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The
Tomb of Li Zhi, a progressive thinker and writer of the
Ming Dynasty, is situated to the north of Tongxian County
on the highway from Beijing to Shanhaiguan. The tomb was
originally in another part of Tongxian County, but in
1953, the Ministry of Health established a tuberculosis
sanatorium in the neighborhood of the tomb and moved Li
Zhi’ s remains to the current site. The tomb was
renovated in 1954.
The
one remaining stela at he tomb is inscribed on its front
with “The Tomb of Li Zhuowu” (Li Zhi’
s courtesy name) written in the hand of Li’ s friend
Jiao Hong, and on the back with a “Record in Commemoration
of Li Zhuowu” written in 1612 by Zhan Zhenguang.
Li Zhi was born to a Hui family in Quanzhou, Fujian Province,
in 1527. He became the prefect of Yao’ an in Yunnan
Province, but retired from office in protest at the age
of 54 after a 20-odd-year official career. After his retirement
he wrote and taught in Macheng and Huang’ an in
Hubei Province, and was unusual in the fact that he accepted
female students.
Li Zhi openly adopted the stance of a heretic and wrote,
“I dislike Confucianism, I don’t believe in
Daoism (Taoism) and I don’t believe in Buddhism;
so whenever I see Daoist priests I detest them, whenever
I see Buddhist monks I detest them, and whenever I see
Confucian scholars I detest them even more.” At
that time, political power in China was in the hands of
the Confucian scholars and the Confucian ethical code
was regarded as sacred. Nevertheless, Li Zhi had the courage
to advocate abandoning Confucian ethics. At the same time,
Li denounced the Song and Ming schools of Confucian idealist
philosophy as hypocritical, proposing a version of utilitarianism
instead. In the field of literature, Li held that a writer
must express his own personal opinions with the “pure,
true heart of a child.”
In 1591,“upright”high officials, annoyed at
Li’ s exposure of the hypocrisy of Confucian morals,
sent their lackeys to Li’ s residence at the Yellow
Crane Pavilion in Wuchang to expel him from the province.
Li was accused of “having defamed Confucius and
of lacking moral principles” and of being an “absolute
heretic.”
In his later years, Li moved from place to place trying
to avoid persecution, and finally took refuge in Tongzhou
(present-day Tongxian County) in Beijing’ s eastern
suburbs with an old friend, Ma Jinglun. At the time, the
authorities considered Li’ s progressive thought
to be a serious menace and labeled him as “an advocate
of irresponsible and immoral doctrines” and as “one
who seeks to mislead the people.”
In the spring of 1602, during the reign of Emperor Wanli,
Li, then 76, was arrested, imprisoned and hounded to death.
His friend Ma Jinglun later buried his body. After Li’
s death, an order was issued that all his published and
unpublished works be burned, and no further copies made.
Despite this order, however, the great majority of Li
Zhi’ s works have survived. |