- Three Rules of Discipline and Eight Points for Attention
The Three Rules of Discipline and Eight Points for Attention is a
military doctrine that was issued in1928 byMao Zedong and his associates for theChinese Red Army , who were then fighting against theKuomintang . The contents vary slightly in different versions. One of the major distinctions of the doctrine was its respect for thecivilian s duringwartime . The following version is obtained fromStephen Uhalley (1975 ). Uhalley, Stephen, (1985). "Mao Tse-tung, a critical biography". New Viewpoints Publishing. ISBN 0-531-05363-6. ]The three rules enjoined
* prompt obedience to orders,
* no confiscation ofpeasant property, and
* prompt delivery directly to authorities of all items confiscated from landlords.The eight points were:
* Be polite when speaking
* Be honest when buying and selling
* Return all borrowed articles
* Pay compensation for everything damaged
* Do not hit or swear at others
* Do not damage crops
* Do not harass females
* Do not mistreat prisonersThese injunctions were usually complied with and, according to historian
Stephen Uhalley , came to make theChinese Red Army a distinctivearmy inChina and an exceptionally popular one. The attitude of the Three Rules and the Eight Points heavily contrasted with the Nationalist Kuomintang armies led byChiang Kai-shek , who were fighting theChinese Red Army in theChinese Civil War . For example, Nationalist armies tended to board in civilian houses without permission, tended to be rude and disrespectful towards the civilians, or sometimes even confiscated material from the peasants in order to gain supplies. The Chinese Red Army however, under the Three Points of Discipline and Eight Points of Attention "requested permission" to take supplies and to board at houses instead, and any confiscation of peasant property were exceptions and violators were promptly punished. For example, Red Army soldiers will be shot on the spot, if they were found looting peasant homes.Many impressed villagers gave supplies and shelter to the Red Army voluntarily, greatly helping their war efforts. Eventually, many villagers and their sons and daughters joined the Red Army, providing the Red Army with sufficant manpower to combat the Japanese and Kuomintang.
It was common after a confiscation of items from warlords that the items would be redistributed among the people, in addition to supplying the Chinese Red Army. As a result, the peasants tended to spread
disinformation to the Kuomintang when they arrived to pursue the Chinese Red Army, while showing the Chinese Red Army hospitality whenever they arrived at villages. This invariably resulted inattrition of the Kuomintang forces.This contrasting doctrine in comparison with the Kuomintang inevitably became one of the major reasons for winning most of the Chinese people 's support, and thus the victory of the Chinese Red Army over the Kuomintang in
1949 . The people 's support for the Red Army proved to be more important than the raw manpower that Kuomintang initially enjoyed.On the 1975 recording of the live album "Pete Seeger and Arlo Guthrie Together in Concert"
Pete Seeger performs a whistling version of the song, accompanied bybanjo .References
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