Jiabiangou
Jiabiangou Labor Camp (Chinese: 夹边沟; pinyin: Jiābiāngōu; lit. 'wedged between ditches') is a former farm labor camp (laogai) located in the area under the administration of Jiuquan in the northwestern desert region of Gansu Province.[1][2] The camp was in use during the Anti-Rightist Campaign in the years from 1957 to 1961.[2] During its operation, it held approximately 3,000 political prisoners, of whom about 2,500 died at Jiabiangou, mostly of starvation.[2][3][4][5]
History
Jiabiangou was a camp for "re-education through labor"[2][3] that was used to imprison intellectuals and former government officials who were declared to be "rightist" in the Anti-Rightist Movement of the Chinese Communist Party.[2][3] The camp is located 27 kilometres (17 mi) to the northeast of Jiuquan,[6] on the edge of the Badain Jaran Desert.
Some inmates were sent to Jiabiangou on the grounds that they had relatives who had owned a business or held a position in the Kuomintang government.[4] Originally designed as a prison to hold 40 to 50 criminals, the camp was overcrowded with 3,000 political prisoners.[2][3] As a consequence, agriculture in the camp area was limited to small patches of grassland in an oasis surrounded by salt marshes and desert.[3] Yet, no external food supplies were offered to the prisoners.
The starvation at Jiabianguo took place during the Great Leap Forward (1958-1961) and the Great Chinese Famine (1959-1962), which is estimated to have caused many millions of excess deaths.[7] The result was a famine in Jiabiangou that started in the fall of 1960.[3] In order to survive, prisoners ate leaves,[3][8] tree barks,[3][8] worms and rats,[3][8] human and animal waste,[4] and flesh from dead inmates.[2][3][8] The bodies of the dead were left unburied on the sand dunes surrounding the camp[3][6] as the surviving prisoners were too weak to bury them.[3]
In December 1960, senior officials of the Communist Party learned of the situation in the camp and launched an investigation. As a result, amnesties were issued to the survivors and the camp's remaining population evacuated early in 1961.[3] In October 1961, the government ordered the closure of Jiabiangou as well as a cover-up.[2] Authorities in Gansu[8] assigned a doctor to the fabrication of medical records for every dead inmate stating various natural causes of death, but never mentioning starvation.[2]
Memorial
Partially fictionalized accounts of firsthand recollections from 13 survivors of the camp have been presented in the book Woman from Shanghai: Tales of Survival From a Chinese Labor Camp by Yang Xianhui[9] (originally published as "Farewell to Jiabiangou", Chinese: 告别夹边沟; pinyin: Gàobié Jiābiāngōu, translated into English by Wen Huang with support from a 2007 PEN Translation Fund Grant. The book was adapted into Wang Bing's 2010 film The Ditch.[10] Another account based on interviews with survivors is given in The Tragedy at Jiabiangou by Xu Zhao (2008), Laogai Research Foundation Publications (in Chinese).[5]
Remains of the camp, including the graveyards, are unmaintained and heavily guarded to prevent people from visiting. In November 2013, a new monument dictated by families and social workers was quickly destroyed by local authorities. Ai Xiaoming, a professor of Sun Yat-sen University, was briefly detained before released and prevented from photographing in May 2014.[11]
See also
References
- Wu, Yenna (April 2020). "Cultural Trauma Construction of the Necropolitical Jiabiangou Laojiao Camp" (PDF). American Journal of Chinese Studies. 27 (1): 25–49.
- Howard W. French (2009): Survivors' Stories From China, New York Times, New York Edition, August 25, 2009, page C1
- Wen Huang (2009): I hope to be remembered as a writer who speaks the truth, guest post at Three Percent - a resource for international literature at the University of Rochester
- Sarah Halzack (2009): Surviving Jiabiangou, The Washington Post, August 23, 2009
- Xu Zhao (2008). The Tragedy at Jiabiangou. Laogai Research Foundation Publications.
- James D. Seymour, Richard Anderson (1998): New ghosts, old ghosts: prisons and labor reform camps in China, And East Gate Book, p. 179, footnote B
- D. Gale Johnson (1998). "China's Great Famine: Introductory Remarks". China Economic Review. 9 (2): 103–109. doi:10.1016/S1043-951X(99)80008-X.
- N.N. (2007): The Unknown Gulag, PRI's The World, December 4, 2007
- Xianhui Yang (2009): Woman from Shanghai, published by Pantheon, a division of Random House, Inc.
- La Biennale di Venezia: The Ditch by Chinese director Wang Bing is the Surprise Film
- 艾晓明:夹边沟遗址遭破坏令人痛心