Remembering Tiananmen, 20 years later

yangdc

1楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-6 23:06 只看该作者

Remembering Tiananmen, 20 years later

全文请看这里

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture … anmen_20_years.html

Remembering Tiananmen, 20 years later

Yesterday, June 4th, 2009, marked the 20th anniversary of the military

crackdown on student protesters gathered in Tiananmen Square in Beijing,

China. Beginning in April of 1989, thousands of students and other citizens

started gathering in groups large and small, protesting many issues, centered

on a desire for freedom and democratic reform. By mid-May of 1989, hundreds of

thousands of protesters occupied the square, staging hunger strikes, and

asking for dialogue. Chinese authorities responded with a declaration of

martial law, and sent soldiers and tanks from the People’s Liberation Army,

preparing to disperse the crowds. Late on June 3rd, 1989, the tanks and

armored personnel carriers rolled into the square, killing and wounding many,

mostly civilians - estimates vary widely, from several hundred to several

thousand dead. The first 17 photos below were taken in 1989, the rest are from

this year, as people remember the events, the ideals, and the fallout from

that fateful day. (32 photos total)

This file photo taken twenty years ago on June 2, 1989 shows some of the

hundreds of thousands of Chinese gathering around a 10-meter replica of the

Statue of Liberty (center), called the Goddess of Democracy, in Tiananmen

Square demanding democracy despite martial law in Beijing. Hundreds, possibly

thousands, of protesters were killed by China’s military on June 3 and 4,

1989, as communist leaders ordered an end to six weeks of unprecedented

democracy protests in the heart of the Chinese capital. (CATHERINE

HENRIETTE/AFP/Getty Images)

This file photo taken on June 3, 1989 shows a dissident student asking

soldiers to go back home as crowds flood into central Beijing. (CATHERINE

HENRIETTE/AFP/Getty Images) #

In this file photo from May 30, 1989, a student from an art institute plasters

the neck of a replica of New York’s Statue of Liberty dubbed the Goddess of

Democracy in front of the Great Hall of the People (right) and the monument to

the People’s Heroes (center) to promote the pro-democracy protests against the

Chinese government at Tiananmen Square in Beijing. (CATHERINE

HENRIETTE/AFP/Getty Images) #

This photo taken on May 1, 1989 shows Wang Dan (center), a leading Chinese

dissident during 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy demonstrations and member

of the Beida students delegaton, addressing foreign correspondents in Beijing.

(CATHERINE HENRIETTE/AFP/Getty Images) #

A file photograph from June 3, 1989 shows a dissident student (left) shouting

to soldiers, asking them to go back home as crowds flood into central Beijing

ahead of the army’s crackdown on pro-democracy protests. (CATHERINE

HENRIETTE/AFP/Getty Images) #

Hundreds of thousands of people fill Beijing’s central Tiananmen Square in

front of the Monument to People’s Heroes and Mao’s mausoleum in the biggest

popular upheaval in China since the Cultural Revolution of the 1960’s in this

May 17, 1989 photo. (REUTERS/Ed Nachtrieb) #

An armoured personel carrier crushes one of the tents set up on Tiananmen

Square by pro-democracy protestors early Sunday morning in this June 4, 1989

file photo. (REUTERS/Stringer) #

This file photo taken on June 4, 1989 shows an armoured personnel carrier in

flames as students set it on fire near Tiananmen Square in Beijing. (TOMMY

CHENG/AFP/Getty Images) #

A captured tank driver is helped to safety by students as some in the crowd

beat him in this June 4, 1989 photo in Beijing. (REUTERS/Stringer) #

This June 4, 1989 photograph shows a girl, wounded during the clash between

the army and students near Tiananmen Square in Beijing being carried out by a

cart. (MANUEL CENETA/AFP/Getty Images) #

This file photo taken on June 4, 1989 shows Beijing residents inspecting some

of over 20 armoured personnel carriers and other vehicles burnt by

demonstrators to prevent the troops from moving into Tiananmen Square in

Beijing. (MANUEL CENETA/AFP/Getty Images) #

This photo from June 6, 1989 shows People’s Liberation Army (PLA) tanks and

soldiers guarding the strategic Chang’an Avenue leading to Tiananmen Square in

Beijing two days after their crackdown on pro-democracy students. (MANUEL

CENETA/AFP/Getty Images) #

This file photo taken on June 4, 1989 shows Beijing residents inspecting the

interior of one of the armoured personnel carriers burnt by demonstrators to

prevent the troops from moving into Tiananmen Square in Beijing. (MANUEL

CENETA/AFP/Getty Images) #

14In this photo taken on June 5, 1989 and made available for the first time by

the AP on Thursday June 4, 2009, three unidentified men flee the scene, as

another man (background left) stands alone to block a line of approaching

tanks (background right) in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. This previously unseen

photograph was taken by then-AP reporter Terril Jones and came to light after

online discussions of the incident on The New York Times’ Lens Blog on the

20th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown. (AP Photo/Terril Jones) #

A single man blocks an approaching column of PLA tanks on Changan Avenue east

of Tiananmen Square in Beijing June 5, 1989 (REUTERS/Arthur Tsang) #

In this June 5, 1989 file photo, a Chinese protestor blocks a line of tanks

heading east on Beijing’s Cangan Blvd. June 5, 1989 in front of the Beijing

Hotel. The man was shortly pulled away and the tanks continued on their way.

(AP Photo/Jeff Widener) #

Fast-forward twenty years to the present, and this is the same view of Changan

Avenue, filled with traffic on June 4, 2009. (REUTERS/David Gray) #

Wang Dan (seen as a younger man in photo 4 above), a key figure in the 1989

pro-democracy protests in China, photographed on May 24, 2009, attending a

press conference in Taipei. Twenty years on he says he has no regrets over the

tumultuous period that transformed him from a college student to a counter-

revolutionary. (SAM YEH/AFP/Getty Images) #

On June 2, 2009, three Chinese dissidents, from left to right, Yu Zhijian, Yu

Dongyue and Lu Decheng pose beside a photograph of the defaced Chairman Mao

portrait, which they had pelted with dye-filled eggs during the 1989 Tiananmen

Square democracy movement, in Washington, June 2, 2009. The three men spent

much of the past 20 years behind bars for marring the massive portrait at

Tiananmen Square, and today say that the students who led that movement have

failed to continue the struggle. . (REUTERS/Jim Young) #

Ding Zilin, mother of 17-year-old pro-democracy demonstrator Jiang Jielian who

was killed during the 1989 army crackdown on Tiananmen protesters, weeps as

she talks about the event in her Beijing flat during an interview on April 7,

  1. Twenty years on, Ding’s pain is still as raw as it was when her son was

shot through the heart in the army crackdown on Tiananmen Square protesters in

China, an event that she says broke her. (PETER PARKS/AFP/Getty Images) #

A Chinese paramilitary police officer stands guard near Tiananmen Square in

Beijing, China, on Thursday, June 4, 2009. China opened Tiananmen Square to

the public this morning after ringing the area with metal fences overnight to

stop people from commemorating the 20th anniversary of the army’s 1989

crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators. (Nelson Ching/Bloomberg News) #

A plain-clothes policeman attempts to use an umbrella to block the view of

soldiers patrolling the area adjacent to Tiananmen square from the media in

Beijing, China, Wednesday, June 3, 2009. Foreign journalists were barred from

Beijing’s Tiananmen Square on Wednesday amid heavy security on the eve of the

20th anniversary of the bloody crackdown on 1989 pro-democracy protests. (AP

Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel) #

A giant statue of former Communist Party chairman Mao Zedong is seen behind a

red wall at the campus of Fudan University in Shanghai June 4, 2009.

(REUTERS/Nir Elias) #

Chinese paramilitary policemen in silhouette watch over one of the entrances

to Tiananmen Square on June 3, 2009. Chinese police had tightened restrictions

on perceived trouble makers on the eve of the 20th anniversary of the

crackdown on Tiananmen democracy protests. (PETER PARKS/AFP/Getty Images) #

Paramilitary policemen, some dressed in plain-clothes and others in uniform,

march in formation past members of the public after the flag raising ceremony

in front of the giant portrait of Chairman Mao Zedong on Beijing’s Tiananmen

Square June 4, 2009. (REUTERS/David Gray) #

Customers use computers at an internet cafe in Changzhi, Shanxi province June

3, 2009. Access to many popular websites was suddenly blocked by the Chinese

government two days before the 20th anniversary of the crackdown, including

YouTube, Blogspot, Tumblr, Livejournal, Flickr, Twitter and Bing.

(REUTERS/Stringer) #

Chinese police check documents of foreign journalists trying to enter

Tiananmen Square on June 4, 2009. Foreign media were harrassed and barred as

China kept Tiananmen Square under tight surveillance for the anniversary.

(PETER PARKS/AFP/Getty Images) #

A plane flies past “Pillar of Shame – A memorial for Tiananmen” by Danish

artist Jens Galschiot which is being displayed at the University of Hong Kong

May 26, 2009, on the tenth day count-down to the 20th anniversary of the June

4th military crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Beijing’s Tiananmen

Square in 1989. (REUTERS/Bobby Yip) #

Tens of thousands of people attend a candlelight vigil at Hong Kong’s Victoria

park Thursday, June 4, 2009, to mark the 20th anniversary of the June 4th

military crackdown on the pro-democracy movement in Beijing. (AP Photo/Vincent

Yu) #

A young girl grabs the candle from her father to join the crowd at Victoria

Park, Hong Kong on June 4th, 2009. The next generation remembering it even

after 20 years. ((C) Y. C. William Wang) #

A man holds a candle as tens of thousands of people attend a candlelight vigil

at Hong Kong’s Victoria park Thursday, June 4, 2009. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu) #

A statue of the Goddess of Democracy is displayed at Hong Kong’s Victoria Park

Thursday, June 4, 2009, ahead of a planned candlelight vigil later in the

evening to mark 20th anniversary of the June 4 military crackdown on the pro-

democracy movement in Beijing. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu) #


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Jyamolmiry

两岸猿声啼不住,党的政策亚克西。

2楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-6 23:08 只看该作者

照片好清晰啊

张书记

http://twitter.com/SecretaryZhang

3楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-6 23:14 只看该作者

左边那个是孔庆东……

1984

无聊,讨厌

4楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-6 23:17 只看该作者

最下面一张左下角那位,好像孔老师啊……

伯通

少壮不努力 长大搞IT

5楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-6 23:17 只看该作者

唔 神态未变……

askboy

6楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-6 23:29 只看该作者

引用:

原帖由 张书记 于 2009-6-6 23:14 发表

应该就是吧,仔细看那颗痣还隐约

godsendpie

7楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-6 23:30 只看该作者

20年沧海桑田,孔老师猥琐不变

anonymous

我是傻逼

8楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-6 23:41 只看该作者

看来孔老师的眼睛是生来如此…

free1989

@photobluer

9楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-6 23:43 只看该作者

图片质量很好。

路边围观

10楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-6 23:47 只看该作者

引用:

原帖由 anonymous 于 2009-6-6 23:41 发表

看来孔老师的眼睛是生来如此…

真想知道他看啥呢

窒息的鱼

不差钱—乞丐

11楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-6 23:53 只看该作者

本来一路看下来,心情挺沉重的,

看到孔家传人表情后,忍不住笑了

闹了个运

Twitter @naoyunhui 不算激情革命派,但是心情容易激动,有正义感,骨子里还是偏温和,要是玩不过你,就颠儿。

12楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 00:04 只看该作者

引用:

原帖由 窒息的鱼 于 2009-6-6 23:53 发表

本来一路看下来,心情挺沉重的,

看到孔家传人表情后,忍不住笑了

+1

浣尘

Twitter @ jerusalem64

13楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 00:44 只看该作者

哎~~~~~

free1989

@photobluer

14楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 00:46 只看该作者

抓拍王维林那第一张,厉害啊。从来没见过。

wxc200

15楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 01:14 只看该作者

圖片真好清晰呀

小宸宸

我家住在黄土高坡,大风从坡上刮过,不管是李宇春还是曾轶可,都是我滴哥我滴哥

。。。我家住在黄土高坡,日头从坡上走过,不管是拜春哥,还是拜曾哥,保佑我及格,不挂科!

16楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 01:19 只看该作者

卧槽!高清要火!

孔老湿的大小眼二十年不变啊~~

吃河蟹的草泥馬

17楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 01:52 只看该作者

他们现在一定也后悔得肠子都青了

在卫星时代 当着全世界的面做这么大的恶

asico001

18楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 01:53 只看该作者

真是孔???

numberscis

收二手或库存的老钢笔、蘸水笔。免费维修钢笔,免费调校、打磨笔尖。尊重世界上所有以匠人性格工作和治学的民族,毋论是日耳曼还是和族。

19楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 02:16 只看该作者

孔教授神态像不像最后晚餐里的犹大?!?!?!??!?!?

Yahoo!

用裤衩思考

路边社社员

20楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 09:41 只看该作者

看见孔老师,一下就拉近了距离,心里好温暖。

黄阿狗

金玉其内 败絮其外

21楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 09:46 只看该作者

我看的第一反应也是 这不是老孔嘛。。。

曰耳又

未来中国民主转型之现实,承受不了转型正义希冀之重。这是一个无解的永恒悲剧。——韩乾

22楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 10:43 只看该作者

我的抗议照

![](http://photos-d.ak.fbcdn.net/photos-ak-

snc1/v4568/157/84/626960696/n626960696_7033395_5482830.jpg)

窒息的鱼

不差钱—乞丐

23楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 11:11 只看该作者

楼上这造型摆的。。。

希望偶尔露出峥嵘:)

[ 本帖最后由 窒息的鱼 于 2009-6-7 19:26 编辑 ]

霜渐

24楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 12:28 只看该作者

我第一眼也看出来了

yalelynn

25楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 18:24 只看该作者

引用:

原帖由 numberscis 于 2009-6-7 02:16 发表

孔教授神态像不像最后晚餐里的犹大?!?!?!??!?!?

你太有才了!

ps:这些老照片数字化后,质量真好!

好贴!

道德制高点

26楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 18:53 只看该作者

效果不错

fogooy

人們,我愛妳啊。 你要警惕。fogooy@gmail.com

27楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 19:24 只看该作者

谢楼主,留名记录。

铁马银枪

茅屋已被河蟹夹破

28楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 20:56 只看该作者

照片很清晰,收藏了

味精

精味味精

29楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 20:59 只看该作者

收藏了,thx

特别感谢孔老师的激情出镜

神行者

爱锅者

30楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-7 22:50 只看该作者

收藏

十四

31楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-8 09:02 只看该作者

前:感伤~~~

20年前鄙人太小,也就5岁多点咯,提不起钢管儿,要是提得起估计也冲锋陷阵了。

那张女学生的照片,看得俺好纠结。。。

至于孔老师嘛。。。嘿嘿。。。原来一直都是相当之猥琐哦~哈哈~力顶~~~

核子力量

Twitter.com/hzpower

32楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-6-8 18:39 只看该作者

真的很清晰,太好了

xiaohui

广告位出租

33楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-7-3 14:07 只看该作者

我要学英语

一向低调

我是爱党的良民

34楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-7-8 13:50 只看该作者

第一次看这么高清的拉发图片,赞一个

student

进步青年

35楼 大 中 小 发表于 2009-7-10 03:41 只看该作者

是原版的吗?怎么网络上的图质大多都很低? 收藏了,赞一个~!