Red tourism and relics lift people out of poverty

The opening of a recreational park on the site of a former revolutionary base has raised local living standards. Shadow Li and Li Bingcun report from Huichang, Jiangxi.

By Shadow Li and Li Bingcun | China Daily | Updated: 2021-09-06 09:27
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A tourist visits the relic of a Communist Party of China base-the Yuegan provincial committee of the CPC, a key site in the park, in May. SHADOW LI/CHINA DAILY

Road out of poverty

In 2014, Zou and his father were classified as impoverished. Their old home, shabby and almost dilapidated, was close to a well-known relic of a Communist Party of China base in Jiangxi-the Yuegan provincial committee of the CPC.

The turning point came in 2016, when the local authority compensated Zou and his father after they were relocated to make way for Fengjingduhao Park, a planned tourist attraction built around the cultural relic that was aimed at boosting local tourism. He and his father were relocated to his current house, more than twice the size of the original residence, which would raise their living standards.

The subsidy for relocation was a ray of sunshine that gave Zou hope of getting out of the quagmire he had been stuck in for years.

Also that year, the local authorities helped him secure an interest-free loan of 20,000 yuan.

Using the money as a startup fund, Zou began a fish farming business. As he was starting from scratch, the local authorities provided training on how to tend to his fish in rivers and the use of e-commerce platforms to promote sales.

For the first few years, Zou had a tough time because raising fish in a river is different from raising them in ponds or lakes because the running water and the current make it more difficult technically, he said. To add to his woes, his father died in 2019, just a few days before Spring Festival. With the new house still under construction and his old home being renovated by the park authorities, Zou was forced to live alone in a tin shelter he had built on the riverside to raise fish.

This time, though, he didn't give in. Zou knew that it was his last chance and that he had reached a point of no return in his life. His perseverance paid off eventually.

He now earns 10,000 yuan ($1,540) a year by fish farming, and he has set his sights on eventually moving his fish farming business away from the river into local ponds in line with new regulations related to environmental protection.

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