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UPDATED: September-5-2008  
Deng Pufang--Spokesman for the Disabled
 

Deng Pufang is the eldest son of the Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping. In 1966 when the "cultural revolution" began, he was a student of Beijing University majoring in nuclear physics. When his father was branded China's No.2 capitalist roader, he too was made to suffer and crippled in both legs.

Deng Pufang was sent to Canada for medical treatment in October 1980. In his four months there, he had two operations.

While recuperating in hospital Deng became acquainted with Western rehabilitation techniques. He was impressed by the effort made to overcome and achieve optimum ability which alleviates the devastation of disablement and helps people regain the ability to work and live on their own. He recalled that in China many disabled people could not work and live independently because they had no help and training. Some die prematurely, he knew.

So when the Canadian doctor asked him to stay longer in their care, he declined, wanting to return home to set up a rehabilitation centre in China.

When the China Fund for the Welfare of the disabled was established in March 1984, Deng Pufang was elected its deputy director for his work in this field. One year later, he was elected director of the Fund. He has won wide recognition for his great energy and dedication in his work for the welfare of the handicapped.

Speaking of humanitarianism at a Fund meeting, Deng Pufang said, "We Communists have done much which is humane, yet strangely we give the impression that we dislike humanitarianism. Humanitarianism was proposed by European thinker, during the bourgeois revolution against feudalism. It is the product of the progress of the human society. We should adopt it. According to Marxism, when handling the  relationship between people and  society, we think in terms of people in the real sense, not something in the abstract. This makes humanitarianism more realistic. We also stand for solving people's problems in the interest of the masses. Our general goal is emancipating mankind. This gives humanitarianism a broader meaning. In all, socialist humanitarianism should be more advanced."

Deng Pufang holds that in China it is necessary to create a good social environment under the guidance of an advanced ideology to enable the handicapped to enjoy real equality, have  equal opportunity to study, work, participate in society's life, and share the benefits available to everyone--able-bodied and disabled alike.

(Beijing Review p.21 No. 4, 1987)


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