the
kulaks as a class" and "All to the struggle against the
wreckers of agriculture" in 1918 in
Petrograd under a
propaganda poster saying "Death to the
bourgeoisie and its lapdogs – Long live the
Red Terror!!" in front of a
Chinese Communist "people's court" in
Fogang County,
Guangdong Province on July 23, 1952 during the
Land Reform Movement, which saw the
mass killings of landlords According to Mann, examples of classicide include the
dekulakization policy during the forced
collectivization in the Soviet Union under the
Stalin era of the better off peasants, who were labelled as
kulaks and identified as "
class enemies" by the
Soviet regime, and the
Cambodian genocide by the
Khmer Rouge regime in
Democratic Kampuchea, before being stopped by
Vietnam. Mann said they were a perversion of
socialist theories of
democracy in the same sense as
ethnic cleansing is a perversion of
nationalist theory of democracy.
Human rights activist
Harry Wu has identified the killings which were carried out during the
Chinese Land Reform under the leadership of
Mao Zedong as classicide. Wu writes that "in order to consolidate his power, Mao Zedong implemented a nation-wide ideology to undermine those who previously held power." According to Wu, this ideology included dividing people into five class categories depending on their possession of land, capital, property, and income. The five categories were the landlord class, the rich peasant class, the middle peasant class, and the poor worker and peasant classes. Those in the lower classes were "praised for their humble way of life and work ethic", while the landlords and the wealthy were demonized and persecuted. Their property was seized, and they were sent to do hard manual labor in the countryside where many of them were killed. Wu writes that "according to research, in 1949 there were around 10 to 15 million members of the landlord and rich peasant classes nationwide. By the end of the 1970s, when the Cultural Revolution had ended, only 10 to 15 percent of them remained alive." == See also ==