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China's 1960s Cultural Revolution and Mao Zedong
(Official PRC View)
Sixth Plenary Session
of the Eleventh Central Committee
of the Communist Party of China
June 27, 1981
Historical resolution
(people.com.cn)
Updated: 2007-07-11 09:06
Comrade Mao Zedong's Historical Role and Mao Zedong
Thought
--Resolution on Certain Questions in the History of
Our Party Since the Founding of the People's
Republic of China (abridged)
(Adopted by the Sixth Plenary Session of the
Eleventh Central Committee of the Communist Party of
China on June 27, 1981)
27. Comrade Mao Zedong was a great Marxist and a
great proletarian revolutionary, strategist and
theorist. It is true that he made gross mistakes
during the "cultural revolution", but, if we judge
his activities as a whole, his contributions to the
Chinese revolution far outweigh his mistakes. His
merits are primary and his errors secondary. He
rendered indelible meritorious service in founding
and building up our Party and the Chinese People's
Liberation Army, in winning victory for the cause of
liberation of the Chinese people, in founding the
People's Republic of China and in advancing our
socialist cause. He made major contributions to the
liberation of the oppressed nations of the world and
to the progress of mankind.
28. The Chinese Communists, with Comrade Mao Zedong
as their chief representative, made a theoretical
synthesis of China's unique experience in its
protracted revolution in accordance with the basic
principles of Marxism-Leninism. This synthesis
contributed a scientific system of guidelines
befitting China's conditions, and it is this
synthesis which is Mao Zedong Thought, the product
of the integration of the universal principles of
Marxism-Leninism with the concrete practice of the
Chinese revolution. Making revolution in a large
Eastern semi-colonial, semi-feudal country is bound
to meet with many special, complicated problems
which cannot be solved by reciting the general
principles of Marxism-Leninism or by copying foreign
experience in every detail. The erroneous tendency
of making Marxism a dogma and deifying Comintern
resolutions and the experience of the Soviet Union
prevailed in the international communist movement
and in our Party mainly in the late 1920s and early
1930s, and this tendency pushed the Chinese
revolution to the brink of total failure. It was in
the course of combating this wrong tendency and
making a profound summary of our historical
experience in this respect that Mao Zedong Thought
took shape and developed. It was systematized and
extended in a variety of fields and reached maturity
in the latter part of the Agrarian Revolutionary War
and the War of Resistance Against Japan, and it was
further developed during the War of Liberation and
after the founding of the People's Republic of
China. Mao Zedong Thought is Marxism-Leninism
applied and developed in China; it constitutes a
correct theory, a body of correct principles and a
summary of the experiences that have been confirmed
in the practice of the Chinese revolution, a
crystallization of the collective wisdom of the
Chinese Communist Party. Many outstanding leaders of
our Party made important contributions to the
formation and development of Mao Zedong Thought, and
they are synthesized in the scientific works of
Comrade Mao Zedong.
29. Mao Zedong Thought is wide-ranging in content.
It is an original theory which has enriched and
developed Marxism-Leninism in the following
respects:
1) On the new-democratic revolution. Proceeding from
China's historical and social conditions, Comrade
Mao Zedong made a profound study of the
characteristics and laws of the Chinese revolution,
applied and developed the Marxist-Leninist thesis of
the leadership of the proletariat in the democratic
revolution, and established the theory of
new-democratic revolution--a revolution against
imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat-capitalism
waged by the masses of the people on the basis of
the worker-peasant alliance under the leadership of
the proletariat. His main works on this subject
include: Analysis of the Classes in Chinese Society,
Report on an Investigation of the Peasant Movement
in Hunan, A Single Spark Can Start a Prairie Fire,
Introducing "The Communist", On New Democracy, On
Coalition Government and The Present Situation and
Our Tasks. The basic points of this theory are: i)
China's bourgeoisie consisted of two sections, the
big bourgeoisie (that is, the comprador bourgeoisie,
or the bureaucrat-bourgeoisie) which was dependent
on imperialism, and the national bourgeoisie which
had revolutionary leanings but wavered. The
proletariat should endeavour to get the national
bourgeoisie to join in the united front under its
leadership and in special circumstances to include
even part of the big bourgeoisie in the united
front, so as to isolate the main enemy to the
greatest possible extent. When forming a united
front with the bourgeoisie, the proletariat must
preserve its own independence and pursue the policy
of "unity, struggle, unity through struggle"; when
forced to split with the bourgeoisie, chiefly the
big bourgeoisie, it should have the courage and
ability to wage a resolute armed struggle against
the big bourgeoisie, while continuing to win the
sympathy of the national bourgeoisie or keep it
neutral. ii) Since there was no bourgeois democracy
in China and the reactionary ruling classes enforced
their terroristic dictatorship over the people by
armed force, the revolution could not but
essentially take the form of protracted armed
struggle. China's armed struggle was a revolutionary
war led by the proletariat with the peasants as the
principal force. The peasantry was the most reliable
ally of the proletariat. Through its vanguard, it
was possible and necessary for the proletariat, with
its progressive ideology and its sense of
organization and discipline, to raise the political
consciousness of the peasant masses, establish rural
base areas, wage a protracted revolutionary war and
build up and expand the revolutionary forces.
Comrade Mao Zedong pointed out that "the united
front and armed struggle are the two basic weapons
for defeating the enemy". Together with Party
building, they constituted the "three magic weapons"
of the revolution. They were the essential basis
which enabled the Chinese Communist Party to become
the core of leadership of the whole nation and to
chart the course of encircling the cities from the
countryside and finally winning countryside victory.
2) On the socialist revolution and socialist
construction. On the basis of the economic and
political conditions for the transition to socialism
ensuing on victory in the new-democratic revolution,
Comrade Mao Zedong and the Chinese Communist Party
followed the path of effecting socialist
industrialization simultaneously with socialist
transformation and adopted concrete policies for the
gradual transformation of the private ownership of
the means of production, thereby providing a
theoretical as well as practical solution to the
difficult task of building socialism in a large
country such as China, a country which was
economically and culturally backward, with a
population accounting for nearly one-fourth of the
world's total. By putting forward the thesis that
the combination of democracy for the people and
dictatorship over the reactionaries constitutes the
people's democratic dictatorship, Comrade Mao Zedong
enriched the Marxist-Leninist theory of the
dictatorship of the proletariat. After the
establishment of the socialist system, Comrade Mao
Zedong pointed out that, under socialism, the people
had the same fundamental interests, but that all
kinds of contradictions still existed among them,
and that contradictions between the enemy and the
people and contradictions among the people should be
strictly distinguished from each other and correctly
handled. He proposed that among the people we should
follow a set of correct policies. We should follow
the policy of "unity-criticism-unity" in political
matters, the policy of "long-term coexistence and
mutual supervision" in the Party's relations with
the democratic parties, the policy of "let a hundred
flowers blossom, let a hundred schools of thought
contend" in science and culture, and, in the
economic sphere the policy of over-all arrangement
with regard to the different strata in town and
country and of consideration for the interests of
the state, the collective and the individual, all
three. He repeatedly stressed that we should not
mechanically transplant the experience of foreign
countries, but should find our own way to
industrialization, a way suited to China's
conditions, by proceeding from the fact that China
is a large agricultural country, taking agriculture
as the foundation of the economy, correctly handling
the relationship between heavy industry on the one
hand and agriculture and light industry on the
other, and attaching due importance to the
development of the latter. He stressed that in
socialist construction we should properly handle the
relationships between economic construction and
building up defence, between large-scale enterprises
and small and medium-scale enterprises, between the
Han nationality and the minority nationalities,
between the coastal regions and the interior,
between the central and the local authorities, and
between self-reliance and learning from foreign
countries, and that we should properly handle the
relationship between accumulation and consumption
and pay attention to over-all balance. Moreover, he
stressed that the workers were the masters of their
enterprises and that cadres must take part in
physical labor and workers in management, that
irrational rules and regulations must be reformed
and that the three-in-one combination of technical
personnel, workers and cadres must be effected. And
he formulated the strategic idea of bringing all
positive factors into play and turning negative
factors into positive ones so as to unite the whole
Chinese people and build a powerful socialist
country. The important ideas of Comrade Mao Zedong
concerning the socialist revolution and socialist
construction are mainly contained in such major
works as Report to the Second Plenary Session of the
Seventh Central Committee of the Communist Party of
China, On the People's Democratic Dictatorship, On
the Ten Major Relationships, On the Correct Handling
of Contradictions Among the People and Talk at an
Enlarged Work Conference Convened by the Central
Committee of the Communist Party of China.
3) On the building of the revolutionary army and
military strategy. Comrade Mao Zedong methodically
solved the problem of how to turn a revolutionary
army chiefly made up of peasants into a new type of
people's army which is proletarian in character,
observes strict discipline and forms close ties with
the masses. He laid it down that the sole purpose of
the people's army is to serve the people
whole-heartedly, he put forward the principle that
the Party commands the gun and not the other way
round, he advanced the Three Main Rules of
Discipline and the Eight Points for Attention and
stressed the practice of political, economic and
military democracy and the principles of the unity
of officers and soldiers, the unity of army and
people and the disintegration of the enemy forces,
thus formulating by way of summation a set of
policies and methods concerning political work in
the army. In his military writings such as On
Correcting Mistaken Ideas in the Party, Problems of
Strategy in China's Revolutionary War, Problems of
Strategy in Guerrilla War Against Japan, On
Protracted War and Problems of War and Strategy,
Comrade Mao Zedong summed up the experience of
China's protracted revolutionary wars and advanced
the comprehensive concept of building a people's
army and of building rural base areas and waging
people's war by employing the people's army as the
main force and relying on the masses. Raising
guerrilla war to the strategic plane, he maintained
that guerrilla warfare and mobile warfare of a
guerrilla character would for a long time be the
main forms of operation in China's revolutionary
wars. He explained that it would be necessary to
effect an appropriate change in military strategy
simultaneously with the changing balance of forces
between the enemy and ourselves and with the
progress of the war. He worked out a set of
strategies and tactics for the revolutionary army to
wage people's war in conditions when the enemy was
strong and we were weak. These strategies and
tactics include fighting a protracted war
strategically and campaigns and battles of quick
decision, turning strategic inferiority into
superiority in campaigns and battles, and
concentrating a superior force to destroy the enemy
forces one by one. During the War of Liberation, he
formulated the celebrated ten major principles of
operation. All these ideas constitute Comrade Mao
Zedong's outstanding contribution to the military
theory of Marxism-Leninism. After the founding of
the People's Republic, he put forward the important
guideline that we must strengthen our national
defence and build modern revolutionary armed forces
(including the navy, the air force and technical
branches) and develop modern defence technology
(including the making of nuclear weapons for self-defence).
4) On policy and tactics. Comrade Mao Zedong
penetratingly elucidated the vital importance of
policy and tactics in revolutionary struggles. He
pointed out that policy and tactics were the life of
the Party, that they were both the starting-point
and the end-result of all the practical activities
of a revolutionary party and that the Party must
formulate its policies in the light of the existing
political situation, class relations, actual
circumstances and the changes in them, combining
principle and flexibility. He made many valuable
suggestions concerning policy and tactics in the
struggle against the enemy, in the united front and
other questions. He pointed out among other things:
that, under changing subjective and objective
conditions, a weak revolutionary force could
ultimately defeat a strong reactionary force; that
we should despise the enemy strategically and take
him seriously tactically; that we should keep our
eyes on the main target of struggle and not hit out
in all directions; that we should differentiate
between and disintegrate our enemies, and adopt the
tactic of making use of contradictions, winning over
the many, opposing the few and crushing our enemies
one by one; that in areas under reactionary rule, we
should combine legal and illegal struggle and,
organizationally, adopt the policy of assigning
picked cadres to work underground; that, as for
members of the defeated reactionary classes and
reactionary elements, we should give them a chance
to earn a living and to become working people living
by their own labor, so long as they did not rebel or
create trouble; and that the proletariat and its
party must fulfil two conditions in order to
exercise leadership over their allies: (a) Lead
their followers in waging resolute struggles against
the common enemy and achieving victories; (b) Bring
material benefits to their followers or at least
avoid damaging their interests and at the same time
give them political education. These ideas of
Comrade Mao Zedong's concerning policy and tactics
are embodied in many of his writings, particularly
in such works as Current Problems of Tactics in the
Anti-Japanese United Front, On Policy, Conclusions
on the Repulse of the Second Anti-Communist
Onslaught, On Some Important Problems of the Party's
Present Policy, Don't Hit Out in All Directions and
On the Question of Whether Imperialism and All
Reactionaries Are Real Tigers.
5) On ideological and political work and cultural
work. In his On New Democracy, Comrade Mao Zedong
stated: Any given culture ( as an ideological form)
is a reflection of the politics and economics of a
given society, and the former in turn has a
tremendous influence and effect upon the latter;
economics is the base and politics the concentrated
expression of economics. In accordance with this
basic view, he put forward many important ideas of
far-reaching and long-term significance. For
instance, the theses that ideological and political
work is the life-blood of economic and all other
work and that it is necessary to unite politics and
economics and to unite politics and professional
skills, and to be both red and expert; the policy of
developing a national, scientific and mass culture
and of letting a hundred flowers blossom, weeding
through the old to bring forth the new, and making
the past serve the present and foreign things serve
China; and the thesis that intellectuals have an
important role to play in revolution and
construction, that intellectuals should identify
themselves with the workers and peasants and that
they should acquire the proletarian world outlook by
studying Marxism-Leninism, by studying society and
through practical work. He pointed out that "this
question of 'for whom?' is fundamental; it is a
question of principle" and stressed that we should
serve the people whole-heartedly, be highly
responsible in revolutionary work, wage arduous
struggle and fear no sacrifice. Many notable works
written by Comrade Mao Zedong on ideology, politics
and culture, such as The Orientation of the Youth
Movement, Recruit Large Numbers of Intellectuals,
Talks at the Yan'an Forum of Literature and Art, In
Memory of Norman Bethune, Serve the People and The
Foolish Old Man Who Removed the Mountains, are of
tremendous significance even today.
6) On Party building. It was a most difficult task
to build a Marxist, proletarian Party of a mass
character in a country where the peasantry and other
sections of the petty bourgeoisie constituted the
majority of the population, while the proletariat
was small in number yet strong in combat
effectiveness. Comrade Mao Zedong's theory on Party
building provided a successful solution to this
question. His main works in this area include Combat
Liberalism, The Role of the Chinese Communist Party
in the National War, Reform Our Study, Rectify the
Party's Style of Work, Oppose Stereotyped Party
Writing, Our Study and the Current Situation, On
Strengthening the Party Committee System and Methods
of Work of Party Committees. He laid particular
stress on building the Party ideologically, saying
that a Party member should join the Party not only
organizationally but also ideologically and should
constantly try to reform his non-proletarian ideas
and replace them with proletarian ideas. He
indicated that the style of work which entailed
integrating theory with practice, forging close
links with the masses and practicing self-criticism
was the hallmark distinguishing the Chinese
Communist Party from all other political parties in
China. To counter the erroneous "Left" policy of
"ruthless struggle and merciless blows" once
followed in inner-Party struggle, he proposed the
correct policy of "learning from past mistakes to
avoid future ones and curing the sickness to save
the patient", emphasizing the need to achieve the
objective of clarity in ideology and unity among
comrades in inner-Party struggle. He initiated the
rectification campaign as a form of ideological
education in Marxism-Leninism throughout the Party,
which applied the method of criticism and
self-criticism. In view of the fact that our Party
was about to become and then became a party in power
leading the whole country, Comrade Mao Zedong urged
time and again, first on the eve of the founding of
the People's Republic and then later, that we should
remain modest and prudent, guard against arrogance
and rashness and keep to plain living and hard
struggle in our style of work, and that we should be
on the lookout against the corrosive influence of
bourgeois ideology and should oppose bureaucratism
which would alienate us from the masses.
30. The living soul of Mao Zedong Thought is the
stand, viewpoint and method embodied in its
component parts mentioned above. This stand,
viewpoint and method boil down to three basic
points: to seek truth from facts, the mass line, and
independence. Comrade Mao Zedong applied dialectical
and historical materialism to the entire work of the
proletarian party, giving shape to this stand,
viewpoint and method so characteristic of Chinese
Communists in the course of the Chinese revolution
and its arduous, protracted struggles and thus
enriching Marxism-Leninism. They find expression not
only in such important works as Oppose Book Worship,
On Practice, On Contradiction, Preface and
Postscript to "Rural Survey", Some Questions
Concerning Methods of Leadership and Where Do
Correct Ideas Come From? but also in all his
scientific writings and in the revolutionary
activities of the Chinese Communists.
1) Seeking truth from facts. This means proceeding
from reality and combining theory with practice,
that is, integrating the universal principles of
Marxism-Leninism with the concrete practice of the
Chinese revolution. Comrade Mao Zedong was always
against studying Marxism in isolation from the
realities of Chinese society and the Chinese
revolution. As early as 1930, he opposed blind book
worship by emphasizing that investigation and study
is the first step in all work and that one has no
right to speak without investigation. On the eve of
the rectification movement in Yan'an, he affirmed
that subjectivism is a formidable enemy of the
Communist Party, a manifestation of impurity in
Party spirit. These brilliant theses helped people
break through the shackles of dogmatism and greatly
emancipate their minds. While summarizing the
experience and lessons of the Chinese revolution in
his philosophical works and many other works rich in
philosophical content, Comrade Mao Zedong showed
great profundity in expounding and enriching the
Marxist theory of knowledge and dialectics. He
stressed that the dialectical materialist theory of
knowledge is the dynamic, revolutionary theory of
reflection and that full scope should be given to
man's conscious dynamic role, when it is based on
and is in conformity with objective reality. Basing
himself on social practice, he comprehensively and
systematically elaborated the dialectical
materialist theory on the sources, the process and
the purpose of knowledge and on the criterion of
truth. He said that as a rule, correct knowledge can
be arrived at and developed only after many
repetitions of the process leading from matter to
consciousness and then back to matter, that is,
leading from practice to knowledge and then back to
practice. He pointed out that truth exists by
contrast with falsehood and grows in struggle with
it, that truth is inexhaustible and that the truth
of any piece of knowledge, namely, whether it
corresponds to objective reality, can ultimately be
decided only through social practice. He further
elaborated the law of the unity of opposites, the
nucleus of Marxist dialectics. He indicated that we
should not only study the universality of
contradiction in objective existence, but, what is
more important, we should study the particularity of
contradiction, and that we should resolve
contradictions which are different in nature by
different methods. Therefore, dialectics should not
be viewed as a formula to be learned by rote and
applied mechanically, but should be closely linked
with practice and with investigation and study and
should be applied flexibly. He forged philosophy
into a sharp weapon in the hands of the proletariat
and the people for knowing and changing the world.
His distinguished works on China's revolutionary
war, in particular, provide outstandingly shining
examples of applying and developing the Marxist
theory of knowledge and dialectics in practice. Our
Party must always adhere to the above ideological
line formulated by Comrade Mao Zedong.
2) The mass line means everything for the masses,
reliance on the masses in everything, and "from the
masses, to the masses". The Party's mass line in all
its work has come into being through the systematic
application in all its activities of the
Marxist-Leninist principle that the people are the
makers of history. It is a summation of our Party's
invaluable historical experience in conducting
revolutionary activities over the years under
difficult circumstances in which the enemy's
strength far outstripped ours. Comrade Mao Zedong
stressed time and again that as long as we rely on
the people, believe firmly in the inexhaustible
creative power of the masses and hence trust and
identify ourselves with them, no enemy can crush us
while we can eventually crush every enemy and
overcome every difficulty. He also pointed out that
in leading the masses in all practical work, the
leadership can form its correct ideas only by
adopting the method of "from the masses, to the
masses" and by combining the leadership with the
masses and the general call with particular
guidance. This means concentrating the ideas of the
masses and turning them into systematic ideas, then
going to the masses so that the ideas are persevered
in and carried through, and testing the correctness
of these ideas in the practice of the masses. And
this process goes on, over and over again, so that
the understanding of the leadership becomes more
correct, keener and richer each time. This is how
Comrade Mao Zedong united the Marxist theory of
knowledge with the Party's mass line. As the
vanguard of the proletariat, the Party exists and
fights for the interests of the people. But it
always constitutes only a small part of the people,
so that isolation from the people will render all
the Party's struggles and ideals devoid of content
as well as impossible of success. To persevere in
the revolution and advance the socialist cause, our
Party must uphold the mass line.
3) Independence and self-reliance are the inevitable
corollary of carrying out the Chinese revolution and
construction by proceeding from Chinese reality and
relying on the masses. The proletarian revolution is
an internationalist cause which calls for the mutual
support of the proletariats of different countries.
But for the cause to triumph, each proletariat
should primarily base itself on its own country's
realities, rely on the efforts of its own masses and
revolutionary forces, integrate the universal
principles of Marxism-Leninism with the concrete
practice of its own revolution and thus achieve
victory. Comrade Mao Zedong always stressed that our
policy should rest on our own strength and that we
should find our own road of advance in accordance
with our own conditions. In a vast country like
China, it is all the more imperative for us to rely
mainly on our own efforts to promote the revolution
and construction. We must be determined to carry the
struggle through to the end and must have faith in
the hundreds of millions of Chinese people and rely
on their wisdom and strength; otherwise, it will be
impossible for our revolution and construction to
succeed or to be consolidated even if success is
won. Of course, China's revolution and national
construction are not and cannot be carried on in
isolation from the rest of the world. It is always
necessary for us to try to win foreign aid and, in
particular, to learn all that is advanced and
beneficial from other countries. The closed-door
policy, blind opposition to everything foreign and
any theory or practice of great-nation chauvinism
are all entirely wrong. At the same time, although
china is still comparatively backward economically
and culturally, we must maintain our own national
dignity and confidence, and there must be no
slavishness or submissiveness in any form in dealing
with big, powerful or rich countries. Under the
leadership of the Party and Comrade Mao Zedong, no
matter what difficulty we encountered, we never
wavered, whether before or after the founding of New
China, in our determination to remain independent
and self-reliant and, we never submitted to any
pressure from outside; we showed the dauntless and
heroic spirit of the Chinese Communist Party and the
Chinese people. We stand for the peaceful
co-existence of the people of all countries and
their mutual assistance on an equal footing. While
upholding our own independence, we respect other
people's right to independence. The road of
revolution and construction suited to the
characteristics of a country has to be explored,
decided on and blazed by its own people. No one has
the right to impose his views on others. Only under
these conditions can there be genuine
internationalism. Otherwise, there can only be
hegemonism. We will always adhere to this principled
stand in our international relations.
31. Mao Zedong Thought is the valuable spiritual
asset of our Party. It will be our guide to action
for a long time to come. The Party leaders and the
large group of cadres nurtured by Marxism-Leninism
and Mao Zedong Thought were the backbone forces in
winning great victories for our cause; they are and
will remain our treasured mainstay in the cause of
socialist modernization. While many of Comrade Mao
Zedong's important works were written during the
periods of new-democratic revolution and of
socialist transformation, we must still constantly
study them. This is not only because one cannot cut
the past off from the present and failure to
understand the past will hamper our understanding of
present-day problems, but also because many of the
basic theories, principles and scientific approaches
set forth in these works are of universal
significance and provide us with invaluable guidance
now and will continue to do so in the future.
Therefore, we must continue to uphold Mao Zedong
Thought, study it in earnest and apply its stand,
viewpoint and method in studying the new situation
and solving the new problems arising in the course
of practice. Mao Zedong Thought has added much that
is new to the treasure-house of Marxist-Leninist
theory. We must combine our study of the scientific
works of Comrade Mao Zedong with that of the
scientific writings of Marx, Engels, Lenin and
Stalin. It is entirely wrong to try to negate the
scientific value of Mao Zedong Thought and to deny
its guiding role in our revolution and construction
just because Comrade Mao Zedong made mistakes in his
later years. And it is likewise entirely wrong to
adopt a dogmatic attitude towards the sayings of
Comrade Mao Zedong, to regard whatever he said as
the immutable truth which must be mechanically
applied everywhere, and to be unwilling to admit
honestly that he made mistakes in his later years,
and even try to stick to them in our new activities.
Both these attitudes fail to make a distinction
between Mao Zedong Thought - a scientific theory
formed and tested over a long period of time - and
the mistakes Comrade Mao Zedong made in his later
years. And it is absolutely necessary that this
distinction should be made. We must treasure all the
positive experience obtained in the course of
integrating the universal principles of
Marxism-Leninism with the concrete practice of
China's revolution and construction over fifty years
or so, apply and carry forward this experience in
our new work and enrich and develop Party theory
with new principles and new conclusions
corresponding to reality, so as to ensure the
continued progress of our cause along the scientific
course of Marxism-Leninism and Mao Zedong Thought.
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