By Carrie
Gracie
BBC News, Beijing
Speaking
truth to power has always been a high-risk strategy in China . Its
rulers tend to prefer flattery, and writers who forget this do so at their
peril. China 's
"grand historian" - 2,000 years ago - was one of many who have paid a
terrible price.
"Among
defilements, none is so great as castration. Any man who continues to live having
suffered such a punishment is accounted as a nothing."
The man who
wrote those words is by no means a nothing today. In a nation obsessed by its
history, Sima Qian was the first and some say the greatest historian.
Wind back
two millennia. It is 99 BC. On China 's
northern frontier, imperial forces have surrendered to barbarians. At court,
the news is greeted with shock. The emperor is raging.
But an
upstart official defies court etiquette by speaking up for the defeated
general.
"He is
a man with many famous victories to his credit, a man far above the ordinary,
while these courtiers - whose sole concern has been preserving themselves and
their families - seize on one mistake. I felt sick at heart to see it,"
writes Sima Qian in a letter to a friend afterwards.
The general
had committed treason by surrendering. And Sima Qian had committed treason by
defending him.
"None
of my friends came to my aid, none of my colleagues spoke a word on my
behalf," he writes.
There is an
interrogation. Sima Qian tells his friend his body is not made of wood or
stone. "I was alone with my inquisitors, shut in the darkness of my
cell."
At the end
he is offered an unenviable choice - death or castration. To his
contemporaries, death was the only honourable option but Sima Qian had a bigger
audience in mind than the Chinese court of the 1st Century BC. He was writing a
history of humanity for posterity.
Sima Qian's
father had been court historian before him and had started the project. On his
sickbed, with both of them in tears, the father extracted from the son a
promise to complete the epic work.
So he chose
castration.
"If I
had followed custom and submitted to execution, how would it have made a
difference greater than the loss of a strand of hair from a herd of oxen or the
life of a solitary ant?" he wrote.
"A man
has only one death. That death may be as weighty as Mount Tai
or it may be as light as a goose feather. It all depends on the way he uses
it."
But neither
in the letter nor in his autobiography can Sima Qian bring himself to describe
the horror of castration. He talks instead of going down to the "silkworm
chamber".
It was
already well known that a castrated man could easily die from blood loss or
infection so after mutilation the victims were kept like silkworms in a warm,
draught-free room.
Sima Qian
never recovered from the humiliation.
"I
look at myself now, mutilated in body and living in vile disgrace. Every time I
think of this shame I find myself drenched in sweat."
But he also
wrote that if, as a result of his sacrifice, his work ended up being handed
down to men who would appreciate it, reaching villages and great cities, then
he would have no regrets even after suffering 1,000 mutilations.
If only he
could have seen the future as well as he saw the past.
In today's China , Sima
Qian's book, The Records of the Grand Historian, is regarded as the grandest
history of them all. What Herodotus is to Europeans, so Sima Qian is to
Chinese.
What is
special about Sima Qian's history is that, even when he wrote about the court,
it was not just flattery. Here is his verdict on an emperor from the Shang
dynasty 1,000 years earlier:
"Emperor
Zhou's disposition was sharp, his discernment was keen, and his physical
strength excelled that of other people. He fought ferocious animals with his
bare hands. He considered everyone beneath him. He was fond of wine, licentious
in pleasure and doted on women…
"He
then ordered his Music Master to compose new licentious music and depraved
songs. By a pool filled with wine, through meat hanging like a forest, he made
naked men and women chase one another and engage in drinking long into the
night."
The emperor
had critics turned into mincemeat, and nobles who were not up for the party
roasted alive.
Zhou was a
good illustration of a theory Sima Qian had about dynastic change, as Frances
Wood, curator of the Chinese collection at the British Museum ,
explains.
"He
introduced the idea… that dynasties begin with the very virtuous and noble
founder, and then they continue through a series of rulers until they come to a
bad last ruler, and he is so morally depraved that he is overthrown."
No suprises
- Zhou was the last of the Shang dynasty.
Sima Qian
thought the purpose of history was to teach rulers how to govern well.
By
contrast, China 's
current government - like every other Chinese government I can think of - sees
it as a means of legitimising its rule.
"History
is totally political in China ,
and I think it always has been," says Frances Wood.
Just look,
she says, at the fate of historians in 20th Century China .
"Somebody
who actually became deputy mayor of Peking , Wu
Han, was a very important historian who had written about the first Ming
emperor.
"The
first Ming emperor… in 1368, he's often been compared with Mao Tse-Tung,
because he was a charismatic bandit leader who, in his last years, went pretty
crazy and paranoid. So you have Wu Han writing that history in the 1950s, which
was a very dangerous thing to do, because Mao was already beginning to totter
into paranoia."
For
criticising the present by writing about the past, Wu Han was arrested. He died
in prison in 1969.
Last year China re-opened
its national museum, lauded as the world's biggest museum under one roof. It is
hugely popular, but it illustrates just how much history is a pick-and-mix for China 's rulers.
They leave out the bits that do not do them credit and - masters of selective
memory - they big up the moments they are proud of.
So instead
of the tens of millions who died in Mao's Great Leap forward and the Cultural
Revolution, you get China 's
first nuclear test in 1964, or a celebration of the reform era after Mao's
death.
A panel as
you exit the museum spells out the key message: "Since the founding of the
Communist Party of China 90 years ago, under the strong leadership of the
Party, our great nation has successively achieved many historic changes…
Socialism is the only way to save China ,
and reform and opening up is the only way to develop China ."
I am sure
Sima Qian would hope someone like him is sitting unnoticed in a quiet corner
writing a more nuanced history of this period, even if it can only be published
when the powerful have passed on.
This, in
fact, is how The Records of the Grand Historian saw the light of day.
After his
death, his daughter risked her own safety to hide his secret history. And two
emperors later, his grandson took another risk in revealing the book's
existence. The rest, as they say, is history.
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