I will be a person
来自China Digital Space
我要作人 (wǒ yào zuò rén): I will be a person
Tan Zuoren (谭作人), whose given name literally means “be a person” is a writer and environmentalist who is currently serving a five year sentence for “inciting subversion of state power” because of his activities relating to the 2008 Sichuan earthquake.
After Tan’s arrest, a popular refrain on Twitter was “The soul of a civil society is moral conscience and courage. I am not afraid! I will not be a lone spirit, and I will not be a living monument; I will be a person!” (良心與勇氣,是公民社會之魂,我不害怕了!我不作幽靈,不作活碑,我要作人!)
The phrase, “I will be a person” has the same ring to it in Chinese as “I will be a man” does in English – however without the gender specific connotations.
The phrase is also reminiscent of a poem written by Bei Dao, a poet often quoted by students during the Tiananmen Square Incident. Bei Dao famously wrote:
Perhaps the final hour is come
I have left no testament
Only a pen, for my mother
I am no hero
In an age without heroes
I just want to be a man
The still horizon Divides the ranks of the living and the dead I can only choose the sky I will not kneel on the ground Allowing the executioners to look tall The better to obstruct the wind of freedom
From star-like bullet holes shall flow A blood-red dawn
也许最后的时刻到了 我没有留下遗嘱 只留下笔,给我的母亲 我并不是英雄 在没有英雄的年代里, 我只想做一个人。
宁静的地平线 分开了生者和死者的行列 我只能选择天空 决不跪在地上 以显出刽子手们的高大 好阻挡自由的风
从星星的弹空里 将流出血红的黎明