The Square Awakes - Tiananmen
Raise the Red Flag
Forgive my enthusiasm, but I’ve just witnessed something that represented every reason why I came to China in the first place, and I feel inspired. China’s a tough country to get to know, and it’s easy for travellers to feel frustrated in their endeavours to get under the skin of this place. But there are times when it all seems crystal clear, when for a moment you can share something with the Chinese people, that genetic pride that can seem unfathomable to all foreigners sceptical of nationalism – the essence of what it is to feel Chinese.Every morning at dawn, a simple ceremony is held at Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. The flag raising ceremony is so popularly attended that if you do happen to get together the resolve to get out of bed and go and see it, you’ll be amazed, as I was just now, at the crowds that gather right before the sunrise. I was on my way there almost by accident – I’d woken up in the middle of the night and had found it impossible to get back to sleep – and suddenly realised that after having spent so long in Beijing without seeing the raising of the flag, it was high time I show a little respect.Beijing’s ring roads were empty of traffic – they’re practically blocked all day, and so it was a delight to see the broad boulevards at their most impressive, when they seemed, albeit incorrectly, to be capable of handling any number of vehicles. Coming close to the Square, the side roads were absolutely jammed with tourist busses, and as I followed the crowds in the halflight, I began to pick up the buzz – this was no special holiday or any particular day of note, this was just another morning – but the thrill that was being generated was frankly breathtaking. Some of these people had dreamed for years of coming to Beijing to witness this event – for the raising of the flag is no trivial matter: Tiananmen Square is the political, and perhaps spiritual, centre of the country, and it could be said that all other Chinese flags are a mere copy of this one. To see the flag raising ceremony at dawn in Tiananmen Square is to partake in a thoroughly serious and solemn display of respect for the mother country.The people in the Square were already pushing for a view by the time I arrived, and it was difficult to get a good position. Perhaps it was my bad luck, but I seemed to be stuck behind the tallest people in China. Guards passed by the front of the crowds encouraging people at the front to squat, but they were largely ignored. It did nothing to dampen the mood, however, and I watched with fascination as the gathering light of morning began to flesh out the scarlet facades of the Forbidden City, Mao’s famous portrait the brightest point on the old Tiananmen Gate.At a quarter past five, the lamps in the Square were extinguished and the humming of chatter collected and hushed into the morning murk. From beneath the portrait, right where the Emperors themselves had once paraded out from their palace, a tight row of uniformed flagsmen emerged and began to march towards the great flagpole with an icy solemnity. Under the dim of the brightening sky, the tongue of bright red carried by the leader was the most intense point of colour visible.As they reached the flagpole, the loudspeakers boisterously began to blast China’s national anthem out across the parade, and the flag was attached to the ropes and hauled, inch by inch, to the top. Perhaps there were no rows of schoolchildren standing erect in full salute as I’ve heard can often be seen on these occasions – and perhaps the thick morning clouds and still air gave the raised flag something of a limp anticlimax – but I couldn’t help but feel enthralled. It was nothing more than the unquestioning respect shown in the deportment of the flagbearers and the crowds of fascinated spectators, a respect that I found very becoming, and something I began to feel myself as I saw the very centre of China gather itself for another day on Tiananmen Square.
Forgive my enthusiasm, but I’ve just witnessed something that represented every reason why I came to China in the first place, and I feel inspired. China’s a tough country to get to know, and it’s easy for travellers to feel frustrated in their endeavours to get under the skin of this place. But there are times when it all seems crystal clear, when for a moment you can share something with the Chinese people, that genetic pride that can seem unfathomable to all foreigners sceptical of nationalism – the essence of what it is to feel Chinese.Every morning at dawn, a simple ceremony is held at Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. The flag raising ceremony is so popularly attended that if you do happen to get together the resolve to get out of bed and go and see it, you’ll be amazed, as I was just now, at the crowds that gather right before the sunrise. I was on my way there almost by accident – I’d woken up in the middle of the night and had found it impossible to get back to sleep – and suddenly realised that after having spent so long in Beijing without seeing the raising of the flag, it was high time I show a little respect.Beijing’s ring roads were empty of traffic – they’re practically blocked all day, and so it was a delight to see the broad boulevards at their most impressive, when they seemed, albeit incorrectly, to be capable of handling any number of vehicles. Coming close to the Square, the side roads were absolutely jammed with tourist busses, and as I followed the crowds in the halflight, I began to pick up the buzz – this was no special holiday or any particular day of note, this was just another morning – but the thrill that was being generated was frankly breathtaking. Some of these people had dreamed for years of coming to Beijing to witness this event – for the raising of the flag is no trivial matter: Tiananmen Square is the political, and perhaps spiritual, centre of the country, and it could be said that all other Chinese flags are a mere copy of this one. To see the flag raising ceremony at dawn in Tiananmen Square is to partake in a thoroughly serious and solemn display of respect for the mother country.The people in the Square were already pushing for a view by the time I arrived, and it was difficult to get a good position. Perhaps it was my bad luck, but I seemed to be stuck behind the tallest people in China. Guards passed by the front of the crowds encouraging people at the front to squat, but they were largely ignored. It did nothing to dampen the mood, however, and I watched with fascination as the gathering light of morning began to flesh out the scarlet facades of the Forbidden City, Mao’s famous portrait the brightest point on the old Tiananmen Gate.At a quarter past five, the lamps in the Square were extinguished and the humming of chatter collected and hushed into the morning murk. From beneath the portrait, right where the Emperors themselves had once paraded out from their palace, a tight row of uniformed flagsmen emerged and began to march towards the great flagpole with an icy solemnity. Under the dim of the brightening sky, the tongue of bright red carried by the leader was the most intense point of colour visible.As they reached the flagpole, the loudspeakers boisterously began to blast China’s national anthem out across the parade, and the flag was attached to the ropes and hauled, inch by inch, to the top. Perhaps there were no rows of schoolchildren standing erect in full salute as I’ve heard can often be seen on these occasions – and perhaps the thick morning clouds and still air gave the raised flag something of a limp anticlimax – but I couldn’t help but feel enthralled. It was nothing more than the unquestioning respect shown in the deportment of the flagbearers and the crowds of fascinated spectators, a respect that I found very becoming, and something I began to feel myself as I saw the very centre of China gather itself for another day on Tiananmen Square.











