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  • On this episode of China Uncensored,

  • To know the future, you must understand the past.

  • Hi, welcome to China Uncensored.

  • I'm your host Chris Chappell.

  • If you've been to any Chinese restaurant in the United States,

  • you've been served a fortune cookie.

  • A lovely little saying, some lucky numbers,

  • maybe it teaches you a word in Mandarin.

  • Yes, fortune cookies are a beloved Chinese restaurant tradition all around the world.

  • But why can't you find fortune cookies in China?

  • In fact, the ancient art of fortune cookies was nearly lost forever.

  • It was a dark time in China's history.

  • One that few people even know about.

  • So today, we bring you a China Uncensored exclusive investigation

  • into the secret history of the fortune cookie.

  • The origins of the fortune cookie stretch back to the roots of recorded Chinese history--the

  • Shang Dynasty.

  • In a grand ceremony to determine the fortune of the nation for the coming year,

  • the emperor would toss oracle bones into a bronze "ding" vessel that would then be lit.

  • A mystic would interpret the cracks that formed on the bones as predictions for the future.

  • Clearly, a feudalistic superstition.

  • That's why, during the Cultural Revolution,

  • when Mao Zedong began destroying the Four Olds

  • --a systematic campaign to wipe out traditional culture--

  • he targeted the fortune cookie.

  • "That was the official reason Mao gave for the

  • 'Smash Confucius, Smash the Cookie' campaign.

  • But there were actually much more sinister reasons behind it."

  • Dr. Iris Wolsey is one of the world's foremost experts on fortune cookies.

  • "After the Shang emperors,

  • it became a folk tradition.

  • People started putting their own spirit tablets with fortunes and charms written on them

  • in steamed rice cakes to celebrate the Lunar New Year.

  • Whoever ended up with the cake with the tablet would have good fortune for the coming year."

  • "Unless they broke their teeth."

  • "At a certain point, they switched to paper."

  • But for Mao Zedong,

  • fortune cookies were more than just feudal superstition.

  • They were also political.

  • During the late Ming Dynasty,

  • the making of fortune cookies became part of esoteric rituals,

  • dominated by secretive clans with occult practices

  • rooted in geomancy, fengshui, and fortune telling based on the Bagua and I-ching.

  • One of these clans had a charismatic leader

  • who convinced his followers that he had the will of Heaven,

  • and the will of heaven

  • was for him to become Emperor.

  • That led to the Le Zaohua, or Happy Good Luck, Uprising of 1629,

  • and later the 1633 Chang Fu, or Everlasting Fortune, Rebellion.

  • Which they most definitely were not.

  • Both rebellions failed,

  • but they greatly weakened the Ming Dynasty.

  • And they were partly responsible for the dynasty's collapse and conquest by the Manchus in 1644.

  • So it's no wonder that,

  • in the 20th century,

  • Mao Zedong was afraid the fortune cookie could threaten his rule.

  • At least that's the accepted scholarly interpretation.

  • But it turns out, there might be more to the story...

  • "No, no that's totally wrong.

  • That's not why Mao turned against fortune cookies at all."

  • I went to Manhattan's Chinatown to interview Jing Fong.

  • He's a seventh generation fortune cookie master from the southern Har Gow school.

  • His was one of only a handful of fortune cookie families

  • that left China before the Cultural Revolution,

  • and have carried on the tradition overseas.

  • "I've been making fortune cookies for nearly 40 years."

  • "You...don't look that old."

  • "My mother put a fortune cookie in my hand before I learned to walk."

  • His fortune cookie factory now supplies nearly one quarter of the Chinese restaurants in

  • the United States.

  • "Mao was a secret believer in the power of Fortune Cookies.

  • That's why during the Chinese Civil War,

  • when the Communists were fighting the Nationalists,

  • Mao had his troops use fortune cookies to deliver secret messages between Revolutionary cells.

  • He believed it was the fortune cookies that helped him win the war."

  • But according to these memoirs written by Mao's doctor,

  • Mao later became obsessed with fortune cookies.

  • Especially after several predictions proved eerily correct.

  • "You mean, the fortunes were accurate?"

  • "Yes.

  • One fortune Mao got read,

  • 'When metal is depleted, the earth will become weak.'

  • That's based on the Five Elements theory.

  • Earth generates Metal.

  • The five elements theory is a profound skill that Chinese people use to predict the future.

  • From this perspective,

  • Mao was using a skill that he didn't completely grasp."

  • According to Jing,

  • Mao thought this prediction meant that unless he increased steel production,

  • theearth,” or China, would be weak and vulnerable to foreign invasion.

  • So during the Great Leap forward,

  • he drove the entire population into steel production.

  • Even in rural areas, entire forests were leveled just to fuel the furnaces.

  • But it was all a waste.

  • They couldn't get the temperatures high enough and so the metal was brittle and useless.

  • In fact, that was one of the contributing factors to the Great Famine.

  • "'When metal is depleted,

  • the earth will become weak.'

  • 30 million people starved to death.

  • The Earth element correlates to the stomach."

  • "Whooooaaaa."

  • "There were other fortunes, too.

  • The entire reason Mao blocked Zhou Enlai from getting treatment for his cancer

  • is because of a fortune cookie predicting that if Mao died first,

  • Zhou would take over his legacy."

  • "And it'd be Zhou's face up in Tiananmen today.

  • Wow, so, I'm really impressed by the history of your art.

  • I was wondering,

  • can I have one of your fortune cookies?"

  • "Knowing the future can be a burden as much as it is a gift."

  • "I'll take my chances."

  • "'You will have the number one show on YouTube.'

  • Oh wow!!!

  • Oh. Wait there's more...

  • 'Visit Learn Chinese Now for the true meaning.'"

  • And thank you for watching.

  • What do you like most about fortune cookies?

  • And if you comment below

  • no spoilers please.

  • Once again I'm Chris Chappell. See you next time.

  • OK, so for the real story behind this episode,

  • here's my friend Ben Hedges from Learn Chinese Now.

  • Yu ren jie.

  • That's how you say April Fool's day in Chinese!

  • So when an elementary student

  • tells his teacher that the principal wants to see him in his office,

  • and he actually goes there to find it was fake...

  • Yu ren jie.

  • That was me who pulled that one.

  • When the BBC tells you spaghetti grows on trees...

  • The last two weeks of March

  • are an anxious time for the spaghetti farmer.

  • After picking,

  • the spaghetti is laid out to dry in the warm Alpine sun.

  • Yep,

  • it's yu ren jie.

  • Or when you see a video that says "traditional" Chinese Fortune Cookies

  • were suppressed by the Communists but preserved in America.

  • It must be

  • yu ren jie.

  • Sorry to break the illusion.

  • You guys really believed that right?

  • But Chris, the Communists did suppress a lot of stuff right?

  • I mean Chinese American food uses a lot of broccoli.

  • That is surely one of the cuisines that were suppressed in the cultural revolution right?

  • I wish the communists had suppressed broccoli.

  • It's the bane of a good General Tsao's Chicken.

  • Anyway, if you like humor and want to learn some useful words in Mandarin,

  • click here to go to Ben's channel,

  • Learn Chinese Now

  • where you can, you know,

  • learn Chinese now.

  • He uploads new awesome videos every week.

On this episode of China Uncensored,

Subtitles and vocabulary

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