https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2017/01/19/tan-hecheng-chinese-unspeakable/
, another review from the NYRB :

In the Cultural Revolution, Mao whipped up the propaganda another notch,
declaring that enemies were readying a counterrevolution. In Dao County,
stories began to fly that the black elements had seized weapons. The county
government decided to strike preemptively and kill them. When village-level
officials objected—many were related to the victims—more powerful leaders
sent out “battle-hardened” squads of killers (often former criminals and
hoodlums) to put pressure on locals to execute the undesirables. After the
first deaths, locals were freed from moral constraints and usually acted
spontaneously, even against family members.

This was not exceptional. Most accounts of the Cultural Revolution have
focused on the Red Guards and urban violence. But a growing number of
studies show that genocidal killings were widespread. Previously, we knew
of cases of cannibalism in Guangxi province. But recent research, as well
as in-depth case studies like Tan’s, show that the killings were widespread
and systematic instead of being isolated, sensational events. One survey of
local gazetteers shows that between 400,000 and 1.5 million people perished
in similar incidents, meaning there were at least another one hundred Dao
County massacres around this time.


The hyperlink in the reply just sent was dead for one of the books cited.
Here is the corrected one and with a link to an excerpt.

https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374533991/tombstone , the account is
graphic.

Author: Yang Jisheng; Edited by Edward Friedman, Guo Jian, and Stacy
Mosher; Translated from the Chinese by Stacy Mosher and Guo Jian;
Introduction by Edward Friedman and Roderick MacFarquhar

*1 THE EPICENTER OF THE DISASTER*


Henan is a rural province north of Shanghai and south of Beijing. The
Chinese Communist Party's "Three Red Banners" waved highest here, and the
famine likewise hit hardest. Political movements set off the famine in
Henan. Some seventy thousand Henan residents were labeled "rightists" in
1957—nearly 13 percent of those targeted in the Anti-Rightist Movement
nationwide, and 15 percent of the province's cadres.1 In 1958 a new
campaign was launched against the "Pan, Yang, Wang rightist anti-party
clique" within the party, which will be detailed later in this chapter.2
These two campaigns combined to create dread and fanaticism that led to
wild exaggeration and horrendous brutality that in turn brought about a
series of catastrophes—among which the "Xinyang Incident" is the most
notable.


*PART I: THE XINYANG INCIDENT*
Xinyang Prefecture lies in the southeast of Henan, bordering the provinces
of Hubei and Anhui. In 1958 the prefecture administered eighteen counties,
the city of Xinyang, and the town of Zhumadian. It was home to 8.5 million
people. Most of the prefecture consisted of mountain ranges that had served
as bases for China's revolutionary forces, and where hundreds of thousands
of lives had been sacrificed in the civil war with the Kuomintang. Elderly
residents say, "Even the trees and grasses of the Dabie Mountains served
the Communist Party." This lush region was the province's main producer of
grain and cotton and an abundant source of tea leaves, timber, bamboo, tung
oil, and medicinal herbs. Scenic Jigong Shan (Rooster Mountain) is located
here. In short, Xinyang, along with nearby Nanyang and Luoyang, was the
economic engine of the province. Yet from the winter of 1959 to the spring
of 1960, at least one million people starved to death here—one out of every
eight residents.

Li Jian, an official of the CCP Central Control Commission (the precursor
of the Discipline and Inspection Commission) sent to Henan in the wake of
the famine, found that the largest number of starvation deaths occurred in
Xinyang and two other prefectures: Nanyang and Xuchang. The most horrific
situation became known as the "Xinyang Incident."3

In September 1999, I went to Xinyang, accompanied by a senior reporter from
Xinhua's Henan branch, Gu Yuezhong, and a former Xinhua reporter who had
been stationed in Xinyang during the famine, Lu Baoguo. Gu had excellent
relations with local officials, but the Xinyang municipal party committee
was clearly disconcerted by the purpose of our visit, and arranged a scenic
tour of Rooster Mountain. Nonetheless, we managed to interview a number of
cadres and villagers who had lived through the famine, and gained access to
a number of documents that shed light on the Xinyang Incident.


*POLITICAL PRESSURE BREEDS EXAGGERATION*
In a political system such as China's, those below imitate those above, and
political struggles at the higher levels are replicated at the lower levels
in an expanded and even more ruthless form. This is what happened in
Xinyang.

Following the provincial-level campaign against the "Pan, Yang, Wang"
clique and the campaign against right deviation, Xinyang's Guangshan County
on November 11, 1959, conducted a criticism, or "struggle," session against
the secretary of the CCP county secretariat, Zhang Fuhong, who was labeled
a "right deviationist" and a "degenerate element." During the struggle
session, county party secretary Ma Longshan took the lead by kicking Zhang,
after which others set upon him with fists and feet. Other struggle
sessions were conducted by county-level cadres on November 13 and 14,
during which Zhang was beaten bloody, his hair ripped out in patches, and
his uniform torn to shreds, leaving him barely able to walk.

On November 15, Zhang was handed over to commune cadres, by which time he
could only lie on the floor while he was kicked and punched and had what
remained of his hair torn out. Another struggle session by commune cadres
on November 16 left Zhang near death; by the time he was dragged home that
day, he had lost control of his bodily functions and could no longer eat or
drink. On November 17 he was accused of malingering and attacked again. On
November 18 he was accused of pining for the return of Kuomintang leader
Chiang Kai-shek and was dragged from his bed for more struggle. When he
asked for water, he was refused. Around noon on November 19, Zhang Fuhong
died.4

Xinyang's deputy party secretary and prefectural commissioner, Zhang
Shufan, subsequently related in his memoirs why Zhang Fuhong was targeted.
In the spring of 1959, in order to alleviate famine conditions among the
peasants, Ma Longshan sent Zhang Fuhong to a production team to launch a
pilot project in which output quotas were assigned to each household. Other
localities were doing the same, but following the political reversals of
the Central Committee's Lushan Conference,5 household output quotas were
labeled right opportunism. Ma denied responsibility, saying Zhang Fuhong
had initiated the use of quotas. Although Zhang insisted that Ma had
assigned him to carry out the system,6 an official one level higher can
crush his subordinate, and that is what happened here.

Campaigns against right deviation in other counties were similarly brutal.
In Xi County, party secretary Xu Xilan directed a struggle session against
deputy secretary Feng Peiran. Xu sat above Feng with a handgun at his side
while someone held Feng by the neck as others beat and kicked him.
According to Zhang Shufan's memoirs, some twelve thousand struggle sessions
were held in the prefecture,7 and all kinds of ridiculous statements were
made under political pressure.

In 1958, Xinyang's Suiping County was given nationwide publicity for Great
Leap production successes referred to as Sputniks, or "satellites." These
"grand achievements" were attributed to the "struggle against
right-deviating conservatism." In an atmosphere of extreme political
pressure, anyone who dared question the accuracy of these reported crop
yields risked being labeled a "doubter" or "denier" engaged in "casting
aspersions on the excellent situation," and anyone who exposed the
fraudulence of the high-yield model was subjected to struggle.

A drought in 1959 drove down Xinyang's crop yields, but prefectural party
cadres, overcome by fanaticism, proposed the slogan of "Big drought, big
harvest" and claimed higher yields than the year before. Commissioner Zhang
Shufan, who was directly responsible for agriculture, in early August
convened a meeting of leading county cadres to provide "practical and
realistic" appraisals of the disaster and to adopt advanced measures such
as varied crop plantings to prevent a famine.

Following the Lushan Conference, the prefectural party committee had each
county report its projected yields. Under the political pressure of the
times, each county's estimate was exceeded by that of the next, as all
feared being criticized for reporting the lowest projection. Yu Dehong, a
staff member at the prefectural party committee meeting, later recalled
that the first projection totaled 15 billion kilos. Zhang Shufan and others
thought this excessively optimistic and asked everyone to submit new
figures, which subsequently totaled 7.5 billion kilos and finally 3.6
billion kilos. During a meeting of the prefectural party committee's
standing committee, eight of the nine standing committee members believed
that the 1959 crop yield would exceed that of 1958, and that given the 1958
yield of 2.8 billion kilos, a 3.6 billion kilo yield for 1959 was very
reasonable. Zhang Shufan, however, expected a yield of only 1.5 to 2.0
billion kilos.

In late August and early September, the Henan provincial party committee
convened an enlarged meeting to implement the spirit of the Lushan
Conference. Each prefecture was asked to report projected crop yields.
Zhang Shufan led off for Xinyang by reporting that his standing committee
projected a crop yield of 3.6 billion kilos, but that his more modest
personal projection was 1.5 to 2 billion kilos. The provincial party
committee was dissatisfied with Zhang's report and subsequently asked
prefectural party secretary Lu Xianwen, "What's going on in Xinyang?" Under
pressure, Lu convened another meeting of county party secretaries
requesting new projections. At first no one spoke, but finally someone
asked, "Isn't it what we already reported in our meeting?" Lu Xianwen
replied, "Someone took exception to those projections." By "someone," Lu
was referring to Zhang Shufan. Soon afterward, right-deviating elements
were sought out and subjected to struggle, and this county head who had
dared to speak the truth was stripped of his official position.8


*PROCUREMENT BASED ON ABSURD PROJECTIONS*
Exaggerated yield projections meant high state procurement quotas. In
Henan, every county was forced to hand over every available kernel of
grain. Zhang Shufan recalls:

Following the expanded meeting, I returned to the prefecture to head up the
autumn harvest procurement. The provincial party committee based its
procurement on the big 1958 harvest, and our prefecture met our quota of
800 million kilos by taking every kernel of grain ration and seed grain
from the peasants. Immediately after the harvest, many localities were left
with nothing to eat, and people began to leave the prefecture in search of
food. Many communal kitchens had no food to serve their members, and the
helpless villagers staved their hunger at home as best they could with
sweet potatoes and wild herbs.

Higher levels reported a somewhat smaller procurement quota, but agreed
that excessive procurement had serious repercussions:

In 1959, Xinyang suffered a drought. The total grain yield of the
prefecture was less than 1.63 billion kilos, a decrease of 46.1 percent
from 1958, but the prefectural party committee projected a grain yield of
more than 3.21 billion kilos. On that basis, the province set Xinyang's
procurement quota at 480 million kilos, which was 21.5 million kilos more
than in 1958. The prefectural party committee added 5 percent to the
procurement quota for each county, raising the total procurement quota to
502.45 million kilos. After the prefecture met its quota, the food ration
left after seed grain and fodder were excluded was only 82.25 kilos of
unprocessed grain per person for the year. Based on typical consumption of
17.5 kilos per person per month, that was enough to feed the population for
four months. With no supplementary foodstuffs or oil, the 17.5 kilos of
unprocessed grain amounted to 12.5 kilos of edible grain, barely enough to
prevent starvation. In addition, some 1.8 million people were engaged in
irrigation projects in the prefecture, and they alone consumed a large
share of the available grain.9

The Henan provincial party committee subsequently found,

Last year the autumn yield of the entire prefecture of Xinyang was
estimated at only a little more than 1 billion kilos, but was exaggerated
to 3.2 billion kilos, and the province set the prefecture's procurement
quota at 480 million kilos, with additional procurements at the prefecture,
county, and commune levels increasing the procurement quota by more than 20
percent. After the prefecture met its mid-October procurement quota of more
than 350 million kilos, 3,751 communal kitchens (370,000 people) were left
without food. Even under those conditions, the campaign against false
underreporting of output and of widespread private withholding of
foodstuffs continued in all communes and production teams.10

As this campaign gained force, it exacerbated the famine.
In 1958, Xinyang Prefecture organized about 30 percent of the prefecture's
working population for the great iron and steel production campaign.11 The
steel furnaces didn't actually smelt any iron; rather, the woks and cooking
utensils of the peasants, the door knockers from their homes, and the bells
from temples were all melted down in order to report success. In addition
to the 1.2 million laborers used for this campaign, more than half a
million were engaged in ball bearing production, and another 2.0 million in
irrigation projects.12 Feeding these laborers left that much less grain for
the farm production teams.


*THE VIOLENT CAMPAIGN AGAINST FALSE REPORTING OF OUTPUT*
Excessively high requisition quotas made procurement difficult. If farmers
were unable to hand over the required amount, the government would accuse
production teams of concealing grain. A "struggle between the two roads"
(of socialism and capitalism) was launched to counteract the alleged
withholding of grain. This campaign used political pressure, mental
torture, and ruthless violence to extort every last kernel of grain or seed
from the peasants. Anyone who uttered the slightest protest was beaten,
sometimes fatally.
A meeting at Rooster Mountain pushed the campaign against grain hoarding to
a climax. Li Ruiying, the wife of Zhang Shufan, was chair of Xinyang
Prefecture's Federation of Women. In June 1959 the prefectural party
committee had her lead a work group to Rooster Mountain Commune to report
on a pilot project to produce 5,000 kilos of paddy per *mu* of land, the
brainchild of the county party secretary. Li Ruiying's team stayed at
Rooster Mountain for a month, during which they learned that this model
commune was a fraud and that the peasants there were starving. Li wrote to
prefectural party secretary Lu Xianwen requesting 105,000 kilos of grain,
but Lu refused and labeled Li Ruiying a right deviationist. A cadre sent to
Rooster Mountain to replace Li also truthfully reported the hunger of
commune members, only to be labeled a "vacillator."

Li's replacement, Wang Binglin, tried to appease party secretary Lu Xianwen
by organizing an on-the-spot meeting to oppose "false reporting of output
and private withholding," the arcane official formulation for hoarding. All
that was produced were rice husks covered by a thin layer of grain. The
prefectural party committee ordered local cadres to stifle the public
outcry, stop villagers from fleeing in search of food, and halt the closure
of communal kitchens. After that, anyone who claimed to have no grain was
labeled a "negator of the Three Red Banners," a "negator of the Great
Harvest," or a "right deviationist," and was subjected to struggle. If
communal kitchens closed due to lack of food, this was labeled "the masses
threatening the cadres," and abandoning starving children along the
roadsides was labeled "an assault against the party."13

Punishments were inflicted on cadres and villagers alike. In Guangshan
County, 2,241 people were beaten, 105 fatally, and 526 cadres were stripped
of their official positions. The number of deaths from physical abuse rose
even higher toward the end of the campaign. In *The Xinyang Incident*, Qiao
Peihua describes the situation in one village:

At the end of September 1959, Wang Pinggui, a member of the Wangxiaowan
production team, was forced to hand over grain kept in his home, and was
beaten with a shoulder pole, dying of his injuries five days later. Not
long after Wang's death, the rest of his four-member household died of
starvation.

In October 1959, Luo Mingzhu of the Luowan production team, upon failing to
hand over any grain, was bound and suspended in mid-air and beaten, then
doused with ice-cold water. He died the next day.
On October 13, 1959, Wang Taishu of the Chenwan production team, upon
failing to hand over any grain, was bound and beaten with shoulder poles
and rods, dying four days later. His fourteen-year-old daughter, Wang
Pingrong, subsequently died of starvation.

On October 15, 1959, Zhang Zhirong of the Xiongwan production team, upon
failing to hand over any grain, was bound and beaten to death with kindling
and poles. The brigade's cadre used tongs to insert rice and soya beans
into the deceased's anus while shouting, "Now you can grow grain out of
your corpse!" Zhang left behind children aged eight and ten who
subsequently died of starvation.

On October 19, 1959, Chenwan production team member Chen Xiaojia and his
son Chen Guihou were hung from the beam of the communal dining hall when
they failed to hand over any grain. They were beaten and doused with cold
water, both dying within seven days. Two small children who survived them
eventually died of starvation.

On October 24, 1959, the married couple Zheng Jinhou and Luo Mingying of
the Yanwan production team had 28 silver coins seized from their home
during the campaign and were beaten to death. Their three children, left
without anyone to care for them, starved to death.

On November 8, 1959, Xu Chuanzheng of the Xiongwan production team was
falsely accused of withholding grain. He was hung from the beam of the
communal dining hall and brutally beaten, dying six days later. The six
family members who survived him subsequently starved to death.

On November 8, 1959, Zhong Xingjian of the Yanwan production team was
accused of "defying the leadership," and a cadre hacked him to death with
an ax.14

These are only a portion of the incidents Qiao recounts.

Liu Wencai, secretary of Guangshan County party secretariat, was in charge
of the anti-hoarding campaign at Huaidian People's Commune, during which he
flogged more than forty peasants, four of whom died. Some 93 percent of
commune-level cadres in Guangshan County led such campaigns and personally
took part in beatings. On November 28, 1960, a report was sent to Henan
party secretary Wu Zhipu.

In the calamity at Guangshan County's Huaidian people's commune in the
autumn of 1959, the commune's average yield per *mu* was 86 kilos, for a
total of 5.955 million kilos. The commune's party committee reported a
yield of 313 kilos per *mu*, for a total of 23.05 million kilos. The
procurement quota set by the county was 6 million kilos, which exceeded the
commune's total grain yield. In order to achieve the procurement quota,
every means had to be taken to oppose false reporting and private
withholding, and every scrap of food had to be seized from the masses. The
final procurement was 5.185 million kilos. All of the communal kitchens
were closed down, and deaths followed. Liu Wencai and the commune party
committee attributed the kitchen closures and deaths to attacks by
well-to-do middle peasants and sabotage by class enemies, and to the
struggle between the two paths of socialism and capitalism. They continued
the campaign against false reporting and private withholding for eight
months. Within sixty or seventy days not a kernel of grain could be found
anywhere, and mass starvation followed.

The commune originally numbered 36,691 members in 8,027 households. Between
September 1959 and June 1960, 12,134 people died (among them, 7,013 males
and 5,121 females), constituting 33 percent of the total population. There
were 780 households completely extinguished, making up 9.7 percent of all
households. The village of Jiangwan originally had 45 inhabitants, but 44
of them died, leaving behind only one woman in her sixties, who went insane.

There was a total of 1,510 cadres at the commune, brigade, and production
team level, and 628, or 45.1 percent, took part in beatings. The number
beaten totaled 3,528 (among them 231 cadres), with 558 dying while being
beaten, 636 dying subsequently, another 141 left permanently disabled, 14
driven to commit suicide, and 43 driven away.

Apart from the standard abuse of beating, kicking, exposure, and
starvation, there were dozens of other extremely cruel forms of torture,
including dousing the head with cold water, tearing out hair, cutting off
ears, driving bamboo strips into the palms, driving pine needles into the
gums, "lighting the celestial lantern,"15 forcing lit embers into the
mouth, branding the nipples, tearing out pubic hair, penetrating the
genitals, and being buried alive.

When thirteen children arrived at the commune begging for food, the
commune's party secretary, surnamed Jiang, along with others incited
kitchen staff to drag them deep into the mountains, where they were left to
die of hunger and exposure.

The official communal dining hall was divided into three types: a special
dining room for party secretaries, a slightly larger room for party
committee members, and a large mess hall for ordinary cadres. The special
dining room served meat, fish, eggs, and fried peanuts.

This was not the first time people had been beaten here. During the
Anti-Rightist Movement in 1957, not a single rightist escaped beating. They
originated the practice of shaving the character for "right" into a
person's hair and herding miscreants in front of pig troughs, where they
were forced to scoop out congee with their hands and eat it.

With no means of escaping a hopeless situation, ordinary people could not
adequately look after their own. Families were scattered to the winds,
children abandoned, and corpses left along the roadside to rot. As a result
of the extreme deprivations of starvation, 381 commune members desecrated
134 corpses.16
Lying became a means of survival. A Huangchuan County party committee
member and the director of agriculture and labor carried out socialist
education sessions at Sanpisi Commune. There was not a bite for them to eat
in the production teams during the day, so they had to return to the
commune at night to eat, but dared not report that the production team had
no food.

After the Xinyang Incident, the commune's first secretary, Jia Xinyuan,
told a provincial party committee work group, "It wasn't that I didn't know
anything at the time; of the 200 people who reported for military service
last year, only 40 percent met the minimum weight requirement. I also knew
about 100 or 200 people dying in one day. Struggling with myself, I went to
the county three times to report what was happening, but turned back each
time out of fear of being labeled a right deviationist. After returning, I
then had to carry out campaigns against false reporting and private
withholding."

During procurement, the leader of the Sanpisi production brigade told his
commune party secretary, "People actually have no food to eat down there."
The commune secretary criticized him: "That's right-deviationist
thinking—you're viewing the problem in an overly simplistic manner!" That
brigade held four meetings to counter hoarding and to search out hidden
caches, and local leaders became struggle targets. The brigade was
compelled to report 120,000 kilos of concealed grain, but not a single
kernel was discovered.17


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