What Has That to Do with Me?
By Yiyun Li
THIS
STORY I am going to tell
you, it is a true story.
The
year was 1968. The girl
was nineteen, the secretary of the Communist Youth League for her class
in a
local high school in Hunan
Province, China.
You probably
don't know much about Hunan,
but I am sure you have heard of at least one person from the province -
Chairman Mao, our father, leader, savior, our god and our dictator.
So it
was in 1968 that the
nineteen old Hunan girl, after seeing many men and women being kicked
and
beaten to death by her fellow Red Guards, expressed her doubts about
Chairman
Mao and the Cultural Revolution he had started two years earlier, in a
letter
to her boyfriend, who was serving in the military. He turned in the
letter to the
company officer. The officer reported to his superiors, who in turn
telegraphed
the Revolutionary Committee of her town. Three days later, she was
arrested.
She was
jailed for ten years,
ten long years during which she kept writing to officials of all levels
to
appeal her case. The letters accumulated as evidence of her failure to
reform,
and ten years later, in a retrial, she was sentenced to death. She was
executed
in the spring of 1978, two years after Chairman Mao's death. Hundreds
of people
attended the execution in a local stadium. A bullet took her
twenty-nine-year-old life, and that was the end of her story.
But the
story I am telling
you, it is not over yet.
Because
I still have to tell
you what happened before the final moment. Minutes before the
execution, an
ambulance rushed into the stadium, and several medical workers jumped
out. I
call them medical workers because I don't know if they were doctors. Do
doctors
kill? But these medical workers, they were professional, efficient.
Working quickly
so as not to delay the execution, they removed the girl's kidneys. No
anesthesia.
The
bullet entered her brain
after the kidneys were taken out. The brain was the sinning organ. The
kidneys
were amnestied, airlifted to a hospital in the province capital, and
transplanted into an older man's body. The man was the father of a
member of
the province Revolutionary Committee.
The
kidneys outlived her, for
how many years I do not know.
The
story I am telling you,
it does not end when the brain was murdered. Not yet.
Because
I still have to tell
you what happened to the young woman's body, minus her kidneys. Like
the
families of many counter-revolutionaries, her family paid for the
bullet that
took her life. Twenty-four cents it was, the price of a thin slice of
pork in
1978. They signed the paper and paid for the bullet, but they did not
dare to
pick up the body after the execution. So the girl was left outside the
town, in
a wild land of stray dogs, crows, and other scavengers. One of the
others got
to the body first, a fifty-seven-year-old janitor. When jars were later
discovered at his home, he admitted to having raped the body. Then he
amputated
the sex organs and preserved them in formaldehyde for his personal
collection.
He was
sentenced to seven
years of imprisonment.
But the
story I am telling
you - you may have guessed this by now - the story I am telling you, it
is not
over yet.
At the
time, in the city in Hunan
Province,
before the final sentence of the young woman, there were people who
tried to
organize and appeal on her behalf. They did not stop at the woman's
execution,
fighting now not for her life but her innocence. Ping-Fan, depurge, was
what it
was called, for in our country, as in any other communist nation,
innocence was
determined not by one's behavior but by the tolerance of such behavior
at a
certain time. I grew up reading stories of depurge in newspapers and
magazines,
of people who had been labeled as counterrevolutionaries for ten,
twenty, or
even thirty years, and now were reabsorbed into our communist family.
Some were
still alive, but most who were depurged had long been dead. Still, a
readmission to the society was celebrated by grateful family members in
tears.
So you see, in our country, one's story does not end at one's death.
Back in
the Hunan
town, people gathered for the young
woman's posthumous reputation. Hundreds of people joined the protest,
and
everyone of them was punished in the end, years in prison for some,
dismissal
or suspension from work for luckier ones. One of them, a woman
thirty-two years
old, an organizer of the protest and mother of a two-year-old boy, was
sentenced to death. She signed on the sentence paper and was reported
to have
thrown away the pen and said, 'What makes you all fear death so?
Everybody
dies.'
I am
not sure how to tell the
story I want to tell you. Sometimes when I think about the story, it
becomes a
grotesque kaleidoscope spinning with patterns and colors that startle
my eyes.
Sometimes I have to shut my eyes in order not to see.
And
shut my mind's eye so I
can stop imagining: the clean incision when the scalpel cut into the
skin,
hastily disinfected for the sake of the kidneys; the short moment
between the
operation and the death; the parents who gave up not only the
daughter's life but
her body; or the boy who grew up not knowing his mother and who was
taught to
thank the government five years later when she was depurged.
What makes you all fear death so? I do not have an answer. I run away from the
deaths
of the two young women because I have only enough courage to tell the
stories
of those alive - for instance, the audience who filed into the stadium
and
watched the young woman suffer and die. The execution must have taken
place in
the morning, as all executions have in my country for hundreds of
years. Did
people go to the stadium first before they went to work, or did they
parade to
the stadium from different working units, singing Chinese and Soviet
marching
songs?
I try
to see the world
through my eyes of 1978. That spring I was five and a half years old, a
problematic kid in day care, disliked by all the aunties, as we called
the day
care teachers. One, Auntie Wang, especially hated me. I knew she hated
me, but
I did not know why. I feared her more than any other kid feared her; I
feared
her more than I feared any other person in my life. I was always the
first to
stop playing and run to her when she called out any order. I would
stand in
front of her, looking with expecting eyes, waiting for her to praise my
promptness. But she saw through my willingness and brushed my head
aside with a
heavy hand. 'Stop looking at me like that. I know you do this just to
make us
believe you are a good kid. Don't think you can deceive me.'
I tried
not to cry, not
knowing that what angered her was my blunt, wide-eyed stare. Auntie
Wang turned
to another auntie and said, 'This is a kid who has too much of her own
will.'
The other auntie agreed.
I did
not know what they
meant. I did not have any will except to please Auntie Wang so she
would smile
at me, or praise me, or at least not yell at me every time I played the
guerilla leader. In the day care our favorite game was battle game,
boys the
male guerilla fighters, girls the female guerilla fighters. Our enemy
was
Japanese invaders, the reactionary nationalist army, American soldiers
in Korea or Vietnam,
all in the forms of houses
and trees, rails and weeds. I was always the guerilla leader because I
was the
one who made up the story for our battle games, the one to lead them to
charge
or retreat.
But
before I had won my first
battle this morning, Auntie Wang grabbed my collar and brought me to a
full
stop. 'What are you making them do?' she said.
I tried
not to look at her,
but I did. 'Play guerillas,' I said.
'No
guerilla playing today,'
Auntie Wang said and waved to my soldiers standing beside me. 'Go play
other
games.'
The
boys and girls scattered.
I tried to slip away, but Auntie Wang stopped me with a thundering
yell. 'You,
did I tell you to leave?' 'No: I said.
'Right.
Time-out for you this
morning. Now squat here.'
I
squatted between her and
another auntie, who was busy knitting a sweater for her son. Auntie
Wang
reserved this special punishment for me. Other kids served five or ten
minutes
of time-out standing in front of her, but she always had me squat, for
half an
hour at least.
Many
years later I read in an
article that having prisoners squat for hours is a common practice in
Chinese
prisons. Squatting while holding the legs, putting the whole body's
weight on
the heels of the feet, back bending and hips drooping - such a
primitive
position creates pain as well as shame, the article said.
I
wonder if Auntie Wang was
an inventive person or if she simply knew the practice. Either way, I
had to
squat in such a position so often that I was no longer bothered by it.
Yes, my
legs still cramped, but I could still watch my friends with cramping
legs. I
saw boys chase one another in meaningless circles, girls gather
wildflowers and
grass leaves. They did not know how to playa guerilla game without me.
I
sighed. Auntie Wang caught
me immediately. 'Why did you sigh?
Do you
think I am wrong to
punish you?' 'No: I said.
'You
are lying. Did you not
sigh? I heard you. You are dishonest.
Do you
hate me?'
'No: I
said, trying hard to
hold back my tears.
'Liar.
I know you hate me. I
know you do,' Auntie Wang said.
Such
exchanges happened often
when I was on time-out. I did not know what made Auntie Wang so
persistent in
tormenting me. Did she have much fun having me in the day care? I do
not know
the answer. Many years later, when I was already in America,
my mother met her in a
shop. Auntie Wang recognized my mother right away and asked about me.
In the
next five years, as my mother told me, they met in the street many
times, and
Auntie Wang asked about me every time. I wonder if she remembers me for
the
same reason I remember her. Sometimes I wonder about it, knowing I will
never
get to know the real reason, accepting
her comment that I was a kid with too much of my own
will as the only
explanation.
So on
this unlucky day, I was
bracing myself for a long squatting period when the police patrol drove
into an
open field by our play yard. There were two tall metal poles at the
centre of
the field. On evenings when movies were shown in the open field, a
piece of
white cloth would be stretched between the two poles, with people
sitting on
both sides of the screen watching the same war movie and speaking the
lines in
a collective voice along with the heroic actors. During daytime the
field was
left for weeds and insects, and I was surprised to see the police car
drive in
there, calling through a loudspeaker for the residents to gather in ten
minutes. Retired men and women walked out of the apartment buildings
carrying
folding chairs and stools. Some even carried umbrellas to shield them
from the
morning sun. The electric bell clanked in the nearby elementary school.
A
minute later students of all grades rushed out of the school building,
pushing
and shouting and ignoring the teachers' orders.
I was
so excited by what was
going on that I forgot to squat. I stood up and looked for my sister
among the
schoolchildren. Immediately Auntie Wang came and snatched me off the
ground. I
was scared, but she did not have time to scold me. She placed me at the
end of
the long rope that we all held onto when we went out of the day care. I
held
the rope and started to stomp my feet as other kids did, waiting
impatiently to
be taken outside our play yard.
As we
walked onto the open
field, the old men and women patted and squeezed our cheeks. Other,
younger
adults had also arrived from different working units. We sat down in
the grass
at the very front. Workers were building a temporary stage with bamboo
sticks
and wooden planks. The students from he elementary school sat behind
us. I
looked back and found my sister in the second grade line, and I grinned
at her,
glad that she was not as close to the stage as I was.
As we
waited, the aunties
chattered among themselves and passed around a bag of dried tofu
snacks. I
caught a black ant and put it in my palm, let it walk over my fingers,
something my parents told me not to do because, as they said, my hand
was too
hot for an ant and it would have a fever walking on my fingers. I
watched the
ant looking in a feverish way for an exit to leave my hand. When I was
tired of
the ant, I flipped it with a finger and saw it land on the neck of
Auntie Wang,
sitting not far from me. I held my breath, but she did not turn around.
I
hesitated and cried out a warning. 'Auntie, auntie: I said.
'What?'
she turned around and
said. 'Now it's you again. Get up and squat. Keep quiet.'
I got
up on my feet, trying
to keep my head and my back as close to my legs as I could, so my
sister could
not tell that I was being punished again.
The
truck drove into the open
field as I was struggling to keep a decent squatting position.
Policemen,
dressed up in snow white uniforms, jumped down from the covered truck.
Then
four men, all heavily bound with ropes, were pushed out of the truck
and led
onto the stage. Two policemen stood behind each man, pushing his head
down. A
police officer with a loudspeaker came onto the stage, announcing that
the four
counterrevolutionary hooligans had been sentenced to death and the
sentence
would be carried out after they were paraded through all the
neighborhoods of
the district. Then he raised a fist and shouted, 'Death to the
counterrevolutionary hooligans!'
The
aunties signaled us, and
I raised my fist, still in the squatting position. We shouted the
slogan along
with the elementary school students, the uncles and aunts from all the
working
units, and the retirees, who had already started to leave the meeting
with
their chairs. The hooligans were escorted back to the truck, and a
minute later
the police car and the truck pulled out of the open field and drove
away to the
next meeting place. I felt disappointed at the shortness of the
meeting. Auntie
Wang walked up to me and put her hand to my head, in the shape of a
handgun.
'You see that? If you have too much of your own will, you will become a
criminal one day. Bang: she said, pulling her finger as if to trigger
the gun,
'and you are done.'
So I
could have been there in
the Hunan
stadium, five years old or seventy-five years old, a child trapped in
her small
unhappiness or an old man already getting tired of the long morning.
Did I see
the violent struggle of the young woman as the medical workers tried to
pin her
limbs down? Did I hear the muffled cries that came from her gagged
mouth?
No, I
did not see, and I did
not hear. I was dozing off, out of boredom.
I woke
up in time to see
another man, a young villager, in a provincial court in central China,
stand up
and say into the microphone, 'I was an orphan. I was illiterate. I did
not know
how to be a good man. I promise I will learn to be a good man. I ask
the people
to listen to me.'
It was
the winter of 1991,
and I was one of the freshmen of Peking
University in the
middle of a one-year
brainwashing in a military camp in central China.
The Harvard of China, as the
university advertised itself, Peking
University had
been the hotbed of every student
movement in Chinese history, including the one in 1989 in Tiananmen Square that ended in bloodshed. For
the next four years, to
immunize the incoming students to the disease that was called freedom,
all
freshmen were sent to the military for a year of brainwashing, or
political
re-education, as it was called.
Being
in the military made me
think of myself as a victim of the regime. Having to use toilet stalls
that had
no doors angered me. Having to listen to the officers call us
disgusting wild
cats in the mating season after being caught singing a love song in the
break
or Americans' walking dogs after being caught reading English in
political
education class, their spittle on our faces, angered me. Anger
sustained us as
hope would sustain one in such a situation. Anger fed us instead of the
radish
stew that never filled our stomachs. Anger made us defy the officers'
orders in
public and in secrecy. Anger helped us to endure the punishment with
dignity.
Anger
made our lives
meaningful, filling us with selves bigger than our true selves. What
could be
more satisfactory for boys and girls of eighteen and nineteen than to
feel that
pumped self growing inside as leavened dough?
So that
winter day I was
sitting among my fellow victims, a swollen self inside my dark green
uniform,
in a crowded theatre that served as a makeshift court for three young
men. We
were sent to listen to the trial to learn how to be law-abiding
citizens. On the
stage were a judge, a public prosecutor, a one-man jury, and two
assistants who
recorded the trial. The three men on trial were held in separate pens.
From
where I sat, I could not see any of their faces, and I did not care to
see.
I
closed my eyes once we were
ordered to sit down. I dozed off during the public prosecutor's opening
statement, spoken in a local dialect that I could not understand well,
and was
lost in my own dreamland until the officer on duty walking from aisle
to aisle
tapped my shoulder heavily with her belt. I pulled myself straight and
looked
at the stage. The judge
was
asking questions, and the
prosecutor was answering, waving a knife in front of him for emphasis.
'What
did the men do?' I asked the girl next to me in a whisper.
'A
train robbery: the girl
answered. 'I don't know for sure.'
I
closed my eyes, not curious
whom they had robbed, what they had done to the train. I did not see
anything
in the three men that was worthy of my attention. Again I was awakened
by the
officer.
For a
while I sat there not
thinking anything, looking at the back of the head in front of me and
the head
in front of that head. Then I traced my eyes along the head to the
shoulder and
to the wooden chair, where a line of characters was scrawled on its
back in
faint ink. I leaned forward and tried to read it. 'Wang San eat dog
shit!' I
laughed to myself at the huge exclamation mark and pointed to the girl
next to
me, and she nodded with a smile.
Then
the youngest of the
three criminals stood in his pen and spoke into the microphone in front
of him
in heavily accented mandarin Chinese. 'I was an orphan. I was
illiterate. I did
not know how to be a good man. I promise I will learn to be a good man.
I ask
the people to listen to me: he said and bowed to us.
I
laughed and whispered to
the girl next to me, 'What is he doing?'
'I
think the judge just asked
him if he had anything to say to defend himself.'
'And
that's his defense?'
'Probably.'
'And
what's that to do with
us?' I said, and we both laughed lightly, dismissing the image of the
young man
along with the graffiti on the back of the chair.
That
was the end of the
trial. We did not catch how many years the young men were sentenced to,
and we
did not care to know. We left the theatre feeling angered that one more
afternoon of our lives had been wasted, not knowing we had missed one
important
moment, not knowing that we forgot to answer that crucial question:
What has
that to do with us?
Did
anyone in the Hunan
stadium ask the same question? Did anyone try to answer it? I want to
know what
the audience was thinking as it watched the young woman's death. Was
there an
Auntie Wang in the crowd? I want to
know, too, who those medical workers were, rushing in and out of the
stadium in
the ambulance. Was the surgeon the same one who, when I was ten years
old,
operated on my mother to take her gallbladder out? I saw him shortly
after the
operation, and he even joked with me, telling me that my mom would no
longer be
a quick-tempered person because she no longer had an organ to store her
bile.
I want
to know the man with
the transplanted kidneys. After the operation did he walk with a cane
to the neighborhood
centre to attend the retirees' biweekly meetings, where my
eighty-one-year-old
grandpa was made to stand for hours, listening to the old men and women
criticize him because he once fought in the army against Communism?
I want
to know the boyfriend
who turned in the letter to his officer.
Was he
promoted for his
action and admitted to the Communist Party? Did he become the officer
who had
us march in snow for hours when we were in the military, trying to kick
our
shaking legs with his leather boots?
I want
to know, too, the
janitor. How did he get caught? What made him seek out a criminal's
body? Was
he like the janitor in my father's working unit, who always patted my
head and
gave me candies to eat? He once gave me a bag of mulberry leaves, kept
moist by
a wet handkerchief, for my silkworms. Did he intentionally or
accidentally
forget that the leaves were sprayed with pesticide, so that my
silkworms all
died overnight, so that I flunked my second grade nature class?
And
above all the questions
is the one question I have been trying to answer all along. What has
that to do
with me? Why do I feel compelled to tell the two women's stories? Who
were
they?
The
first young woman was
once the secretary of the Communist Youth League. She must have been a
devoted
daughter of the revolution to get the position. What led her astray
from her
faith? What made her stare back with blunt, questioning eyes? And those
letters
she wrote over the next ten years, page after page, what was she trying
to say?
What is in the letter that betrayed her, ending the ten years of
imprisonment
with a death sentence instead of freedom?
And the
second woman, the
mother of a young boy, what made her so undaunted in the face of death?
Did she
like to read the stories of women heroes as I once did, my favorite
heroine a
nineteen-year-old Soviet girl named Zoya, who was caught burning down a
German
stable and was hanged to death? Did she admire Autumn-Jade, the woman
hero I
secretly hoped was one of my ancestors?
Autumn-
Jade was a student of
my great-granduncle, the one we called Big Man in our family. Big Man
was a
revolutionary at the end of the last dynasty, fighting along with his
comrades
to establish a republic. He was known in history for two things - the
female
students he trained to be assassins and his peculiar death after a
failed
mission. Autumn- Jade was twenty-four, the most beautiful student of
Big Man.
She was sent to bomb the emperor's personal representative; the bomb
did not go
off, and she was arrested, beheaded in the town centre of our hometown.
On the
day of her execution, hundreds of people watched her paraded in the
street, her
body badly tortured. Many brought stacks of silver coins to bribe the
executioner so they could get a bun immersed in her blood, something
that was
said to cure tuberculosis. How many bloody buns were consumed that day,
how
many men were cured? Soon after Autumn-Jade's death, Big Man went alone
on
another assassination mission. He succeeded but got caught by the
guards. His
heart and liver were taken out and fried into a dish for the guards to
eat.
I can
never tell the story of
Big Man and Autumn-Jade right. I cannot resist the temptation to make
Autumn-
Jade one of my family. I want Big Man in love with Autumn - Jade, the
beautiful
young woman who learned fencing, shooting, horse riding, and the
chemistry of
explosives from him. I want Big Man to go into the suicide mission as a
tribute
to Autumn-Jade, his comrade and his lover. I want the granduncle whom
Big Man's
wife raised alone to be a son of Big Man and Autumn-Jade.
I want
to interfere with
history, making things up at will, adding layers to legend. I want
Autumn-Jade's fearless blood running in the two young women's bodies.
Sometimes
I imagine the second woman looking calmly into her executioners' eyes
when she
was forced to kneel down to receive the bullet, as many years ago
Autumn- Jade stood
quietly in front of the axe and chanted her last poem. The scenes
always move
me, as they are the central scenes for a hero's story. I want the story
to be
about bravery. But always I am stopped.
It is a
fact that heroes are
created by anger and romance, but anger and romance do not carry us
long. It is
a fact that the first woman, after the death sentence, cried and begged
for her
life to anyone walking past her cell. It is a fact that she was crushed
by the
thought of dying at twenty-nine, a fact that she was no longer a sane
person on
the way to the stadium, weeping and singing and laughing and murmuring
stories
to herself.
As if
this were an imaginary
world, like the world of made-up battle games in the day care, with
history
carried on my young shoulders. But sooner or later Auntie Wang will
shout in
her loud voice, and I will run to her again, wishing that this time she
will be
pleased by me, knowing she is not when I see her pursed lips. Again I
am
squatting in time-out, watching the white clouds above me, and the
black ants
busying themselves in the grass. Our game was interrupted, but our
lives
continue .•
This
first appeared in The Gettysburg Review, Volume 16,
Number
2, and is reprinted here with the acknowledgment of the editors