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    SUMMARY/EXCERPT:

    Ma Jian says Chinese writers need to speak up about the past:

    “The most powerful words written in Chinese last year were not by a novelist, but an unknown citizen who placed in a Sichuan newspaper an ad that simply said: “Respect to the mothers of the victims of 6/4.” The young clerk who had approved it for publication hadn’t grasped the significance of the date. The slip was soon discovered by the authorities, and three of the paper’s editors lost their jobs.

    The Chinese people have been denied knowledge of their past and the right to reflect on it. Large gaps exist in the collective memories of the nation. It is the role of Chinese novelists, poets, bloggers and journalists around the world to help fill them.”


    On the 19th anniversary of Tiannamen, Ma Jian speaks out against the silence of Chinese writers

    Ma Jian says Chinese writers need to speak up about the past: “The Chinese people have been denied knowledge of their past and the right to reflect on it. Large gaps exist in the collective memories of the nation. It is the role of Chinese novelists, poets, bloggers and journalists around the world to help fill them.” [Read]



    By Ma Jian // At The Times // On May 30, 2008

    Filed In Articles // On Jul 2, 2008 // Under June 4, 1989, Censorship



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