NOTES OF CHINESE SOCIETY
7 By owner-peasants Comrade Mao
Tse-tung means the middle peasants.
8 Marshal Chao is Chao
Kung-ming, God of Wealth in Chinese folklore.
9 The May 30th Movement was the
nation-wide anti-imperialist movement in protest against the massacre of the
Chinese people by the British police in Shanghai on May 30 1925. Earlier that
month, major strikes had broken out in Japanese-owned textile mills in Tsingtao
and Shanghai, which the Japanese imperialists and the Northern warlords who
were their running dogs proceeded to suppress. On May 15 the Japanese textile
mill-owners in Shanghai shot and killed the worker Ku Cheng-hung and wounded a
dozen others. On May 28 eight workers were slaughtered by the reactionary
government in Tsingtao. On May 30 more than two thousand students in Shanghai
agitated in the foreign concessions in support of the workers and for the
recovery of the foreign concessions. They rallied more than ten thousand people
before the British police headquarters, shouting such slogans as "Down
with imperialism!" and "People of China, unite!" The British
imperialist police opened fire, killing and wounding many students. This became
known as the May 30th Massacre. It immediately aroused country-wide
indignation, and demonstrations and strikes of workers, students and
shopkeepers were held everywhere, forming a tremendous anti-imperialist
movement.
10 By
"the overwhelming majority of the semi-owner peasants", Comrade Mao
Tse-tung is here referring to the impoverished peasants who worked partly on
their own land and partly on land rented from others.
11 There
were several strata of shop assistants in old China. Here Comrade Mao Tse-tung
is referring to the largest. There was also the lower stratum of shop
assistants who led the life of proletarians.
12 The
seamen's strikes were staged by the seamen at Hongkong and by the crews of the
Yangtse River steamers early in 1922. The Hongkong seamen held out for eight
weeks. After a bitter and bloody struggle, the British imperialist authorities
in Hongkong were finally forced to raise wages, lift the ban on the Seamen's
Union, release the arrested workers and indemnify the families of the martyrs.
The crews of the Yangtze steamers went on strike soon afterwards, carried on
the struggle for two weeks and also won victory.
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