In 1976, the annual day of remembrance for the dead, Qingming Festival, fell on April 4. In Beijing, preparations had begun weeks in advance. In courtyards across the city, young and old squatted side by side, weaving white wreaths—white being the color of grief. “Do not go to Tiananmen Square!” the party leadership ordered. “Honoring the dead is a tradition of the past.”
The first mourners had already made their way to the square in March. Party newspapers urged them to turn back, but they were not heeded. On April 2, the British diplomat Roger Garside estimated the crowd at ten thousand. The following day, even more arrived. Most walked in silence; others sang “The Internationale” or China’s national anthem. On the silk ribbons attached to their wreaths, they had written their final greetings to Zhou Enlai, the country’s recently deceased prime minister.