Beginning in 1965 and into spring 1966, a political dispute arose within the
People's Republic of China regarding the Beijing Opera play
Hai Rui Dismissed from Office. The play depicts an honest official of the
Ming Dynasty named
Hai Rui, who reverses unjust land verdicts on behalf of peasants who are portrayed passively and celebrate Hai Rui as their savior. Critics began to interpret the play as referencing Marshal
Peng Dehuai's criticism of Mao Zedong and the peasant politics and policies of the
Great Leap Forward at the
Lushan Conference, which resulted in the political purging of Peng Dehuai. Politically aware Chinese understood Hai Rui to present Peng Dehuai, the Ming Dynasty Emperor to represent Mao, and the unjust land verdicts to represent the Great Leap Forward policies. Political figure and literary critic Yao Wenyuan began a scholarly and political debate about
Hai Rui Dismissed from Office when he wrote an article critical of it at the request of close Mao allies
Jiang Qing and
Zhang Chunqiao. In particular, Yao's article argued that play's author
Wu Han had distorted the historical record and that the aspect of reversing unjust land verdicts provided a focal point for "
bourgeois opposition" who wanted "to demolish the
people's communes and to restore the criminal rule of the landlords and rich peasants". Beijing Mayor and high-ranking Politburo member
Peng Zhen attempted to protect the author of the play, his subordinate and Beijing Vice Mayor Wu Han, by preventing republication of Yao's critical article. When the intervention of
Zhou Enlai meant it was no longer politically feasible to prevent its publication, Peng Zhen used his leading role in the party's cultural apparatus via the
Group of Five to restrict the terms of the debate over the play to censor any argument of contemporary political implications. At his direction, the Group of Five drafted a formal disciplinary code, the "Outline Report on the Current Academic Discussion", also known as the "February Outline"—intended to restrict the terms of the argument and thereby stop further articles comparing the play to contemporary political issues. The February Outline openly threatened the "obstinate Left" with discipline, urging that it bear in mind its "long-term behavior". Mao opposed the February Outline, describing those who "prevent the publication of left-wing essays" as "great scholar-tyrants": a series of top-level party meetings from mid-March to mid-May addressed the controversy following the Outline and Mao response . In late April, the Central Committee decided to revoke the February Outline, disband the Group of Five, disband the Beijing Party Committee which Peng Zhen led, and disavow his handling of the
Hai Rui Dismissed from Office controversy. == The document ==