Only 24 hours earlier we had joined these students under the
statue of the goddess of democracy and shared our dreams of a more democratic
China-of renewed partnership between our two countries. We had spoken with a
gentleman who wheeled his mother in any old wheelbarrow to the Square. “I wanted her to be a part of China’s history “, the
gentleman explained. “The first bloodless revolution in the history of our country”
Saturday, May 3, 2014
25th ANNIVERSARY
June 4,1989 is 25 years ago but the events are seared in to
my memory as though it were yesterday. I am standing with my son under the
entrance archway to Beijing University. Above us in emblazoned red characters
is the phrase: ”Tienenmen bathed in blood. The whole world weeps” It is early
morning and the students are streaming in from the Square and from the area
morgues. They are carrying the nametags of their colleagues whose dead bodies
they had identified. They were victims of the bullets of their military
countrymen or of being run-over by tanks and other heavy artillery.
Across
the ocean my wife (who I was unable to reach for more than 72 hours ) worried.
While she saw it all on television the local Chinese media reported that only
that few soldiers had been injured by unruly students but that peace prevailed.
Eventually we made it home safely and my son who was in doctoral studies at the
University was able to retrieve his research. It was a dark day. But slowly and
inevitably some light has broken through. Some economic freedoms have emerged.
Living standards have been raised. China is about to equal the USA in gross
domestic product. But all of that lay deeply hidden that day under the bloody
bodies of students who had a dream-and paid for it with their lives.
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