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  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 11
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 03
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 08
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 05
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 01
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 12
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 10
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 09
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 02
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO.jpg
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 07
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 06
  • Chinese line up to see Mao's mummified body inside his Mausoleum in Tiananmen square, Beijing, China May 15, 2006.Despite failed policies that left millions dead and brought the country near to collapse, Mao is widely revered for his founding of communist China.
    CHINA CULT OF MAO 04
  • A home is decorated with Mao memorabilia in the model village Nan Jie Cun, China, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2009.  Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 04
  • A statue of late chairman Mao stands in the central square of model village  Nan Jie Cun, China, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2009.Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 01
  • A worker operates machinery at a factory in the model village of Nan Jie Cun, China, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2009.  Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 11
  • Model workers are shown on a board at the entrance of a factory in the model village of Nan Jie Cun, China, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2009.  Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 05
  • Children play next to a large painting in the likeness of Communist ideologist Karl Marx in the model village of Nan Jie Cun, China, China, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2009. Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 02
  • Soldiers from  2nd Battalion of Maoist army dance holding their weapons in the air as they prepare to leave for the mountains after a cultural program and remembrance ceremony in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal Thursday April 22, 2004.  In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. The doctrines of Mao, the Chinese communist leader who believed in communism via an empowered peasantry, have found new life in the farm fields of this Himalayan kingdom. The rebels contend their revolution _ which has cost more than 9,500 lives _ is only possible through the barrel of a gun.
    NEPAL MAOIST 001.jpg
  • Private forms of commerce, not seen in the model village of Nan Jie Cun, as people peddling food in the streets line up outside the walls of the city, a stone throw away from the model village in China, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2009.  Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 12
  • Workers dressed in communist style uniforms sing revolutionary songs ahead of a day's work in the model village of Nan Jie Cun, China, Thursday, Aug. 27, 2009.  Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 10
  • A Child eats free noodles at a communal dining hall in the model village of Nan Jie Cun, China, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2009.  Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 07
  • A worker waits for a free meal at a communal dining hall in the model village of Nan Jie Cun, China, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2009.  Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 06
  • Chinese youth practice military drills outside of their school in the model village of Nan Jie Cun, China, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2009.  Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 03
  • A young soldier from the second battalion already marked by injuries of war listens to speakers during a cultural program and remembrance ceremony in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal Thursday April 22, 2004.  In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. The doctrines of Mao, the Chinese communist leader who believed in communism via an empowered peasantry, have found new life in the farm fields of this Himalayan kingdom. The rebels contend their revolution _ which has cost more than 9,500 lives _ is only possible through the barrel of a gun.
    NEPAL MAOIST 09
  • Images from revolutionary China adorn a wall in the model village of Nan Jie Cun, China, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2009.  Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 09
  • Chinese youth dig in to their books during a lesson at a school in the model village of Nan Jie Cun, China, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2009.  Nan Jie Cun village in central China's Henan province advertises itself as a commune which continues to adhere to the communist teachings of Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic 60 years ago. The village's industries are collectively owned. Workers receive bonds, instead of currency, and housing and healthcare are free. They sing revolutionary songs and march to work in lines. Despite being out of step with the rest of today's China, the village's industries are a success, and more than 7,000 migrants have requested to work at Nan Jie Cun.
    CHINA MODEL VILLAGE 08
  • Dancers from National Ballet of China perform the Mao-era ballet  "The Red Detachment of Women" in Beijing, China, Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2009. Signature works such as "The Red Detachment of Women",  a rousing story about a peasant girl liberated by communism and her heroic turn in an all-female army troupe, satisfy a taste for nostalgia among China's older audiences and are kitschy fun for younger crowds.
    CHINA BALLET 12
  • Dancers from National Ballet of China perform the Mao-era ballet  "The Red Detachment of Women" in Beijing, China, Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2009. Signature works such as "The Red Detachment of Women",  a rousing story about a peasant girl liberated by communism and her heroic turn in an all-female army troupe, satisfy a taste for nostalgia among China's older audiences and are kitschy fun for younger crowds.
    CHINA BALLET 10
  • Dancers from National Ballet of China perform the Mao-era ballet  "The Red Detachment of Women" in Beijing, China, Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2009. Signature works such as "The Red Detachment of Women",  a rousing story about a peasant girl liberated by communism and her heroic turn in an all-female army troupe, satisfy a taste for nostalgia among China's older audiences and are kitschy fun for younger crowds.
    CHINA BALLET 11
  • Dancers from National Ballet of China perform the Mao-era ballet  "The Red Detachment of Women" in Beijing, China, Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2009. Signature works such as "The Red Detachment of Women",  a rousing story about a peasant girl liberated by communism and her heroic turn in an all-female army troupe, satisfy a taste for nostalgia among China's older audiences and are kitschy fun for younger crowds.
    CHINA BALLET 02
  • A soldier from the  2nd Battalion extends a salute with the Maoist greeting, a clenched right fist, to villagers gathered to welcome them after they descended from the mountains to take part in a cultural program and remembrance ceremony in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal Thursday April 22, 2004.  In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. The doctrines of Mao, the Chinese communist leader who believed in communism via an empowered peasantry, have found new life in the farm fields of this Himalayan kingdom. The rebels contend their revolution _ which has cost more than 9,500 lives _ is only possible through the barrel of a gun.
    NEPAL MAOIST 03
  • Troops from the 2nd Battalion dance alongside villagers after descending from the mountains in to the valley to take part in a cultural program and remembrance ceremony in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal Thursday April 22, 2004.  In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. The doctrines of Mao, the Chinese communist leader who believed in communism via an empowered peasantry, have found new life in the farm fields of this Himalayan kingdom. The rebels contend their revolution _ which has cost more than 9,500 lives _ is only possible through the barrel of a gun.
    NEPAL MAOIST 06
  • A villager shows a picture of the late King Birendra of Nepal, who was murdered in alongside 10 other members of the royal family in 2001, is seen in  a heart shaped window in the wallet of a villager in the district of Rukum, viewed as the Maoist heartland Friday April 23, 2004. The Maoists, who say they are inspired by Chinese revolutionary leader Mao Zedong, have been battling since February 1996 to replace the monarchy with a communist state. The current Nepali King Gyanendra, faces besides tackling the insurgency, daily protests in the capital for dumping a democratically elected government in 2002.
    NEPAL MAOIST 11
  • Villagers and Maoist soldiers dressed in civilian clothing play carrom ball after some troops belonging to the 2nd batallion made descended from the mountains  in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal Wednesday April 21, 2004.  In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. The doctrines of Mao, the Chinese communist leader who believed in communism via an empowered peasantry, have found new life in the farm fields of this Himalayan kingdom. The rebels contend their revolution _ which has cost more than 9,500 lives _ is only possible through the barrel of a gun.
    NEPAL MAOIST 12
  • A dancer from National Ballet of China performs the Mao-era ballet  "The Red Detachment of Women" in Beijing, China, Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2009. Signature works such as "The Red Detachment of Women",  a rousing story about a peasant girl liberated by communism and her heroic turn in an all-female army troupe, satisfy a taste for nostalgia among China's older audiences and are kitschy fun for younger crowds.
    CHINA BALLET 07