Forbidden No More
As Beijing gets ready to host its first Olympics, a veteran journalist returns to its once-restricted palace complex
- By Paul Raffaele
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2008, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Inside the imperial garden—trees and walkways, ponds and pavilions created for the emperors' private pleasure—gilded bronze elephants squat beneath twisted cypress tree trunks. I have never come here without thinking about Puyi, the subject of Bernardo Bertolucci's Academy Award-winning 1987 movie, The Last Emperor. Poor Puyi. Born in 1906, he was named emperor just before his third birthday; after revolution swept his domain, the forces that would establish the Republic of China forced him to abdicate when he was 6. The miscast ruler spent the next 12 years as a virtual prisoner; the garden was his sanctuary.
Run Qi Guo Bu Luo, Puyi's brother-in-law, consulted on the Bertolucci movie. At 96, he lives in a small apartment near the Forbidden City. "Puyi never wanted to be emperor," he told me. "His great wish was to go to England and study to be a teacher." But even after abdicating, he could not escape the perils of power. In his autobiography, Puyi writes that he was eating an apple at 9 a.m. on November 5, 1924, when Republican troops gave him three hours to vacate the Forbidden City. That afternoon, after signing a declaration that "the imperial title of the Hsuan Tung Emperor of the Great Ching is this day abolished in perpetuity," the Son of Heaven fled in a fleet of limousines.
Puyi moved to Tianjin, in northeastern China, then controlled by the Japanese. In 1932, the Japanese set him up as the ruler of Manchukuo, their puppet state in Manchuria. In the waning days of World War II, he was captured by Soviet forces, and in 1950 repatriated to what had become the People's Republic of China. After ten years in a reeducation camp, he worked for the government as an editor. Puyi died at age 61 in 1967 as the Cultural Revolution was getting underway.
The fervor of that revolt almost claimed the Forbidden City. The Red Guards, having plundered historical sites to further Mao's aim of effacing anything traditional, planned to sack the Forbidden City, too. But Premier Zhou En-lai ordered the gates closed and sent other troops to protect it, thus preserving, among so much else, the Gate of Heavenly Peace, where the chairman's portrait still hangs.
Paul Raffaele, a frequent contributor to the magazine, wrote about the ark of the covenant for the December 2007 issue.
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Comments (3)
what is forbidden no more, but it really is an interesting topic..........
Posted by shanautica ford on February 2,2011 | 02:18 PM
Twilight in the Forbidden City has been republished with all the original photographs and a bonus previously unpublished chapter of Johnston's meeting with the 13th Dalai Lama...
Great price at Amazon.com!
http://www.amazon.com/Twilight-Forbidden-City-Illustrated-revised/dp/0968045952/
A great read especially if you are interested in China!
Posted by Mark on April 17,2009 | 02:07 AM
I am sorry that potted histories like this one by Mr Raffaele will proliferate during the Olympic year in Beijing. What does it matter how many dragons were depicted throughout the Forbidden City? An irrelevance that the Palace Museum's Li Ji was right to shrug off. The Palace is extraordinary and its spaces and buildings among the most beautiful in the world. Fortunately my childhood home alongside ChingShan and opposite the northern gate of the Forbidden City, was close enough to allow me to explore it often as a child, between the years 1943 and 1949. Although Beijing was then occupied by the Japanese, the guards ignored me and I could wander there with my minder. It is indeed different now and has lost its silent splendor, becoming an entertainment centre. It has not been restored, it is being re-stroyed. Neither will Raffaele's journalistic facts and figures enlighten serious people. I strongly recommend reading Reginald F. Johnston's "Twilight in the Forbidden City" He was Emperor Puyi's tutor and spent years there when the place was still Imperial.
Posted by D'Alpoim Guedes on July 20,2008 | 11:29 PM
I really want to go to China this summer 4 u know what! This article was great! :) :]
Posted by Meg on March 10,2008 | 09:37 AM
I have been there twice with my Chinese wife.I am always amazed at the wonder of the Forbidden City,The stories about the Dragon Lady are great.As her 6 year old son ruled China she sat behind a silk certain and listened if she did not agree with the visitor she pulled a rope that was attached to a sword above the visitors head, consealed amongst silk scarves at the top of the tall ceiling.The visitor had to stand in a square marked on the floor in order to speak to the Emperor,this square was dead center of the swords drop. I wonder how many met there fate standing in that tiny square on the floor?? Robert Schlund & Lian Wen Ling Chongqing,China
Posted by Robert Schlund on March 10,2008 | 09:27 AM
I belive that it is wonderful that they are opening the forbindden city to the public. There is much history there that can be scholers can use to find more out about Chian magnificent past and if should be shared with the people of Chian after all it is there history and anserty to.
Posted by Emma Rose on February 26,2008 | 02:41 PM