Anxiety, emptiness fuel Confucius craze in China

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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May 8, 2007, 10:30:38 PM5/8/07
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*Perilous times, False religions, False gods

Anxiety, emptiness fuel Confucius craze in China*

By Guo Shipeng
Reuters
Tuesday, May 8, 2007; 7:46 PM

BEIJING (Reuters) - Pop culture offerings in China these days run the
gamut from Hollywood blockbusters to domestic versions of "American
Idol," but it is a book about the ancient sage Confucius that is causing
all the buzz in the streets.

"Notes on reading the Analects," by Beijing Normal University professor
Yu Dan, has become China's best-selling book in recent memory, defying
critics who say it turns Confucian thought into self-help pulp for the
modern age.


"It is good to have these teachings from old times because people are
too selfish now," 60-year-old accountant Qu Juan said of the book that
has sold over 3 million copies in four months. "Everybody cares only
about making money after the economic reforms," she said, flipping
through the softback at a book shop.

Yu first shot to fame in October when she went on state TV to lecture on
the Analects, a canon of Confucianism recording discussions between the
ancient Chinese sage Confucius (551-479 BC) and his disciples. She wrote
the book based on the TV transcripts.

Her mass following tells of deep anxiety about morality and beliefs in a
society that has gone through a disorienting transformation in recent
decades, analysts said.

"We were taught Marxism and Leninism in schools," said Tian Na, a
25-year-old teacher who bought the book on the Internet.

"But when I became independent and went to college, I saw professors
take bribes and I felt the old slogans like 'serve the people' were no
longer relevant," she said.

Yu's book appeals across generations, despite the vastly different
experiences of growing up as Tian did, in the relatively prosperous and
stable reform era of the 1980s and 90s, or as the older generation did,
during the tumultuous reign of Mao Zedong.

After the Communist Party took power in 1949, a series of radical
political movements plunged the country into anarchy and near economic
bankruptcy, culminating in the chaos of the Cultural Revolution.

The turmoil is blamed by many for leading to mistrust between people and
a breakdown of traditional values, including the Confucian ones which
were denounced as "reactionary," as the Party tried to obliterate the
country's past.

INEXTRICABLE ANXIETY

Confucian philosophy, emphasizing high personal morality and a strict
hierarchy of social relationships, was endorsed by China's imperial
rulers over the past two millennia and still has huge influence in other
East Asian nations.

Today, market-oriented reforms in China since the late 1970s have
brought dazzling growth and greatly improved living conditions, but also
a yawning wealth gap and social tensions.

The shattering of Communist ideals and the rush to get rich --
considered almost the sole indicator of success -- with whatever means
have left many feeling lost or resentful.

"A nation which used to value morality above everything else suddenly
finds itself in a situation without a moral benchmark. That causes
inextricable anxiety," said Zhu Dake, a professor and cultural critic at
Tongji University in Shanghai.

Yu delivers her message with a simplicity that has charmed readers but
galls critics trained in the classics.

"The essence of the Analects is to tell us how to live a happy life that
our souls crave for," Yu wrote in the book. "Don't assume we should look
up to it ... it is simply about orienting yourself in modern life."

LARGEST SOUL MARKET

Detractors argue that Yu offers little more than a mix of distorted
ancient teachings and motivational stories tailored to tell readers how
to handle stress and relationships.

They say Yu takes advantage of the public's ignorance of classic
literature and her success is a symptom of, rather than a prescription
to the ailments of crazy commercialism and declining ethics
characteristic of China nowadays.

"Her moral preaching might be helpful in re-building more healthy social
relationships now centered on money, but she has neither the courage nor
the impulse to explore the ultimate meaning of life," said Zhu.

Yet such academic criticism has failed to dampen Yu's supporters. They
snapped up 15,000 autographed copies of her latest book in a single day.
The book offers similar content but borrows the thought of Zhuangzi, an
ancient Taoist philosopher . Writer Zha Jianying said Yu's books had
found a frantic audience in the ideological vacuum following the
collapse of Communism as the "state religion" which has made China the
world's "largest soul market" with its 1.3 billion population.

"So be it Buddhism, Christianity or Yu Dan's version of Confucius,
people embrace them," said Zha, author of an acclaimed 2006 book of
interviews with a dozen Chinese cultural figures.

"There are so many wounded, helpless souls that are desperate to find
something to believe in and to hold on to after these drastic changes."

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