我们为什么记得六四 (中英文)

<h1 class="entry-title"><br /></h1> <div class="entry-content"> <p style="text-align: left" align="center"><em>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;</em><em>最近有人问,&#8220;为什么你们一定要记住六四?&#8221;三十年过去了。已经是历史了。忘了吧。往前看吧。</em></p> <p><em>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </em><em>一个简单的问题,却有着许多答案。没有任何一个答案是足够的。所有的答案都加在一起,也不足。问题还留在半空中,寻求答案。</em></p> <p align="center">+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; +&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; +</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为那时候蒋捷连才17岁。今天,他仍然是17岁。他永远是17岁。死去的人不长岁数儿。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为那些逝去的亡灵,始终困扰着刘晓波,直到晓波去世;亡灵们也将困扰我们,直到我们也去世。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为普通的工人倒了下去。我们不可能记住大多数他们的名字,因为我们不知道他们的名字,从来也不知道。但我们记住了他们作为人的举动,我们也记住了自己始终不知道他们的名字。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为刺刀上闪烁的篝火,令人难忘;即使没有亲眼看见过的人,也不会忘记。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为它让我们看清了中国共产党的本质。在那会儿,这个党所有的外衣脱落在地,毫无隐藏。没有任何书籍、电影或者博物馆,能够让人看得如此清晰。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为这是最坏的中国,但也是最好的中国。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为它是一场大屠杀&#8212;&#8212;不仅是一场镇压;不是一个事故、事件或风波;不是一次反革命暴乱,不是一个模糊的记忆;不是如同今天中国的一个孩子所能够想起的,一片空白。不是别的,是一场大屠杀。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为,正如方励之以他的特有的幽默所说的:世界历史上很少有大国侵略他自己。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为我们想知道那些杀人的士兵们, 自己有什么记忆。 在执行凶狠的命令之前,他们在北京的郊区被洗脑,以为是要平息暴徒。因此这些普通兵也是受害者。我们不知道他们头脑中想过什么。但是我们记得我们想知道。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为丁子霖还活着。她82岁了。她走到哪儿,便衣警察跟到哪儿。为的是安全。丁教授的安全吗? 不是。为的是国家的安全。没错,一个拥有千亿元GDP和两百万军队的政权,竟然需要保护自己免受一个82岁老太太的伤害。怕的不是他的力气,是她脑子里的想法。那想法是有力量的。这是我们值得记住的。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为要支持其他的想记住的人。我们单独记得。但也是跟朋友们一道记得。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为记忆对我们自己有好处。是我们自己的利益。 政治提到&#8220;利益&#8221;总是物质利益。然而精神上,道德上的利益同样重要&#8212;&#8212;不,更加重要。比拥有一艘游艇重要得多。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为六四是五分之一世界的历史转折点。是一个朝向可怕的方向的转折。我们不希望看到,这也是把世界带到沟里去的那样一个转折。但我们不知道。真的不知道。得走着瞧。</p> <p>我们记得六四,是因为只有通过记性,这种事儿才能在脑子里存在。 难道能够<strong>想像</strong>得出来吗<strong>?</strong><strong> </strong></p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为有些人非常希望我们记住。我们记住,对他们是莫大的安慰。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为另外有些人非常愿意看到我们遗忘。 遗忘有利于他们维持政权。多么卑污!哪怕记住屠杀是我们抵制独裁的唯一方法,我们还是得记住,还是得抵制。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因记忆能提醒我们中国政府撒谎的方式。自己都不信自己的谎言。 说中国人民早就对&#8220;天安门广场上的反革命暴乱作出了正确的判断&#8221;。但是每年的六四,便衣警察阻止人们进入天安门广场。 为什么?&#8211;假如中国老百姓真的做了政府宣扬他们做了的所谓&#8220;判断,&#8221; 那为什么不让人家进入广场去谴责反革命分子?警察的在场,说明政权不相信自己的谎言。</p> <p>我们记住六四,是因为人脑受到巨大冲击之后,需要很长很长的时间才能开始恢复。哪怕我们下决心从明天开始遗忘,也肯定忘不了。</p> <p align="center">&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p> <p align="center"><strong>Why We Remember June Fourth</strong></p> <p align="center"><strong>Perry Link</strong></p> <p><em>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Some people recently asked, &#8220;Why must you remember June Fourth?&#8221;&nbsp; Thirty years have gone by.&nbsp; It is history.&nbsp; Get over it.&nbsp; Move on. </em></p> <p><em>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A simple question, but there are many answers. No single answer is adequate, and all of the answers together still leave the question hanging in mid-air, asking for more.&nbsp;</em></p> <p align="center">+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; +&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; +</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because Jiang Jielian was 17 at the time.&nbsp; He is still 17.&nbsp; He will always be 17.&nbsp; People who die do not age.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because the lost souls that haunted Liu Xiaobo until he died will haunt us, too, until we do.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because the glint of bonfires on bayonets is something one does not forget, even if one did not see it personally.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because it taught us the essential nature of the Communist Party of China when all of the clothes, every shred, falls away. &nbsp;No book, film, or museum could be clearer.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because of the ordinary workers who died then.&nbsp; We cannot remember most of their names because we do not know most of their names.&nbsp; We never did.&nbsp; But we remember them as people, and we remember that we never knew their names.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because the worst of China is there&#8212;but the best of China is there, too.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because it was a <em>massacre</em>&#8212;not just a crackdown, or an &#8220;incident,&#8221;&nbsp; an event, a <em>shijian</em>, a<em> fengbo</em>; not a counterrevolutionary riot, not a faint memory, and not, as a child in China might think today, a blank.&nbsp; It was a massacre.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because, as Fang Lizhi noted with his characteristic wit, it is the only case he has heard of in which a nation invaded itself.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because we want to know what the soldiers who did the killing remember.&nbsp; They were brainwashed on the outskirts of the city before they carried out their deadly orders. &nbsp;So they were victims, too.&nbsp; We do not know what their thoughts were.&nbsp; But we remember that we want to know.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because Ding Zilin is still alive.&nbsp; She is 82 years old.&nbsp; When she goes out, plainclothes police follow to provide security.&nbsp; Security for her?&nbsp; No, security for the state.&nbsp; That&#8217;s right, a regime with 100 trillion yuan in GDP and two million soldiers needs protection from an 82-year-old lady.&nbsp; Protection from her <em>ideas</em>.&nbsp; This is worth remembering.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth in order to support others who remember.&nbsp; We remember alone.&nbsp; But we remember together, too.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because remembering it makes us better people.&nbsp; Remembering is in our personal interests. When politicians talk about &#8220;interests&#8221; they mean material interests. But moral interests are just as important&#8211;no, they are <em>more</em> important.&nbsp; More important than owning a yacht.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because it was an historic turning point for one-fifth of the world.&nbsp; A turning point in a frightening direction.&nbsp; We hope it won&#8217;t be so much of a turning point as to throw the whole world into a ditch.&nbsp; But we don&#8217;t know.&nbsp; We&#8217;ll have to see.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because, if we didn&#8217;t <em>remember</em> it, it could not be in our heads any other way.&nbsp; Could we possibly have<strong> <em>imagined</em></strong> it?&nbsp; No.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because there are people who dearly <em>want</em> us to remember.&nbsp; It comforts them to know that we remember.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because there are also people who desperately want us <em>not</em> to remember.&nbsp; They want us to forget because forgetting helps to preserve their political power.&nbsp; How foul!&nbsp; We would oppose that power even if remembering massacres were the only way to do it.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth in order to remind ourselves of the way the Chinese government lies to itself and to others.&nbsp; It says the Chinese people have long since made their &#8220;correct judgment on the 1989 counterrevolutionary riot at Tiananmen Square.&#8221;&nbsp; But each year, at June Fourth, plainclothes police block people from entering the Square.&nbsp; Why?&nbsp; If the Chinese people all believe what the government says they believe, then why not let the people into the square to denounce the counterrevolutionaries?&nbsp; The presence of the police shows that the regime does not believe its own lies.</p> <p>We remember June Fourth because shocks to the human brain last a long time.&nbsp; We would not be able to forget even if we tried.</p></div>