Remembering June Fourth: Historical Memory, Liberty, and the Resilience of the Chinese People

Every year, as June approaches, the world is reminded of one of the most significant events in modern Chinese history: the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 and the tragedy that unfolded on June 4. More than three decades later, the Chinese Communist Party continues to censor discussion of the event inside Mainland China. References to June Fourth remain heavily restricted, and younger generations often grow up with little knowledge of what occurred.

Yet history has repeatedly demonstrated that totalitarian and authoritarian political power can suppress information only temporarily. Historical memory has a remarkable ability to survive, re-emerge, and inspire future generations. This is why remembering June Fourth is not merely an exercise in looking backward. It is an affirmation of human dignity, freedom, and the enduring search for truth.

The British television network ITN produced one of the most important documentaries on the events of 1989. Drawing upon original footage, eyewitness testimony, and contemporary reporting, it remains an invaluable historical resource for understanding what happened during those critical weeks in Beijing.

For readers interested in learning more, I strongly recommend watching the documentary:

The story of June Fourth is not only a story about a protest movement. It is also part of a much longer historical pattern demonstrating that Chinese people have repeatedly resisted oppression, defended their values, and sought greater political freedom.

Historical Memory and the Limits of Authoritarian Control

Authoritarian governments often attempt to monopolize historical narratives. They seek to define what may be remembered and what must be forgotten. Yet such efforts rarely succeed permanently.

Throughout world history, individuals have risked their lives to preserve truth against official censorship. The Soviet Union attempted to erase many uncomfortable historical facts. Eastern European communist regimes did the same. Ultimately, however, historical truth resurfaced.

The same phenomenon can be observed in the Chinese world. Despite extensive censorship, information about June Fourth continues to circulate through personal memories, overseas communities, academic research, and digital archives.

The reason is simple: human beings naturally seek truth. Political authority can restrict access to information, but it cannot entirely extinguish the desire to know what happened.

The Southern Song and the Battle of Yamen

The determination to defend one’s civilization did not begin in 1989.

One of the most dramatic examples in Chinese history occurred during the collapse of the Southern Song Dynasty.

In 1279, the Southern Song made its final stand against the Mongol armies at the Battle of Yamen. By that point, the Mongol conquest of China was nearly complete. The Song government faced overwhelming military odds.

When defeat became inevitable, the premier and military commander Lu Xiufu carried the young Emperor Bing of Song (Zhao Bing), who was approximately seven years old, and jumped into the sea rather than surrender. Historical accounts also describe numerous officials, military leaders, and loyalists choosing death over submission.

Modern readers should avoid projecting contemporary democratic ideas onto thirteenth-century China. The Southern Song was not fighting for constitutional democracy in the modern sense. Nevertheless, the episode illustrates an important historical reality: Chinese people have repeatedly demonstrated a willingness to sacrifice themselves for political principles, cultural identity, and national survival.

The notion that Chinese civilization is naturally submissive to any ruling authority is contradicted by its own history.

The War of Resistance Against Japan

Another powerful example emerged during the Second Sino-Japanese War between 1937 and 1945.

The National Revolutionary Army of the Republic of China bore the primary burden of resisting Imperial Japan on the Chinese mainland. Major battles such as Shanghai, Wuhan, Changsha, and numerous other campaigns imposed enormous sacrifices on Chinese soldiers and civilians.

Historical estimates suggest that approximately three to four million Chinese military personnel lost their lives during the war, while total Chinese civilian and military casualties may have reached fourteen to twenty million people.

President Chiang Kai-shek and the National Government faced extraordinary difficulties. Large portions of the country were occupied. Economic resources were limited. International assistance was often uncertain.

Yet the Republic of China continued fighting.

This resistance was not only important for China itself. It tied down significant Japanese military forces and contributed to the broader Allied war effort.

When World War II ended, the Republic of China emerged as one of the victorious Allied powers and became one of the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council.

This achievement was not accidental. It reflected years of sacrifice by soldiers, officials, and ordinary citizens who refused to accept foreign domination.

June Fourth and the Search for Political Reform

The Tiananmen movement of 1989 represented a different kind of struggle.

Unlike earlier military conflicts, the students and citizens who gathered in Beijing were demanding political reform, accountability, anti-corruption measures, and greater freedom.

Participants came from diverse backgrounds. Many remained committed to improving their country rather than overthrowing it. Their demands reflected a belief that economic modernization should be accompanied by political progress.

The events of June Fourth therefore occupy a unique place in modern Chinese history. They represented one of the largest public expressions of civic participation ever witnessed under Communist rule.

Although the movement was suppressed, its historical significance remains.

The desire for greater freedom did not disappear in 1989.

The White Paper Movement of 2022

More than three decades later, a new generation demonstrated similar courage.

In late November 2022, following a deadly fire in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, public frustration with prolonged COVID lockdown policies erupted into nationwide protests.

Many citizens believed that excessive restrictions had contributed to the tragedy. Public anger spread rapidly.

Protests appeared in Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Wuhan, Nanjing, Chengdu, Xi’an, Hangzhou, and numerous other cities.

One of the most powerful symbols of the movement was a blank sheet of white paper. Because direct criticism of the Chinese Communist Party could trigger censorship or arrest, protesters held empty white sheets as a silent expression of dissent.

The symbolism was immediately understood.

The White Paper Movement became one of the most significant protest movements in Mainland China since 1989.

Particularly striking were reports from Shanghai, where some demonstrators openly called for Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party to step down. Such public expressions were extraordinarily rare under the current political system.

The movement demonstrated that political conformity should never be mistaken for genuine consent.

The Republic of China on Taiwan and Democratic Development

An equally important chapter in modern Chinese history developed on the other side of the Taiwan Strait.

In 1987, President Chiang Ching-kuo lifted martial law in the Republic of China. This decision initiated a process of democratization that transformed Taiwan’s political system.

Subsequent reforms included constitutional changes, competitive legislative elections, expanded civil liberties, and the first direct presidential election in 1996.

Today, the Republic of China on Taiwan operates as a constitutional democracy with a market economy, regular elections, freedom of speech, and an independent civil society.

These achievements carry significance far beyond Taiwan itself.

For decades, some observers argued that Chinese culture was incompatible with democracy. Taiwan’s experience decisively disproves this claim.

The success of constitutional government in the Republic of China demonstrates that Chinese-speaking societies are fully capable of sustaining democratic institutions, protecting individual liberties, and maintaining economic prosperity.

The issue has never been culture.

The issue has always been institutions.

Why Historical Memory Matters

The events discussed above span more than seven centuries.

The Battle of Yamen, the War of Resistance against Japan, the Tiananmen movement, the White Paper Movement, and the democratic development of the Republic of China on Taiwan occurred under very different circumstances.

Yet they share a common theme.

Each illustrates that Chinese people have repeatedly demonstrated courage, resilience, and a willingness to defend principles larger than themselves.

Remembering June Fourth is therefore not simply about one day in 1989.

It is about recognizing a broader historical tradition in which individuals refuse to surrender their dignity even when confronted by overwhelming power.

Authoritarian governments may control archives, censor textbooks, and restrict public discussion. But they cannot permanently erase human memory.

History survives because people continue to remember.

And as long as people remember, the pursuit of truth and liberty remains alive.

That may be the most important lesson of June Fourth, not only for the Chinese world, but for all societies that value freedom and human dignity.


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How to Cite this Article (APA 7th edition)

Wang, H. H. (2026, June 4). Remembering June Fourth: Historical Memory, Liberty, and the Resilience of the Chinese Peoplehttps://williamhongsongwang.com/2026/06/04/remembering-june-fourth-historical-memory-liberty-and-the-resilience-of-the-chinese-people/