Sunday, 20 June 2010

Unique Role of Colours in Chinese Cultural Symbolism

Chinese colours – are colours in Chinese culture used differently than colours in other cultures?

Since ancient times, China has been a fascinating and extraordinarily rich culture steeped in complex codes of colour symbolism. One feature, however, sets Chinese use of colour in daily life apart from other civilizations – you rarely see objects with only a single colour and no patterns, graphics or calligraphy on them. 

Compare a Chinese envelope (Hóng Bāo in Mandarin and Lai See in Cantonese) to a Western design.


See how a roadside condom advert from Ghana contrasts with a Chinese version.



and this one in Beijing


Symbolic Meaning of Colours in Chinese Culture


Every culture has colour codes, which ascribe symbolic meaning to what colours represent. Sometimes the key to decoding this colour symbolism can be very perplexing to outsiders as they depend on context, social hierarchy, ritual function and other connotations.

Black in ancient China was the king of colours and yet sometimes considered evil and not commonly worn though the I Ching considers black as the colour of Heaven. Possibly as a result of Western influence, wearing black is sexy and common in China now and one sees black in Chinese funerals and a black ribbon is placed over the deceased’s photo.


Photo source

Red = Joy, good fortune and virtue, used in all festive occasions. Envelopes containing money gifts given at festive occasions like weddings and the New Year are usually red. Red symbolises energy and the element of fire in Chinese metaphysics. Red is strictly forbidden at funerals though it is closely connected with the communist government. Chinese athletes typically tend to wear red in their uniform to bring good luck. Is it possible that there is a scientific basis for that belief? 

Norbert Hagemann, Bernd Strauss and Jan Leissing, Psychology researchers at the University of Muenster claim that sports referees in Taekwondo typically give 13% better points to athletes wearing red than blue.



White = Represents brightness, purity and fulfilment. It is also the colour for grieving, the dead. Earlier people wore white at funerals like in India still nowadays.

Yellow = The national colour. At many points in Chinese history only the emperor and his close family were allowed to wear golden yellow. In Chinese Buddhism, yellow represents freedom from samsara or the world of phenomena and material. Yellow represents the earth element.


Green = Good health, prosperity and harmony. Green hats, in Chinese folk tradition, are a sign of infidelity. It is used as an idiomatic expression for a cuckold. Chinese Catholic bishops, avoid using the customary green hat or galero and use violet, blue, scarlet or black hats. 



Blue = Symbolises immortality. Dark blue is worn at funerals and sombre occasions.


How Chinese Art and Mythology Use Colours to Portray Characters


In Chinese mythology and theatre, deities usually have red makeup. Contrary to Western practice a simple and honest person wears black makeup while a crook or a villain wears white makeup.


In Chinese Buddhism, gods appear in white garments and the devils are black while naughty goblins are red. Buddhist “priests” use yellow robes and the dead are buried in yellow.


In Chinese art and literature, purple robes indicate an academic. Different ranks of government officials (usually behaving like gods or demi-gods at least) wore different coloured balls of glass or stone on their caps to signify their rank.

Zhang Yimou, the celebrated film director who was responsible for the spectacular opening ceremony of the 2008 summer Olympics at Beijing, uses colour themes splendidly. Most of his movies have colours in their names e.g., Yellow Earth (1984), Red Sorghum (1987), Raise the Red Lantern (1991), Curse of the Golden Flower (2006).

Each Season Has Its Own Colour in Chinese Symbolism

  • Spring in China is associated with greenish blue. This symbolises an abundance of vitality and vigour.
  • Summer in China is bright red as it represents the fire element.
  • Autumn turns into white with a bluish tint. The element for autumn is metal and the direction is west. It is a time to be tranquil and serene after the heat of summer.
  • Winter in China is black, even though parts of China have snowfall. Winter is marked by an absence of water. Black is the colour of water, which at winter withdraws into the northern “shallows of the world”.
  • Yellow is the colour between the seasons.
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Symbolism of the Chinese Flag



Why is the Chinese flag red?

The designer of the Chinese flag, Zeng Liansongchose red and yellow because they are the most auspicious Chinese colours. His original idea was to portray the sun under which all China lives in perfect happiness as the large yellow star on a red background. In order to be approved by Mao, the large star became the Chinese Communist Party. The smaller stars, sustained by the large one, are the four classes mentioned by Mao (the workers, peasants, petty bourgeoisie, patriotic capitalists).

An alternate explanation is that the stars portray the four pillars of the Chinese nations, the soil, Mind, Wealth and Labour – the red colour stands for sacrifice and yellow for being grounded (to remind people that everything comes with a cost as China is grounded in the great sacrifices of the Communist Revolution).



How Chinese Leaders Use Colours in Costumes

The most influential person in China, Chairman Mao carefully avoided the imperial yellow and used red only in badges or armbands. Chairman Mao Tse Tung mostly kept to grey, Mao suit blue or army green.

Sun Yat Sen, who is credited as being the chief architect overthrowing the Qing Dynasty in China and celebrated as the Father of the Nation also avoided colour.


US President Richard Nixon tries to match sombre colourless attire with Chairman Mao’s wife Jiang Qing, who later became notorious as the “Gang of Four”.


Years later, the US president Carter tried to blend in the no-colour grey dress theme when meeting with the Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping.


The current microblogging and modern Chinese president Hu Jintao has brought a touch of colour to Chinese leader’s outfit. Though he carefully avoids imperial yellow, he uses bright red and the suits are not grey but Western style dark blue or black.


President Hu Jintao’s wife, Liu Yongqing is definitely more colourful than previous consorts of Chinese leaders. 


US President George W Bush found that doors wouldn’t open for him at a conference in Beijing, China but he was fooling against a much more colourful background than Nixon and Carter.


Colour is back among Chinese leaders!

Wednesday, 5 May 2010

Are All Dictators Ruthless Despots?

Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Ceausescu, Genghis Khan, Saddam Hussein, and Idi Amin – we all know these names of dictators.

They come to mind immediately as examples of megalomaniac and brutal despots or dictators. Are all dictators ruthless despots?

How to Measure the Evil of Dictators?


Dictator Gallery in Thailand Museum

Stalin once said "One death is a tragedy; one million is a statistic." 

This is the dictator’s moral benchmark. Measuring evil is not only a gruesome affair, but it is also very difficult. If you are honest enough, it might get very uncomfortable for you if you start registering all your pernicious, vicious and evil thoughts. So, deeds only qualify. Conquering the largest territory is not a reliable measure of evil as this list shows. 

Francisco Pizarro (1470-1541) and Hernando Cortez (1485-1547) inflicted much more suffering and caused more damage, by wiping out entire civilizations, than Cyrus the Great (600-529 BC) or Alexander the Great, who conquered vast areas.

One way to measure the ruthlessness of dictators is body count – how many people they have killed.

The top place in recorded history goes to Mao Zedong of China with 70 million killed.


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Then Stalin and Hitler follow. Saddam Hussein killed about a million in a country of 22 million. 

Considering the death toll against a backdrop of population is another method. 


  • Pol Pot of Cambodia would probably be the most dangerous dictator to his own people as he killed off 25% of Cambodia’s population. 
But, in this game of percentages, one woman puts all men dictators to shame. 


  • She is Queen Ranavalona 1 of Madagascar. During her reign from 1828-1861 she terminated 50% of the population of Madagascar (from 5 to 2,5 million) through her atrocities. Tough bird!
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Are There Good Dictators too?


Yes, at least one in ancient Rome.



Photo source:   Cincinnatus returning the Fasces, the symbol of power to the Roman senate after accomplishing his mission and returning back to live as a farmer on his own farm.

Dictator was a title with a good sound in the ancient Roman Republic (509 BC-27BC) until Julius Caesar (49-44 BC). Roman consuls or generals like Cincinnatus (529-430 BC) were given the title Dictator with limitless powers only for a certain period. They usually returned the power after the mission was accomplished.

A “benevolent dictator” is a ruler (a man, mostly), who exercises supreme power for the good of his people and country rather than strictly for himself. At least this is how most of his supporters see things. 


  • Josip Broz Tito of Yugoslavia
  • Deng Xiaoping of China
  • Józef Piłsudski of Poland
  • Napoleon Bonaparte of France
  • Park Chung-Hee of South Korea are such dictators.
There is another term in Spanish, “Dictablanda” where the word blanda implies soft dictatorship. “Dictadura” or hard dictatorship is the opposite.

Sometimes dictators are validated by the Supreme Court of the country as Pervez Musharaf of Pakistan (from 1999-2004) was or highly controversial plebiscites validate them like Pinochet did in 1980 in Chile.



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Dictators Have Crazy and Fantastic Titles

Some dictators have short titles like Der Fuehrer (German for Leader) for Hitler or Il Duce (Leader) for Mussolini. Some examples of unusual titles below.
  • Vodca (Leader) – Jozef Tiso (1939-45) dictator of Nazi supported Slovakia.
  • Vozhd (Russian for "Chief". Stalin as the Chief or the guide for the working class)
  • Guide of the First of September Great Revolution of the Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriy, Brotherly Leader and Guide of the Revolution - Muammar Al Gaddafi of Libya.
  • Maximillien Robbespierre’s supporters called him “The Incorruptible”. The rest of France called him “Dictateur Sanguinaire” (French for Bloodthirsty dictator).
  • The craziest title for a dictator goes to Idi Amin of Uganda – “President for Life, Field Marshall, Al Hadji Dr. Idi Amin, VC, DSO, MC, Lord of All the Beasts of the Earth and Fishes of the Sea and Conqueror of the British Empire in Africa in General and Uganda in Particular” - Wow! Nothing less.

Maximilien de Robespierre (1758-1794), France


Many Hereditary Dictatorships Currently

Dictators rule almost thirty countries nowadays. You’d be more surprised by how many of them, like Burma, are good friends of Western democracies.
  • Raúl Castro succeeded his brother Fidel Castro in Cuba
  • Ilham Aliyev succeeded his father in Azerbaijan in 2003
  • Ismail Omar Guelleh of Djibouti succeeded his uncle Hassan Gouled Aptidon in 1999
  • Egypt’s Hosni Mubarrak plans to shift power to his son Gamal Mubarrak upon his death.
  • Tunisia’s Zine El Abidine Ben Ali has only two daughters and his (former) hairdresser wife is a mega shopaholic so son-in-law Sakher al-Materi will probably inherit power unless the whole circus is ousted pretty soon in popular uprising.
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How Dictators Want To Be Seen

Dictators love to be seen as friendly, charming and lovely persons whom children adore. Just the sort of person everyone should dream of inviting for dinner at their homes!




Dictators also need to show that they are tough and merciless so that anyone planning to topple them should better watch out. 


This gruesome Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge gesture is a typical dictator message to enemies.


Dictators usually argue that there is nothing uniquely bad about their methods and they don’t differ from those used by Western democracies such as Britain in India earlier

or by the current trigger-happy men with expensive guns in Iraq in the so-called Haditha Massacre. 

War is senseless everywhere and as Steve Biko, the South-African anti-apartheid activist said
“The most potent weapon of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed.”

If you want to know more about your favourite dictator, here is a good site and a blog.

If you want to get rid of a dictator, there is advice on Different Ways to Get Rid of Dictators.


Due to demands by readers, we really have to include the Chilean Augusto Pinochet among the dictators. Two of his most famous sayings sum up typical dictator thoughts:

  1.  I regret and suffer those losses, but it's God's will. He will pardon me if I committed excesses, but I don't think I did.
  2.  I'm not a dictator. It's just that I have a grumpy face.
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