
|
WORLD/ONE COUNTRY, MANY SYSTEMS
INSIDE CHINA
BY JOHANNA MCGEARY
 |
As Hong Kong Is Reunited With China, It Will Change
The Mainland As Much As China Changes It
|
|
One country, two systems. Beijing's promise to Hong Kong has the virtue of simplicity. In the West it conjures
up the notion of a tiny island of advanced civilization lodging precariously inside a primitive, monolithic
communist mainland. In China, though, it's a glaring understatement. Two systems? China today has dozens of
political and economic experiments jostling one another, all progressing in different directions at different
speeds. One country? China is many countries already. Hong Kong will be just one more participant in an
unfinished revolution.
The People's Republic is still a police state with one firm red line: Thou shalt not overthrow the Communist
Party government. Yet the vast majority of Chinese people are surprisingly free. The society is so rapidly
reshaping itself that even its own leaders are often overwhelmed. This vast, tumultuous land is a startling work
in progress that has abandoned orthodox Marxism but not yet settled on fixed alternative arrangements. The
Chinese are no longer what they were but are not sure what they will become.
This story is not about the Politburo in Beijing or even the thousands of dissidents locked away in jails. It is a
tale of ordinary people in three regions, no more but also no less representative of the "real" China. While
communism and democracy form the two poles of the country's political drama, most Chinese live their lives
somewhere in between, feeling their way cautiously forward. Politics remains hard for people to discuss, not
just because they are afraid to but because that is not primarily where their interests lie. Many do not yet have a
vocabulary that extends beyond the freedom to get rich. But some are, slowly, expressing aspirations for greater
guarantees of personal liberty, for laws they can understand and trust.
The country is a mosaic of backwardness and new thinking, of worship of Mammon and nostalgia for Mao.
Hong Kong poses no graver threat to the powers in Beijing than homegrown forces already at work; the
embrace of individual enterprise has forever undermined the basic tenets of communism. The pace and
uncertainty of this unique transition frighten as many Chinese as they embolden. Whatever the Chinese are on
the way to becoming, they offer this counsel: Naixin. Patience. Xuyao shijian. It takes time.
--With reporting by Jaime A. Florcruz/ Beijing and Mia Turner/shenyang
|