MAO's WARNING TO CADRES
Mao Zedong, on 5th January 1930, wrote an essay titled "A single spark can start a prairie fire to criticise cadres for not creating rural revolutionary base areas.
“A single spark can start a prairie fire” is an old Chinese saying. It was later made famous worldwide by Mao Zedong’s 5th January 1930 political essay of the same title. Modern explanations trace the concept to the ancient classic Book of Documents and note its later use by Ming‑dynasty statesman Zhang Juzheng, who used the wording to warn that small causes can trigger large social upheavals. Mao's essay, arguing that small, scattered revolutionary forces in rural China could grow into a nationwide revolutionary “prairie fire.” Mao used it as a metaphor to counter pessimism in the Communist Party by stressing that weak revolutionary forces could inevitably expand.
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