Great Famine | Mao's
As production targets became impossible to meet, local officials feared being labeled "rightists" and began over-reporting their harvests to Beijing.
: Mao ordered the extermination of sparrows, believing they ate grain. Instead, the loss of sparrows led to a locust plague that devastated crops. The Collapse: A Man-Made Disaster Mao's Great Famine
The story of Mao’s Great Famine (1958–1962) is not just a tale of food shortage, but a harrowing chronicle of political dogma clashing with human survival. It is widely considered one of the deadliest man-made disasters in history, resulting in the deaths of an estimated . The Vision: The Great Leap Forward As production targets became impossible to meet, local
: Private farming was abolished, and villagers were forced into massive communes of up to 20,000 households. believing they ate grain. Instead