sparrows actually prefer to eat insects rather
than grain seed. - More importantly, sparrows had served an
important function in the farm ecology by eating
locusts.
31Great Sparrow Campaign
- Illogical agricultural methods were used, such as
overplanting. Mao believed the seeds of the same
species would not compete, and higher harvests
would result. Grain production actually fell. - As part of the Great Leap, Mao also launched the
Great Sparrow - Campaign in which the Chinese
- people were encouraged to kill
- sparrows because it was believed that
- they ate the grain.
32Great Sparrow Campaign
- Sparrows eat insects. The kinds of insects that
eat grain With no birds, the insect population
exploded and Chinas crops were devastated. - Officials were often pressured to lie about their
to produce grain, resulting in communes being
forced to sell more grain that they could afford
to give.
33Great Sparrow Campaign
- Initially, the campaign did improve the harvest.
- While the sparrow population declined, the locust
population grew - Sparrows are a predator of the locusts in the
food chain - Locusts swarmed the country and caused
disruptions to crop harvesting.
34Great Sparrow Campaign
- While the Great Sparrow Campaign initially
appeared to produce an increase in grain output,
the countryside became infested with locusts, a
much more serious pest than sparrows. - Mao called the plan off, but it was too late.
- Swarming locusts coupled with bad weather and the
misguided Great Leap Forward led to the Great
Chinese Famine (?????, San Nián Dà Jihuang),
which killed 30 million people between 1958 and
1961.
35- Propaganda Poster to encourage rural children to
hunt and kill the sparrows
36- Picture of rural family looking at all the
sparrows they have killed.
37- Propaganda Poster to encourage peasants to hunt
and kill the sparrows.