
A new lifestyle emerges.
JEFFREY AARONSON-NETWORK ASPEN
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BY JOHANNA MCGEARY
REPORTED BY SANDRA BURTON/HONG KONG, DEAN FISCHER AND
DOUGLAS WALLER/WASHINGTON AND JAIME A. FLORCRUZ/BEIJING
He was a surprisingly unassuming man for such a titan among statesmen.
His round, cherubic face belied a will of steel that had launched his vast
land on the most remarkable transformation of the modern age. When death
came to Deng Xiaoping last week, at 92, he was nearly blind, deaf, virtually
invisible and the honorary chairman of only the China Bridge Association.
Yet even in his long political twilight, he still cast a shadow over the
nation, at once reassuring and restricting the Chinese as they march uncertainly
toward the 21st century.
The seismic changes Deng set in motion were daring, thrusting one-fifth
of mankind in a Great Leap Outward from the crushing, dogmatic isolation
of Maoism into a quasi-capitalist economic miracle. The China that comes
after Deng will grow inexorably from the complex of roots he planted firmly
in the nation's soil. Yet his work is unfinished, and the next China will
have to come to terms with the fundamental contradiction in his hybrid creation.
Even as the country embarked on a headlong pursuit of free-market economics,
Deng insisted it be done under the iron fist of a rigid communist political
system. The people would be free to get rich but not to challenge or change
their leaders. Economic liberties would have to coexist with political bondage.
China would continue to be ruled by men, not laws.
When this frail old man finally succumbed to the Parkinson's disease
and lung ailments that had sparked rumors of his demise for years, most
Chinese registered barely a sigh. Black-clad television announcers proclaimed
his death just a few hours after it occurred, while traffic continued to
thread through Tiananmen Square. The casual manner in which Beijing residents
went about their daily routines offered eloquent proof that the Chinese
have accepted their leader's mortality and long since discounted his loss.
"We are at ease with the thought that things will be all right without
Deng," said Beijing writer Yin Zhixian. "It's unlikely that there
will be major changes, because everyone is a beneficiary of Deng's policies."
Thirtyish Zhu Xun, manager of the Shanghai office of a German air-conditioning
firm, raised his glass of white wine at the chic Golden Age club in a fitting
toast: "Thank you, Comrade Deng."
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