Perry Link
The June Fourth
Massacre in Beijing has had remarkable longevity. What happened in and around
Tiananmen Square twenty-five years ago this June not only haunts the memories
of people who witnessed the events and of friends and families of the victims,
but also persists in the minds of people who stood, and still stand, with the
attacking side. Deng Xiaoping, the man who said “go” for the final assault on
thousands of Chinese citizens protesting peacefully for democracy, has died.
But people who today are inside or allied with the political regime responsible
for the killing remain acutely aware of it.
They seldom put their
awareness into words; indeed, their policy toward massacre-memory is
repression. They assign plainclothes police to monitor and control people who
have a history of speaking publicly about the massacre. They hire hundreds of
thousands of Internet censors, one of whose tasks is to expunge any sign of the
massacre from websites and email.