Mao's Great Famine -

As production targets became impossible to meet, local officials feared being labeled "rightists" and began over-reporting their harvests to Beijing.

: Peasants were ordered to melt down their cooking pots, tools, and doorknobs in crude furnaces to produce steel. This resulted in useless, low-quality pig iron and left farmers with no tools to till the land. Mao's Great Famine

: Private farming was abolished, and villagers were forced into massive communes of up to 20,000 households. As production targets became impossible to meet, local

In 1958, Chairman Mao Zedong launched the , an ambitious plan to rapidly transform China from an agrarian economy into a communist industrial superpower. The goal was to surpass the industrial output of Great Britain within 15 years. To achieve this, the state implemented radical changes: : Private farming was abolished, and villagers were

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

: 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