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Chinese Industrial Cooperatives

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Chinese Industrial Cooperatives (Chinese: 工業合作社; pinyin: Gōngyè Hézuòshè) (CICs) were organisations established by a movement, involving various Western expatriates, to promote grassroots industrial and economic development in China. The movement was led through the Chinese Industrial Cooperative Association (CICA or Indusco) founded in 1938. Its international arm the International Committee for the Promotion of Chinese Industrial Cooperatives (ICCIC, also known by the nickname Gung Ho International Committee) was founded in 1939 in Hong Kong to promote cooperatives in China.

The movement was especially active in the 1930s and 1940s with bipartisan support from both the left and right wings of Chinese politics. The movement disappeared after the 1950s due to suppression by the People's Republic of China government, but CICA and ICCIC were revived in the 1980s and are still active today. In the English-speaking world, the industrial cooperatives’ best known legacy is its nickname Gung Ho meaning "working together", which led to the word ‘gung-ho’.

Founding

The Gung Ho (工合 "Gōnghé", literally "work together") movement was first initiated in Shanghai in 1937. Some of the principal organizers were Rewi Alley of New Zealand, Edgar Snow, Nym Wales (Helen Foster Snow), and Ida Pruitt of the USA, as well as a group of Chinese including Hu Yuzhi (胡愈之) and Sha Qianqi. In August 1938, the CICA was established.[1] It was founded in the wartime capital Hankow when China was engaged in the War of Resistance Against Japan. Through the sponsorship of Madame Chiang Kai-shek, Finance Minister Dr. H. H. Kung supplied government financial support. The movement aimed to organize unemployed workers and refugees, increasing production to support the war effort. The goal was to replace industrial capacity lost to bombing, but to do so by dispersing and giving workers voting shares in their CICs. The CICA organized small scale self-supporting cooperatives, mainly in rural areas, to create employment for workers and refugees and produce goods for the war effort.[2]

In January 1939, the international arm ICCIC was established in Hong Kong. Ms. Soong Ching-ling was elected honorary chair and the Anglican Bishop of Hong Kong, the Right Rev. Ronald O. Hall to be chair, and Dr. Chen Hansheng was appointed as secretary general.[3][4] In 1941, the Gung Ho movement reached its peak: around 3 000 cooperatives with a combined membership of nearly 300 000 people were functioning.[5] Their factories produced more than 500 products for the local people, and a large number of blankets, uniforms and other army supplies for the battlefront. Ida Pruitt toured the United States to raise substantial financial support. The unique role of Gung Ho cooperatives in the war also won such international acclaim that the term "gung-ho" became a famous slogan of the U.S. Marine Corps, and entered the English language as a term denoting whole-hearted dedication to a meaningful cause.[6]

Both the Nationalist government of Chiang Kai-shek and the Communist movement of Mao Zedong supported the movement and tried to control it. Alley placated the Nationalists but his sympathies and eventual loyalties were to the emerging Communist government. In 1942, Alley was dismissed from Gung Ho by the government of Chiang Kai-shek.[5] Both CICA and ICCIC suspended their works in 1952. After Mao’s victory in 1949 Alley stayed in China, but there was no need for the CICA and ICCIC. Work was suspended in 1952, but in 1983 a new CICA was formed, and a new ICCIC was formed in 1987.

An excellent discussion of the CICs appears in Graham Peck's book Two Kinds of Time (1950).[7] Peck traveled with Alley to a number of CICs early in 1941 and was able to see them at their height, but as his experience grew he came to understand their limitations and the fact that their course was ultimately downwards, not upwards, for a variety of reasons.

Revival

The CICA was revived in 1983, and the ICCIC was revived in 1987 in Beijing by Alley and other former Gung Ho leaders.[5] The reorganized ICCIC registered with the Ministry of Civil Affairs of People's Republic of China as an international non-profit organization. Zhu Xuefan (朱學範) was elected as honorary chair and Alley as chair. The main task of the revived ICCIC is the promotion of cooperatives in China. Membership is open to all individuals and organizations who support the cooperative movement. The committee has approximately 100 members from China, Australia, Germany, Belgium, France, Japan, Mexico, Singapore, the United Kingdom, the United States of America, and Hong Kong. The ICCIC’s General Assembly of all members meets every five years. The Executive Board elected by the Assembly is responsible for decision-making on major issues according to its articles of association during the adjournment of the Assembly. A secretariat is set up to handle day-to-day work.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Rewi Alley". New Zealand China Friendship Society. 2010-01-19. Retrieved 2010-10-31.
  2. ^ Anne-Marie Brady, Friend of China: The Myth of Rewi Alley (London; New York: Routledge Curzon, 2002, ISBN 978-0700714933): 30-31.
  3. ^ Alley, Rewi (1997). Rewi Alley: an autobiography. New World Press. ISBN 978-7-80005-344-3. OCLC 48776431.
  4. ^ "Introduction". International Committee for the Promotion of Chinese Industrial Cooperatives. Beijing: International Committee for the Promotion of Chinese Industrial Cooperatives. Retrieved 2010-10-31.
  5. ^ a b c "International Committee for the Promotion of Chinese Industrial Co-operatives". New Zealand China Friendship Society. New Zealand China Friendship Society. 2010-01-19. Retrieved 2010-10-31.
  6. ^ "Introduction of ICCIC". International Committee for the Promotion of Chinese Industrial Cooperatives. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  7. ^ "University of Washington Press - Books - Two Kinds of Time".

References