(Clearwisdom.net) How many citizens of China will be rooting for
foreign athletes -- any foreign athletes -- at the Olympics in Beijing this
August? At the 1936 Games, held in Berlin under Adolf Hitler's personal
supervision, Peter Gay was a German teenager, yearning to see Germany beaten.
Peter's father had won the Iron Cross in the First World War and the Gays were
patriots. But Hitler had declared them pariahs because they were Jews. They knew
he would call any German victory a Nazi triumph.
For the Gays, there was at least one beautiful moment, in the women's 400-meter
relay. The Germans were favorites, but one of them dropped the baton, letting
the Americans win. Peter's father jumped to his feet in ecstasy. Six decades
later, Peter Gay, a distinguished American historian, wrote in his memoir, My
German Question: Growing up in Nazi Berlin, that this was one of the real
pleasures of his youth.
Hitler, like Chinese leaders today, promoted the Olympics as a way to establish
the legitimacy of his regime. Did it work? Americans who write about 1936 enjoy
pointing out that the four-gold-medal performance by Jesse Owens, a black
American sprinter, ostensibly the member of an inferior race, so disgusted
Hitler that he stormed out of the stadium.
Writers often make the Games sound like a defeat for the Nazis, but Germany won
the most gold medals, 33 (the Americans were second, the Italians third). Hitler
had several reasons to celebrate. He not only displayed the excellence of German
sport, he also forced the democracies to accept the German Third Reich as a
lawful state. And despite the opinions of foreign Jews, he accomplished this
without permitting Jews to represent Germany in any sport. He turned down the
International Olympic Committee's timid "one Jew" request to allow a
token Jew on the German team.
Across China this season, there must be millions of citizens with good reason to
hope the Beijing Games fail. They know the government believes the Olympics will
prove that China is a progressive country, ready to stand beside other great
nations of the world. But in almost all its policies, including the criminal
code, the treatment of minorities and freedom of speech, China remains a
backwater.
To Tibetans, the government of China is a violent oppressor, as the response to
recent demonstrations has shown once more. To members of the Falun Gong, it's a
brutal tyranny that doesn't hesitate to use torture and arbitrary imprisonment.
To traditional religious Chinese, it's everything from a nuisance to an agent of
the devil. Buddhists, Christians and Muslims can practice their faith only under
state supervision, in buildings the state has authorized, where police monitors
can hear what's said. Owning a picture of the Dalai Lama is punishable by
imprisonment. Boys who want to become monks in Tibet must first sign a
declaration against Tibetan independence and express loyalty to Beijing.
Intellectual claustrophobia has become part of Chinese life. China has more
journalists in prison than any other country and employs a small army of
specialists to keep anything dangerous from appearing on the Internet. According
to a study by Freedom House, a filtering system automatically blocks taboo web
pages and eliminates material containing banned words, such as
"democracy" and "Tiananmen." A sign saying "Beijing
Internet Police" appears every 30 minutes on computer screens run by 13
major portals based in Beijing, to remind people they are being watched. Foreign
Internet companies have largely co-operated with the Chinese dictatorship.
Chinese law provides the death penalty for 65 different crimes, among them
robbery, pimping, tax fraud and "undermining national unity." The
government acknowledges that in 2005, the last year for which there's a total
available, China executed 1,770 people; human rights organizations, on the other
hand, believe the true number approaches 10,000. There are unnumbered Falun Gong
adherents who vanish into concentration camps.
This summer, Canada and the other Olympic countries will help keep this system
in power by honoring it with our presence in Beijing. China wants to persuade
the world that it's united, but everything we know suggests that millions of its
people feel cheated by a history that has left them poor, isolated and without
human rights.
If China and the world are fortunate, the Chinese Communist Party will soon
collapse, China will turn to honest and open government, and everyone connected
with promoting the 2008 Games will be covered in shame.
March 20, 2008
http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomment/archive/2008/03/20/robert-fulford-by-attending-the-beijing-olympics-canada-is-helping-keep-china-s-violent-and-oppressive-government-in-power.aspx