Chen Jiongming:
Anarchism and the Federalist State
by Leslie H. Chen
Alexandria, Virginia
Introduction
Several major events occurred in China's search for
modernization in the twentieth century: (1) the New Policies Reform and
Constitutional movement of the late Qing period, 1898-1911; (2) the Republican
Revolution of 1911; (3) the New Culture movement of the May Fourth period in
1919; (4) the Federalist movement of 1920-1926; (5) the Nationalist
(Guomindang) Revolution of 1926-1949 and (6) the Communist Revolution of 1949.
Chen Jiongming (1878-1933) played an important role in
the first four of these events. He was by training a lawyer and became a Qing
legislator, a republican revolutionary, a military leader, a civil
administrator and a federalist who sought to reconstruct China as a democratic
republic.[1]
Chen has sunk into obscurity, however, because he
disagreed with Sun Yat-sen about the direction that reform should take. Sun
wanted to unite the country by force and institute change through a centralized
government based on a one-party system. Chen advocated a multiparty federalism
and the peaceful unification of China. Following a revolt of Chen's troops in
1922 that forced Sun to flee Canton (Guangzhou) and delayed his Northern
Expedition (beifa), Sun turned on Chen. Sun's Nationalist Party (Guomindang)
quickly began to publish slanderous material about Chen to discredit
him.[2] The Communists, who had entered
into an alliance with Sun and who still regard him as the founding hero of the
Chinese Revolution have continued to characterize Chen as a traitor and a
reactionary warlord.
The conflict between Sun and Chen was a conflict between
two different concepts of nation building – centralism versus federalism (Chen
1991; Duara 1995, 177-204). Four years
later, in 1926, when the Northern Expedition of the Nationalist-Communist
alliance swept across the southern and central provinces, all provincial
constitutions, provincial and local assemblies, and local self-government
societies associated with the vision of a federated state ceased to exist. The
story of Chen Jiongming and federalism has since remained hidden behind
Nationalist and Communist accounts of modern Chinese history.
A paper by Winston Hsieh published in 1962 was the first
Western scholarly work that gives a sympathetic analysis of Chen's political
career with emphasis on his ideas and ideals (Hsieh 1962). Hsieh observes that Chen had strong
intellectual affinity and political connections with many Chinese anarchists
and that he was a great patron of the anarchist movement whenever he was in
power. Three decades later, in the 1990s, similar remarks have been made in the
three definitive works written on Chinese anarchism respectively by Zarrow
(1990), Dirlik (1991) and Krebs (1998).
Since Hsieh's work we have known much more about Chen
Jiongming's lifelong political activities, including his writings in Zhangzhou
during the May Fourth period and in Hong Kong in his last years. Chen was one
of the founders and patrons of an anarchist assassination group during the
Republican revolutionary movement of 1910-1911. The group was the most
idealistic and morally-conscious among all the radical organizations in the
movement.After the successful overthrow of the Qing dynasty, the group was dissolved;
Chen continued to be the patron and protector of his anarchist friends and
comrades who now engaged in a social and cultural reform movement in Canton.
During the May Fourth period, Chen created with the help of anarchist
intellectuals a "model" city of New Culture in Zhangzhou, Fujian,
which won the critical acclaim both in China and abroad. Back in Guangdong in
the 1920s, Chen actively promoted peaceful unification of the country through
"Chinese federalism" ––– a "bottom-up" form of federalism
that clearly has its anarchist origin.
Anarchism is known in China as wuzhengfu zhuyi, meaning literally "without a
government".[3] This simplified
term unfortunately leads to much misinterpretations as is also the case in the
West. In the words of George Woodcock, the stereotype of the anarchist is that
of the "cold-blooded assassin who attacks with dagger or bomb the symbolic
pillars of established society" and "anarchy, in popular parlance, is
malign chaos"(Woodcock 1962, 10). [4]
John P. Clark defines anarchism as a political theory
which must contain :(1) a view of an ideal, noncoercive, nonauthoritarian
society; (2) a criticism of existing society and its institutions, based on
this antiauthoritarian ideal; (3) a view of human nature that justifies the
hope for significant progress toward the ideal; and (4) a strategy for change,
involving immediate institution of noncoercive, nonauthoritarian and
decentralist alternatives (Clark 1978, 13). By invoking Clark's definition,
Zarrow concludes that the early Chinese anarchists meet all these four
requisites, "at least to a degree" (Zarrow 1990, 239)
Chinese anarchists propagated their ideas and belief by
publishing journals, books and pamphets in Paris, Canton, Zhangzhou and
Shanghai. Liang Bingxian sums up where they stood:
(1) Interpret
and publicize Proudhon's theories of social revolution and of private property;
Kropotkin's communism and theory of mutual aid to supplement social Darwinism;
and Kropotkin's philosophy of living. (2) Oppose racialism, nationalism and
militarism. (3) Oppose arranged marriage and marriage for profits; advocate
freedom in love. (4) Champion individual freedom, social equality and a
classless but organized society. (5) Oppose imperialism and national
boundaries; promote a world of Great Harmony (datong). (6) Oppose religion that stupefies people's mind; advocate
mobilizing human wisdom to enrich physical world. (Liang 1978, 6)
Chinese anarchists were among the first to condemn
Confucianism, to discuss feminism, to promote language reform, and to organize
modern labor union (Zarrow 1990, 2; Dirlik 1991, 128). They inherited a
Confuscian philosophy of human-goodness,.and they believed that there are
qualities of human beings which enable them to live together in a world of Great
Harmony. Thus, they rejected the idea of a Utopia that exists outside of the
existing world, and asserted that Great Harmony is achievable by commencing
reforms in each community (Mo 1997, 66).
For the anarchist, there could be no separation of the
revolutionary process from the revolutionary goal. It is on this issue of ends
versus means that "anarchists and Marxists part company, rather than on
their visions of the ideal society" (Clark 1978, 11; Carter 1978, 333-36).
Chinese anarchists opposed class struggle to achieve a classless society. They
criticized Marxism for establishing a center authority "either in the
'proletariat' or in its 'representative', the Communist party, that reproduced
the very power structures that in theory it rejected" (Dirlik 1991, 9;
Joll 1964, 278).
We shall proceed to explore the influence of anarchism on
Chen Jiongming's lifelong political career using Clark's definition and certain
characteristics of Chinese anarchists as guidance.
1. Early Revolutionary Activities
Chen Jiongming was born in 1878 in Haifeng, Guangdong, to
a landlord family that enjoyed moderate wealth and a reputation for
scholarship. He began to study the Confucian classics at the age of five, and
won the xiucai degree when he was
twenty-two. In 1906, he enrolled in the Academy of Law and Political Science in
Canton and graduated two years later at the top of his class. The Qing
government intended the newly established academy to train future officials,
especially parliamentarians. Part of a reform program designed to prepare China
for a constitutional monarchy, the effort resembled that of Japan following the
Meiji Restoration of 1868. The academy invited Japanese and Chinese educated in
Japan to give courses on the Japanese constitutional movement and Western
learning.
Two events characterize Chen Jiongming's early commitment
to local and national affairs. the first resulted in the successful impeachment
of a magistrate for cruel and improper conduct. As the obscure law student from
a remote township in East Guangdong, Chen gained a reputation in the provincial
capital for leadership and for being willing to risk his life to fight
injustice. He also refused to benefit financially from his efforts (Chen 1999,
13).
The second event took place during Chen's vacation from
the Academy in February of 1908. At the historical shrine of Wen Tianxiang in
Haifeng, Chen persuaded over thirty young men of the village to swear secret
support for a national revolution.[5]
Chen's group was made up of gemuine, homegrown "village
intellectuals" in the anti-Manchu movement, they were neither
foreign-educated nor members of one of the long-established secret societies.
While China's many revolutionary groups shared strong nationalistic and
anti-dynastic views, the Haifeng group differed from their overseas
compatriots, like Sun Yat-sen, who preached the overflow of the Manchu regime
from the haven of foreign countries. For these village intellectuals,
revolution was the means to an immediate goal, the eradication of the misery
and social injustice that surrounded them every day. They paid special
attention to the problem of local reconstruction and social reform. Like the
anarchists, they wanted "a social revolution (shehui geming) to follow immediately the successful national
revolution (minzu geming)" (Mo
1997, 52).
After graduating from the Academy in 1908, Chen returned
home, where in 1909 he established the Haifeng
zizhi bao (Haifeng self-government gazette). Chen was the editor-in-chief
with several others of his village comrades as editors. They did not hesitate
to point out social ills, constantly adding, for instance, the headline
"the evil of inequalities" to reports of buglaries or robberies. In
October, only a year over the minimun age of thirty, Chen was elected to the
first Guangdong Provincial Assembly in Canton. There he simultaneously helped
develop practical policies while secretly working to overthrow the Qing
Dynasty.
Prior to the successful revolt in Wuchang that sparked
the Revolution of 1911, Chen had participated in two abortive revolts in
Canton: the Revolt of the New Army of February 12, 1910 and the Uprising of
April 27, 1911. The failures forced Chen to change his strategy to avoid
focusing on the heavily armed and fully alerted capital city of the province.
When the news of the Wuchang Revolt of October 10, 1911 reached Canton, Chen
secretly left for his home districts in East Guangdong to raise a revolutionary
army. Peasants formed the bulk of this army; they were led by a mixed group of
former military officers, secret society members, local intelligentia, and
overseas Chinese from Southeast Asia. Chen Jiongming , for the first time in
his political career, found himself the commander-in-chief of an army –– an
army one might justifiably called a "people's revolutionary army".
Chen adopted the ancient sign of a well-field system for the flag of his army,
signifying the old Chinese saying "land to the tiller" (gengzhe you qi tian) (Chen 1999. 41-45).
Chen's army captured Huizhou, a capital city in East
Guangdong on November 8, 1911, which led to the province's declaration of
independence on the next day without firing another shot. Chen subsequently
became governor-general of the province's new Republican government. In the
critical period following a tumultuous revolution, his administration had
provided Guangdong the continuity of a strong and stable government. His
accomplishments were, as described by the American consul general, Leo
Bergholz, "nothing less than a miracle" (USDS 1264, March 11, 1912)
2.
Associations with the Anarchists
After the failure
of the New Army revolt in February 1910, Chen Jiongming secretly left for Hong
Kong where he and ten others joined with Liu Shifu (1884-1915) to organize a
secret revolutionay society called the China Assassination Corps. The Corps was
successful in the assassination of a Manchu general, but failed in its attempts
on two other high Qing officials with the loss of two members. When Guangdong
declared its independence, the Corps voluntarily disbanded. Supposedly in the
spirit of despising worldly fame, the Corps decided to keep its history secret.
They burned all documents except certain items kept in memory of their martyrs.
As a consequence, the activities of the Corps were shrouded in mystery until
several decades later when two survivors chose to break their silence.[6]
The unofficial but unquestioned leader of the Corps was
Liu Shifu, who became the doyen of the Chinese anarchism. In an article meant
to propagate anarchist ideas to the common people, Liu states his goal:
All the
people of the world are like brothers. Naturally we love one another. But the
governments invented patriotism. Soldiers are trained to kill ........The laws
are simply established customs, as said by the great anarchist Kropotkin....Disorders
came from contention, and contentions, from evil society, and when society is
evil, the laws fail to do good.....
The necessities of life are
clothing, food and home. Clothing, food and home are derived from goods and
goods are the product of the earth and labor......Anarchy destroys the system
of private property and promotes communism. Everyone works as he can and gets
what he wants.... There is no contention for money.....All men live an equal
life and are free to work. Quarrelsome society turns into a loving one.[7]
And how to achieve this
idealistic society of Great Harmony, Liu explains:
The principle
of anarchism may not be easily understood by unintelligent persons. The
responsibility to reach them rests with the intelligent....In preaching
anarchism one has to make the principle understood. When the majority of the
people believe in anarchism, government will be abolished. At that time the
minority of the population may be ignorant of the principle, but there will be
no difficulty in making them understand (USDS 893.00B/4, April 24, 1920).
Liu's is a passive approach by persuasion and example. He
was preoccupied with the importance of individual regeneration in the
reformation of society. He listed twelve rules of personal conduct for members
of his Conscience Society (Xinshe) to
follow, which prohibited the consumption of meat, liquor, and tobacco, the
employment of servants, riding in rickshaws, marriage, family surnames and
participation in government, the parliament and assemblies, political parties,
the armed forces, or any religious organization (Krebs 1998, 105-106).
Liu and his fellowers were men of action. In addition to
publication of magazines and pamphlets, they conducted schools to learn
Esperanto and even attempted to establish a village of Great Harmony (Datong cun).[8] Six years later in Zhangzhou, Chen Jiongming
confided to a follower of Liu :
It is
difficult to dislodge the burden of evil. It is even more difficult for someone
who is willing to shoulder that burden himself. [Liu] Shifu teaches people to
dislodge it. Let me take it on my shoulders for the rest of my life!"
(Liang 1978, 11).
Chen chose to take a
different approach to achieve a similar goal.[9]
Liu Shifu was widely respected for his seriousness of
purpose and deeply committed to practising what he preached –– traits that Chen
Jiongming had shared in his lifelong political career.
Chen also befriended Wu Zhihui (1864-1953), another doyan
of anarchism. Wu, a promoter of the popular "Work and Thrift" study
movement in the early 1920s , came south to solicit Chen's support and
succeeded in getting a donation of $100,000 for the building fund of the
Franco-Chinese Institute in Lyon, France (Mo1997, 24). Wu later became an elder statesman of Sun
Yat-sen's Nationalist Party. In 1924, he failed to effect a reconciliation
between Sun and Chen (Chen 1999, 239-41).
In a letter to Chen, Wu explained the necessity of grooming Sun Yat-sen
for a leader of the party, like Lenin in Russia. Wu confessed that he was still
a "talking" anarchist, but, in reality, one who "holds a pair of
grass shoes" [is a humble follower] under the banner of the patriotic
[Nationalist] party (Chen 1999, 291-96).
3. The
Zhangzhou Experiment
The two years (August 1918 – November 1920) that Chen
Jiongming spent in Zhangzhou gave his
first extended opportunity to put his reform ideas into action. His
apprenticeship in the Guangdong Provincial Assembly and his experiences as
governor-general in 1912 now bore fruit. He knew he had to maintain military
strength while working to build strong civil institutions. The guidelines that
shaped his actions came from the New Culture movement. The idea of this
movement had emerged from the anger stimulated by Japan's Twenty-one Demands
and the events of May 4 1919.
Chen's army, now called the Guangdong Army, was led by
men who fought with him in the Revolution of 1911. In a proclamation to his
army, Chen explains his political objective in veracular language:
Question: What is the Principle of Nation-Building
(jianguo zhuyi) ? Answer: It is democracy (minzhu zhuyi). Q: The Republic of China is a democracy. What is the safeguard for
it? A: Before the promulgation of a
national constitution, the safeguard is provided by the Provisional
Constitution [of 1912] (Duan and Ni 1998, 1:320).
As commander-in-chief, Chen set himself up to a high
standard of morality; his army was the most disciplined in the era.[10]
Chen embarked on a program of social reform and economic
development in the twenty-six counties under his control in southern Fujian. So
striking was the scope of reform that it soon attracted attention abroad. A
newspaper in Germany, for example, referred to Zhangzhou as "the shining
star in the East" (Chen 1963, 42).
Some Peking University students, afire with idealistic visions of the
new communist regime in Russia, were so much impressed after visiting Zhangzhou
that they commented in their student publication: "[Chen] is a man devoted
to revolution....[The practices] in an age of communism could not be better
than what Chen has carried out in Zhangzhou .... Zhangzhou is the Moscow of
southern Fujian" (WSQK 1959,
389). The American consul at Amoy commented: "The Chinese saw what could
be done without undue hardship and heavy taxation" (USDS 4091, August 31,
1921). Indeed Zhangzhou was referred to by some contemporaries as "Little
Model China" (Chen 1999, 294).
On the cultural side, Chen had the help of a group of
"freedom socialists", mostly Liu Shifu's followers who came to
Zhangzhou "to reform education, publish books and newspapers, change the
attitudes of society, raise the people's level of knowledge, and transform the
twenty-six counties of southern Fujian into a healthy and autonomous
region." They believed this piece of clean and healthy land could serve as
a shining model to the rest of China, thus inducing reform of the whole country
(Liang 1978, 12).
Chen Jiongming had had little time to write during his
active political career. However, in Zhangzhou, he managed to author several
articles and some poems. His writings reveal unmistakenly the profound
influence of the anarchistic ideas for absolute equality, moral purity,
democracy, mutual aid and emancipation from institutional yokes.
In the center of Zhangzhou's first public park, which
Chen had built as a symbol of the new era, he erected a tower. On its four
sides were inscribed in large characters the four central concepts of the New
Culture movement: ziyou (freedom), pingdeng (equality), bo'ai (fraternal love), and huzhu (mutual aid). In his forword to Minxing bao (Fujian Star), Chen explored
the meaning of these words and the philosophy underlying the new
movement.[11] He argued that the New
Culture movement must necessarily involve the reform of human thought, but in
reforming human thought, he cautioned against the use of force or anything that
resembled what we would call brainwashing. He believed that China must follow
an evolutionary process based on fraternal love and the principle of mutual
aid. Utimately, he believed, human society would evolve to a stage where people
enjoyed the happiness of full equality and suffered no bondage of states,
nations, or individuals. What we need is, Chen argued, a great awakening of
every mind so that all may be free of the prevailing erroneous thinking that
"each must struggle for his own existence without any concern for the life
and death of others."
As a student at the Academy of Law and Political Science
in Canton, Chen had expressed his enthusiasm for social Darwinism by giving
himself the courtesy name of Jingcun (struggle for existence) (Chow 1960,
64n-t). At this point, however, he had obviously deviated from the doctrine of
social evolution, considering a brutish struggle for existence morally
inadequate.
At the time of rising nationalism, Chen held that
nationalism constituted a far from sacred or complete vision of human society.
He argued forcefully against its tenets as a categorical imperative. Instead,
he believed in the truer and more lasting principles of fraternal love and mutual
aid:
Men have the
natural capacity for brotherly and fraternal love (bo'ai). If one knows how to love his country, why not teach him to
extend his full capacity to love all of human society? Te be able to love all
mankind means that one cannot discard his compasion for others since it is
linked at least in part to all mankind in the historical past.....If any nation
is being oppressed today, we can rush to offer her assistance without being in
conflict with the compassion we hold for other nations ......Is not the concept
of "socialism of all mankind" (quanrenlei
shehui zhuyi) a better doctrine? (Duan and Ni 1998, 404-405).
In another publication, the Minxing ribao (Fujian Star Daily News), Chen wrote a manifesto
outlining the paper's mission. He reiterated the themes of building a new
society by shaking off the yoke (shufu)
of the old society for freedom, by discarding class distinctions for equality,
and by putting aside competition for mutual aid (Duan and Ni 1998, 441-45).
Contrary to anarchist teaching, Chen was not opposed to
religion. When his friend Xu Qian, a noted jurist, decided to "escape from
Confucianism to convert to Christianity" (tao ru gui ye), Chen was inspired to write an article entitled Don't Be a Slave to Evils in praise of
Christianity. Jesus of Nazareth, Chen observes, was a man who preached
equality, freedom, fraternal love and self-sacrifice and who was willing to
bear the painful burden to save the world. Chen credited Christianity as the
prime moving force for the freedom and equality enjoyed by the people in the
Western countries (Duan and Ni 1998, 408-18).
In both British and American diplomatic reports, Chen
Jiongming was occasionally referred to as "the Bolshevik general",
but the report of an American missionary at Zhangzhou to the consul at Amoy
offered a milder assessment: "At a large athletic meet held here the past
week, [Bolshevist] literature was distributed and some speeches made. The
General [Chen] himself a socialist (but I cannot believe of the most radical type)
has apparently aided in this movement."[12]
Wu Zhihui visited Zhangzhou in 1919-1920. His remarks
typify the prevailing attitude of most Chinese intellectuals at the time,
including Chen Jiongming:
As to
Marxism, we had studied it and debated over it many times in our publication The New Century in Paris more than ten
years ago. We finally rejected it [as inapplicable to China].... In reality,
every country has its own ways and conditions that accompany the outbreak of a
social revolution. We had no idea what Lenin had up his sleeve (Liang 1978,
17).
Although the Chinese were not sure "what Lenin had
up his sleeve", they neither feared nor disliked the new Soviet state.
They were curious about it and sincerely admired Lenin's leadership in the
fight of the oppressed Russian people against czarist imperialism. The Soviet
Union was in its infancy, and the Chinese Communist Party did not yet born. It
was still a time when everyone was exploring a variety of new social ideas.
4 The Federalist State
After returning from Fujian with the
Guangdong Army in November 1920, Chen Jiongming immediately embarked upon a
fervent program to make Guangdong a model province so as to "gain the
confidence of the nation (mofan qixin)".
In an interview with Rodney Gilbert, the American correspondent of the North China Daily News (Shanghai) two
months after his return to Guangdong, Chen explained the underlying philosophy
and ultimate goal of Guangdong's reform
programs:
The people of China are not organized to express themselves or to make
their collective will felt. They are accustomed, however, to self-government in
their village communities, and if there is democracy in China, it will have to
evolve from these communities and their tradition of self rule. We must work from
the bottom up, and not from the top down as we have been trying to do
for so many years......
We believe that if we
begin the application of our ideas in Kuangtung [Guangdong] and if we are at
all successful, the example will prompt the people of the provinces around us
to insist upon a similar system, and that the movement will spread throughout
China.........If we can get a few provinces we can federate and bring in the
others, one by one, until we have made over into a lien sheng cheng fu [liansheng
zhengfu] - a Government of United Provinces (USDS 3809, February 18, 1921).
In the two-year period of 1921-1922, significant and unprecedented results were
achieved for the reconstruction of
Guangdong in all fronts – in establishing modern municipalities, election of
county magistrates and assemblymen, reform of education, industrial
development, judicial reform, labor movement, commerce and transportation (Chen
1999, 120-56). The election of county
magistrates and assemblymen was unprecedented in China's history. The Guangdong government fostered the
organization of labor unions, but it "sternly cautioned" them against
strikes as a means to settle labor grievances. At the same time , the
government launched a drive to eliminate illiteracy among the labor force by
establishing evening schools in the factories (Huang 1922, 59). By early 1922 there were more than 130
unions registered with the provincial government representing more than 300,000
members (Huazi ribao, February 10,
11, 12 and 14, 1925). The Machinery Workers Union was among the most powerful ,
and its leaders were prominent anarchists (Mo 1997, 26).
Without a written law and with little precedent, Governor
Chen took upon himself to put into practice what workers of advanced industrial
nations only gained a decade later – the right of the workers to collective bargaining through their own
representation without interference, restraint or coercion by the employers.
Using such an approach, he helped settle the great Hong Kong Seamen's strike of
1922 (FO 371/8030 March 11, 1922, 92; Qun
bao March 6, 1922 [SRYS 5:100];
Chen 1999, 142-48). Chen had similar
idea for organizing peasant unions as a vehicle for agrarian reforms; he put it
into practice in East Guangdong in 1923-1925 (Chen 1999, 148-50).
Chen Jiongming's idea of building democracy from the
bottom up clearly had its anarchist origin.[13] The noted American educator and philosopher John Dewey, who
visited China for a two-year lecture tour in 1919-1921, had high praise for
Chen and the federalist program in Guangdong. Dewey visited Guangdong in the
spring of 1921. In July he reported for The
New Republic on Chen's views on unifying China "by the people
themselves, employing not force but the methods of normal political
evolution." [14]
While the Guangdong Provincial Assembly was working on
the provincial constitution in early 1921, Chen Jiongming was drafting a
"reconstruction plan" (jianshe
fanglue) –– a proposal for a national constitution. The plan was, in
essence, a political "initiative" by the Guangdong federalists, which
sought immediate action towards the goal of unifying the country (Chen 1999,
159-62). In the North, Hu Shi and a number of prominent scholars, writing for
the Peking periodical Nuli zhoubao
(Edeavor Weekly) advised both Sun Yat-sen and Wu Peifu that only by the
adoption of a federal system of government could the nation be saved from
partitioning by warlords (Li 1971, 583). A dissenting voice was raised by Chen
Duxiu who would later become the founder of the Chinese Communist
Party.[15] Chen Duxiu mounted a
vehement attack on the federalists: "Those who advocate ' a federation of
provinces' are simply using 'federation of self-governing provinces' (liansheng zizhi) as a pretext to effect
the seizure of territories by military governors."[16]
After forging an alliance with the Chinese Communist
Party in 1924, Sun Yat-sen took up Chen Duxiu's line of attack:
If we were to
imitate the American federal system and change China into united provinces, it
would become necessary for each province to have its constitution and to govern
itself. After the provincial constitutions are implemented, then a federal
constitution could be built up.
But in reality that would be
changing a united China into some twenty independent units and then reuniting
them, just like those ten old independent states of America a hundred years
ago. That solution....is utterly wrong [for China]. (GFYJ 1960, 253; d'Elia 1974, 312)
Sun never did discuss the pros and cons of a federal
system of government in China. Instead, he played with two pairs of antonyms to
advance his argument –– "united" (tongyi)
versus "separate" or "disunit" (fenlie), and "centralized-authority government" (jiquan) versus a "shared-authority
or federal government " (fenzhi).
Sun led his listeners to believe that a united provinces system, in which
authority was shared between the central and local governments (fenzhi), was actually a disunited or
splintered (fenlie) state of affairs.
Sun also used the term "unification" (tongyi) erroneously as a synonym for concentrating all power in the
central government (jiquan).
Following the Soviet example, unification by force with a highly centralized
regime run according to the the wishes of the party leader became the single,
unalterable program of Sun's reorganized party in 1924.
Such a fusion of words –– tongyi and jiquan –– held great
appeal for the divided nation. Aided by Soviet techniques of mass propaganda
and political action, Sun was able to discredit the federalist principle of
building democracy from the bottom up, a doctrine that had been enormously
popular in China for more than a decade.
To allay the fears of the Chinese people about the
establishment of a Soviet-style totalitarian state, Sun shrouded his program
with two new principles. In the Nationalist Party's Declaration at its First
National Convention in January 1924, Sun announced the adoption of the
Principle of Equalization of Power (junquan
zhuyi) and of county (xian)
self-governemnt. In the former, the division of power between the central and
local governments will "favor neither the centralized-authority (zhongyang jiquan) nor the
shared-authority (difang fenquan)
system of government". The governor of a province is to be elected by the
people, but he "receives orders from the central govrnment to perform his
duties". The county is designated as the basic unit for local
self-government (GFYJ 1960,
606). In essence, what Sun proposed was
a Soviet-style federation or union of "self-governing" counties.
After the defeat of the Guangdong Army in 1925 by Sun's
Soviet-trained, Soviet-equipped force, Chen Jiongming made his home in Hong
Kong, where he continued to seek the unification of China by political means.
He found a new political party, called the Zhigong Party, with its membership
primarily from overseas Chinese in the Americas and Southeast Asia. The party
stipulated federalism as the fundamental principle for the nation-building of
the Chinese Republic (Chen 1999, 267-68).
In his book A
Proposal for the Unification of China published in 1927, Chen sees Chinese
federalism coordinating four levels of geographical division –– the village,
the district, the county or city, and the province –– with two types of
organization, the traditional geographical organization and the occupational or
trade organization (Chen 1999, 269-72).
Here we can sense an anarchistic system of "extreme"
decentralization in which power is delegated upwards from the smallest unit ––
the Jeffersonian township or the village (See, for example, Nock 1970, 56-57).
The new participation of the occupational or trade organizations reminds one of
Bakunin's free federation of workers' associations, industrial as well as
agricultural, and scientific as well as literary associations (See, for
example, Maximoff 1964, 298).
During his last years in Hong Kong, Chen advocated the
extension of the federalist principle to the reconstruction of Asia, Europe and
America, eventually leading to a world federation:
1. Build the
Chinese nation upon the principles of equality of wealth, equality of rights,
and the equality of enjoyment.
2. Build Asia
into an organized unit, a cornerstone for a world organization. To achieve a
world in harmony (datong), Asia,
Europe and America must be separately organized into federations.
3. Organize
the world into a federation based on the principle of equality and peaceful
co-existence. Abolish military organizations in every nation. China should play
the role of founding member in such a world federation. (Chen 1927, 28-29; Nianpu 1957, 36-37)
In the years around 1920 many people worldwide were
advocating world federalism, for they had been sickened during World War I with
the meaningless slaughter and destruction brought about in the name of
nationalism. The League of Naions had been established, but that painfully weak
institution could not stand against the forces of fascism and nazism. Many
Chinese intellectuals had had hope for the League of Nations; notably among
them was the Marxist Li Dazhao. Li saw a historical progress to higher levels
of organization: "The Americas, Europe and Asia would each unite. Finally,
they would join together and abolish all racial and national boundaries"
(Zarrow 1990, 218).
There appears to be no significant difference between
what Chen Jiongming advocated and what Li Dazhao forsaw in leading to a world
of Great Harmony. The important difference lies in the strategies that one
takes to achieve his goals. The
federalist Chen Jiongming would apply the concept of federation to every levels
of organization, building democracy from the bottom up –– an anarchist strategy
that ends should not be separated from the means in the process of change. Li
Dazhao took the Marxists' approach. To the anarchists, the Marxists' goal is
not necessarily wrong, but "given the methods they advocate, they can be
certain never to reach it" Clark 1978, 11).
Conclusion
Nationalism,
revolution and communism have dominated the study of modern Chinese history
from the late Qing period to the present.
Federalism and anarchism have long been ignored by those who regard all
history through the eyes of the victors. Study of Chen Jiongming's political
career provides a glimpse of federalism and its interplay with nationalism and
anarchism on the eve of the communist expansionism in China. As observed by
James Joll , "the belief that triumphant causes alone should interest the
historian leads to the neglect of much in the past that is valuable and
curious, and narrows our view of the world" (Avrich 1967, 4).
The first quarter of the twentieth century was a golden
age for Chinese intellectuals. During the late Qing reform movement, about one
hundred journals circulated at any one time, containing numerous essays on
Western thought and practices (Bailey 1990, 5-6). Within six months of the May Fourth student incident in 1919,
more than four hundred new periodicals, all in vernacular language, appeared in
the newsstands (Dewey 1973, 13). The
noted educator Cai Yuanpei later recalled the situation of the 1910s and 1920s
nostalgically: "At that time, freedom of thought and speech developed
nearly to their utmost" (Yuan 2000, 47).
The pivotal turn came in 1924 when Sun Yat-sen
reorganized the Nationalist Party to follow Soviet Russia's example and
implemented "partification" (danghua)
of education, civil service, judiciary and the armed forces.[17] Four years after Sun's death, in 1929, Hu
Shi, at which time he was serving as chancellor of a private university in
Shanghai, reported: "[At present] to deny the existence of God is
acceptable, but criticizing Sun Yat-sen is forbidden....It is forbidden not to
read Sun's 'Last Will and Testament' or not to observe the weekly commemorative
ceremony."[18] From this time on,
the most influential theory was always the ruler's speech and writing.
Chen Jiongming's commitment to federalism was the natural
outgrowth of his experience and philosophy. He believed in reform from the
bottom up. He thought that the country should draw on traditional Chinese
strengths, especially its long experience with self-government on the local
levels. By strengthening those capacities, Chen thought that his fellow Chinese
would learn to govern themselves successfully at the regional and ultimately
the national level. He lives, wrote
John Dewey in The New Republic,
"an almost Spartan life in a country where official position is largely
prized for the luxuries it makes possible" (Dewey 1921, 235).
Was Chen Jiongming an anarchist? He was no more an
anarchist than John Dewey was.[19] If a
label is desired, Chen was unquestionably a federalist, who had embraced
certain important ideas and ideals of anarchism. He was, above all, a man who
was totally committed to practising what he preached.
__________________________
Footnotes
* Leslie Chen is the son of Chen
Jiongming (Chen Chiung-ming), governor of Guangdong Province in early
Republican China. He was trained as an engineer at the National Chiao-Tung
(Jiaotong) University, Shanghai, and Harvard University. After a thirty-year
career in engineering, he retired and devoted his time to studying his father's
political career. He has compiled a collection of historiographic materials as
welll as two Chinese language biographies of Chen Jiongming. He is the author
of a recent book Chen Jiongming and the
Federalist Movement: Regional Leadership and Nation Building in Early
Republican China, Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan.
1. A detailed account of Chen Jiongming's political career may be found
in Chen 1999. Interested reader may
want to consult with the Chinese-language section of the website:
(http://www.chen-jiongming.com)
3. In Mo 1997, Mo uses a straight phonetic transliteration, An Na Qi zhuyi; while Liang calls
himself and fellow anarchists ziyou
shehui zhuyizhe (Freedom socialists). For a discussion of the word
anarchism, see, for example, Clark 1978, 3-6.
4. To generations of Chinese intellectuals in the twentieth century,
anarchism is a political theory for scorn and ridicule. The dominance of modern
Chinese historiography by the Nationalists and Communists is one factor.
Another factor that often escapes attention is the fact that generations of
Chinese intellectuals have been subjected to "party-guided" education
or the "partification" of education (danghua jiaoyu) since 1924 when Sun Yat-sen reorganized the
Nationalist Party to follow Soviet Russia's example and implemented an
educational system controlled by the party. See, for example, (Yuan 2000). Yuan points out that "although the term
sounds strange today, partification of education was the supreme guiding
principle in Chinese education for decades...(It) stifled freedom of thought in
schools ...No theory was allowed to contradict the government orthodoxy."
5. See Chen 1999, 13-14. Wen
Tianxiang (1236-1282) symbolized Chinese (Hans) resistance to foreign invaders.
As prime minister to the last Song emperor, Wen had led a war against the
Mongol (Yuan) invaders.
6. Obviously the Corps was not proud of what they did. Violence is
inconsistent with anarchist values and it is essential to anarchism that ends
not be separated from means. The issue of violence and anarchism is complex and
contentious. For example, Tolstoy insisted on the intrinsic importance of
nonviolence for anarchism (Carter 1978, 320). Others, however, contended that
"campared with the wholesale violence of capitol and government, political
acts of violence are but a drop in the ocean." (Goldman 1969, 107)
7. This article, entitled "Sketch of Anarchism" was
distributed in Zhangzhou, Fujian by Liu's followers in 1920, five years after
Liu's death. It was translated by the American Consulate at Amoy (Xiamen) as
enclosure to USDS 893.00B/4, April
24, 1920.
8. Mo 1997, 61-62, 67-68. The
village project was abandoned when Yuan Shikai's loyalists took over Chen's
government in August 1913.
9. After the Revolution of 1911, Liu and several other members of the
assassination corps worked under the new Governor Chen, organizing the
Association of the Army Corps to help disband citizen soldiers. Two years
later, when Yuan Shikai loyalists took over Canton, Liu and his followers
finally left for Shanghai where they continued to publish the magazine Voice of the People (Minsheng). Liu died
of tuberculosis in 1915 at the early age of 31. Chen was then in exile in
Malaysia and later sent funds to Liu's brother for support of the magazine. (Mo
1997, 76).
10. Chen Jiongming commanded a successful regional army that, for most
part, remained loyal to him to the bitter end. It was easy for Nationalist
propagandists to label the Guangdong Army as "Chen's private army"
and Chen as a "warlord" or a
"militarist", as they did immediately after Chen's split with Sun in
1922. The label lingers to this date due in large measure to the
"partification" of Chinese education for the past three quarters of a
century (See Note 4)
11. Minxing bao was published
twice a week. The full text of Chen's Foreword is reprinted in Duan and Ni 1998, 402-406.
12. USDS 893.00B/2, April 26,
1920. The literature was produced and distributed by followers of Liu Shifu. It
was anarchist, not Bolshevist. The confounding of anarchism and Bolshevism was
typical of the confusion that prevailed at the time over the relationship of
these radical ideologies. See, for example, Dirlik 1991, 151
13. For anarchism and the federalist idea, see, for example, Clark 1978,
6; also Gerrin 1970, 63-65
14. Dewey 1921, 235. Apparently
Dewey and Chen shared many views on solving China's problem. Dewey's pragmatism
was "more socialist than libertarian, more anarchist than communist or
liberal". (See Manicas 1992, 407).
15. Both Hu Shi and Chen Duxiu were prominent leaders in the May Fourth
movement. For the split between them, see, for example, Keenan1977, 74
16. Li 1986, 193. Chen Duxiu's
article was originally printed in Xiangdao
zhoubao 1:2, September 13, 1922. In
September 1922, Chen Duxiu attempted to persuade Chen Jiongming to join the
Communist Party and lead the revolution in South China; see Liang 1978, 39.
17. See Note 4 for the meaning of the word "partification"
18. Yuan 2000, 48; originally from Hu 1998, 5:579.
19. See, for example, Manicas 1992 for comments on Dewey's political
philosophy.
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