The Great Leap Forward1958 — 1962
How Mao’s Utopian Dream Became the Worst Famine in Human History
A political campaign designed to catapult China into the industrial age in five years instead produced the deadliest man-made disaster in recorded history — killing more people than both World Wars combined killed in their respective countries. This is the story of ideology overriding reality, fear silencing truth, and one man’s delusion costing 30–45 million lives.
Context — China Before the Leap
By 1957, the People’s Republic was eight years old. The CCP had achieved remarkable successes: land reform, the suppression of inflation, basic industrialisation through the Soviet-modelled First Five-Year Plan, and the unification of a fractured nation. But Mao was impatient. China remained overwhelmingly rural and poor. The Soviet model — gradual, bureaucratic, expert-led — felt too slow for a revolutionary who believed willpower could move mountains.
Mao wanted China to overtake Britain in steel production within 15 years and reach communism before the Soviet Union. He believed that China’s greatest resource — its 600 million people — could substitute for capital, technology and expertise through sheer mass mobilisation. “With 600 million people, we can accomplish anything.”
The Anti-Rightist Campaign (1957) had just silenced 550,000 intellectuals and critics. Anyone who questioned the party line risked being labelled a “rightist” — meaning imprisonment, labour camp or social destruction. The culture of fear was total. When Mao proposed the Great Leap Forward in late 1957, no one dared object — not because they all agreed, but because disagreement was suicidal.
Mao’s Vision — The Ideology Behind the Leap
The Great Leap Forward was not merely an economic plan — it was an ideological project rooted in Mao’s conviction that human willpower, revolutionary enthusiasm and mass mobilisation could overcome any material limitation. This “voluntarism” — the belief that correct political consciousness can transform physical reality — was Mao’s fundamental contribution to (and departure from) Marxist theory.
Mao rejected the Soviet model of development that relied on technical expertise, gradual industrialisation and centralised planning by professionals. Instead, he believed that China’s peasantry — properly mobilised and politically “educated” — could achieve in five years what the West had taken a century to accomplish. He saw experts as potential class enemies whose caution was a form of political conservatism.
This vision was intoxicating — and catastrophically wrong. Mao treated economics as a branch of politics, agriculture as a matter of willpower, and dissent as treason. The result was a programme that systematically destroyed the knowledge, incentives and institutions that make food production possible.
The People’s Communes — Abolishing Private Life
The centrepiece of the Great Leap was the People’s Commune — a vast collective unit merging dozens of villages into a single administrative and economic organisation of 20,000–30,000 people or more. By the end of 1958, approximately 26,000 communes had been established, absorbing virtually all of China’s 500+ million rural inhabitants.
Private farming was abolished. Family plots, livestock, tools and even cooking pots were confiscated and made communal property. Private cooking was banned — peasants were required to eat in communal mess halls, where initial abundance (fuelled by slaughtering collective animals) gave way to rationing and then starvation. Private property was considered a bourgeois relic; everything belonged to the commune.
Labour was centrally directed — commune leaders, under pressure to meet impossible quotas, could order entire villages to abandon farming and work on dam construction, road building, or backyard steel production instead. Women were mobilised for field work while children were placed in communal nurseries. The family unit — the basic social structure of Chinese civilisation for millennia — was effectively dissolved.
Backyard Steel — When a Nation Melted Its Own Tools
Mao declared that China would surpass Britain’s annual steel output of 6 million tonnes. The target was raised repeatedly — eventually to 10.7 million tonnes for 1958. To achieve this impossible figure, an estimated 90 million people — roughly one in seven Chinese citizens — were mobilised to build and operate backyard steel furnaces across the country.
The problem: peasants were not metallurgists. Backyard furnaces — small, primitive kilns made of mud and brick — could not produce usable steel. Desperate to meet quotas, people melted down their own tools, pots, pans, farming implements, door handles, bed frames and even wedding jewellery. The resulting product was brittle, impure pig iron — completely useless for any industrial purpose. Millions of tonnes of this worthless metal were produced, reported as “steel” and then abandoned in piles.
The agricultural cost was catastrophic. Tens of millions of peasants were pulled away from farming during the critical harvest season to tend furnaces and gather fuel. Forests were stripped for charcoal. Crops rotted unharvested in the fields. The labour diversion — combined with the destruction of farming tools that had been melted down — ensured that even where crops grew, they could not be properly harvested or processed.
Lysenkoism & the Four Pests — When Pseudo-Science Killed Millions
China adopted the agricultural theories of Soviet pseudo-scientist Trofim Lysenko, who rejected genetics in favour of ideologically-driven claims. Three disastrous Lysenkoist methods were imposed across China: Deep ploughing — turning soil to depths of 1–2 metres, destroying its fertility by burying topsoil and exposing infertile subsoil. Close planting — planting seeds 10 times more densely than normal, causing plants to compete for light, water and nutrients and producing lower yields, not higher. Sparrow killing — part of the Four Pests Campaign. Each method reduced rather than increased output, but questioning them was ideological heresy.
Mao declared war on four pests: rats, flies, mosquitoes and sparrows. Citizens were mobilised to kill sparrows because they ate grain seeds. The campaign was devastatingly successful — sparrows were nearly eradicated across China. But sparrows also eat insects. Without their natural predator, locust and insect populations exploded, devouring crops across the country and dramatically worsening the famine. The ecological catastrophe was so severe that China was forced to import sparrows from the Soviet Union. The sparrow was eventually removed from the pest list — but the damage was irreversible.
The Great Famine — The Three Bitter Years (1959–1961)
The famine struck with full force in 1959 and peaked in 1960–1961. Its mechanism was devastatingly simple: the state took more grain than existed.
Local officials, terrified of punishment for failing to meet targets, reported inflated harvest figures — claiming yields three, five, even ten times higher than reality. Central government officials then requisitioned grain based on these false numbers, taking food that peasants needed to survive. Communes that had already delivered their actual harvest were forced to surrender their seed grain and emergency reserves. Peasants were left with nothing.
The result was mass starvation on an incomprehensible scale. Entire villages were wiped out. People ate bark, roots, wild grasses, leather, cotton padding, and earth. In the worst-affected provinces — Anhui, Sichuan, Gansu, Henan, Guizhou — there are documented cases of cannibalism, including parents eating deceased children. Bodies were left unburied because the living were too weak to dig graves.
Yet throughout the famine, China continued to export grain — shipping food abroad to maintain international prestige and repay Soviet loans while its own people starved. In 1959, China exported 4.2 million tonnes of grain — enough to feed approximately 16 million people for a year.
Why No One Spoke Up — Peng Dehuai & the Lushan Conference
Peng Dehuai was China’s Defence Minister, a hero of the Korean War, and one of the most respected military commanders in the PRC. At the Lushan Conference (July–August 1959), as reports of famine were emerging, Peng wrote a private letter to Mao — respectful in tone but devastating in content. He described the failures of the backyard steel campaign, the agricultural disasters, and the suffering of peasants. He called the Great Leap’s problems “left adventurism” and urged a correction of course.
Mao was furious. He interpreted Peng’s letter not as constructive criticism but as a personal attack on his authority. Mao circulated the letter to the full conference and demanded that delegates choose: Peng or me. Faced with this ultimatum, the party rallied behind Mao. Peng was denounced as the leader of an “anti-party clique,” stripped of all positions, placed under house arrest, and eventually tortured to death during the Cultural Revolution (1974).
Peng’s destruction sent a chilling message across the entire party and nation: criticism of Mao’s policies, no matter how accurate, would be punished with destruction. After Lushan, no one dared challenge the Great Leap — and the famine intensified as Mao doubled down, launching an “anti-rightist opportunism” campaign against anyone who questioned the programme.
The Numbers — How Many Died?
The death toll of the Great Leap Forward has been the subject of intense scholarly debate, complicated by the CCP’s suppression of data for decades. Here are the major estimates:
How It Ended — Retreat Without Reckoning
The Great Leap Forward was not officially declared a failure — it was quietly abandoned between 1960 and 1962 as the scale of catastrophe became undeniable even to Mao’s inner circle.
Liu Shaoqi (President) and Deng Xiaoping (General Secretary) quietly reversed the worst policies — restoring private farming plots, dissolving communal mess halls, reducing grain requisitions, and allowing peasant markets. These pragmatic corrections saved millions of lives and demonstrated that the crisis was policy-driven, not natural. Liu told Mao bluntly: “History will record this famine. Cannibalism will be recorded. You and I will be in that record.”
At this extraordinary enlarged party meeting, Mao made a partial self-criticism — accepting “some responsibility” for the Great Leap’s failures while blaming local cadres for implementation errors. Liu Shaoqi stated that the disaster was “30% natural, 70% man-made” — a formula that Mao found humiliating. Mao retreated from day-to-day governance but seethed at his diminished authority. This resentment would fuel the Cultural Revolution four years later — Mao’s revenge on the very people who had saved China from his policies.
Legacy — The Scars That Remain
Mao launched the Cultural Revolution (1966) in large part to punish those who had corrected his Great Leap mistakes. Liu Shaoqi was purged, tortured and died in prison. Deng Xiaoping was sent to a tractor factory. Peng Dehuai was tortured to death. The Great Leap’s aftermath directly produced China’s next catastrophe.
The Great Leap Forward is not openly discussed in China. It is mentioned in textbooks as a period of “errors” and “difficulties” but the full horror — the death toll, the cannibalism, the grain exports during famine — remains largely suppressed. Yang Jisheng’s Tombstone is banned in mainland China. For the CCP, fully confronting the Great Leap means confronting Mao — and confronting Mao means questioning the party’s founding legitimacy.
The Great Leap Forward offers lessons that transcend China: the danger of utopian ideology divorced from evidence; the catastrophic consequences of suppressing dissent and data; the human cost when political leaders face no accountability; and the fundamental importance of institutions — free press, independent judiciary, political opposition — that can check power before it destroys millions of lives.
