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Jetliner retraces 'Two Airlines Uprising' route as Hong Kong promotes patriotic education

By YUAN SHENGGAO | China Daily | Updated: 2025-11-13 00:00
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Representatives from the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and China National Aviation Corporation launch the C919 retracing "Two Airlines Uprising" route ceremony in Hong Kong on Friday. EDMOND TANG/CHINA DAILY

China's first homegrown narrow-body passenger jetliner, the C919, touched down at Hong Kong International Airport on Friday, launching a three-day commemoration of a 1949 triumphant patriotic labor movement amid the city's intensified efforts to foster stronger national pride among residents of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.

When Flight CA101 from Beijing arrived in Hong Kong, it was welcomed with a "water salute".

On Sunday, as Flight CA104, it completed the commemorative journey, flying from Hong Kong to Tianjin, covering the route flown during the "Uprising of the Two Airlines", which occurred at Hong Kong's former main air hub, Kai Tak Airport, on Nov 9, 1949.

At Friday's event, an association dedicated to the uprising in Hong Kong revealed that it is now spearheading a major initiative to build a monument commemorating the historic 1949 uprising at the original Kai Tak Airport site.

Seventy-six years ago, the daring operation was sparked when 12 aircraft from the then Hong Kong-based China National Aviation Corp and the Central Air Transport Corp deviated from their scheduled routes from Kai Tak and instead flew to Beijing and Tianjin, delivering the aircraft to the then new government under the leadership of the Communist Party of China.

The 12 aircraft that flew north — along with other Kuomintang planes left on the mainland and later restored by the two airlines' technical staff — became the seed fleet for China's civil aviation.

Deputy Chief Secretary for Administration Warner Cheuk Wing-hing lauded the commemorative flight initiative as "a model for a soft, heartfelt, and relatable approach to patriotic education", through which national identity can be nurtured.

Zhan Zhong, president of the China National Aviation Corp (Group) — one of the airlines involved in the uprising — remarked that the patriotic spirit and dedication to the nation displayed by those participating in the uprising form a vital part of the country's "Red spirit lineage", an "invaluable legacy" that must be passed down through the generations.

Starry Lee Wai-king, convenor of the SAR government's high-level working group on patriotic education, agreed. She stressed the need to help youth "recognize this currently largely overlooked historical period in Hong Kong's public discourse".

In February, the city's Civil Aviation Department opened a dedicated exhibition on the uprising at the Aviation Education Path, aiming to raise public awareness of this pivotal event and of the country's civil aviation advancements, thereby fostering a stronger sense of national pride in the city.

Since the uprising, the civil aviation industry in China has developed rapidly, and recently produced the domestically developed C919, which is on par with the likes of the US' Boeing 737 and the European Airbus A320 family.

Cheuk said that the C919 marks a "major milestone" and a "national technological triumph" in China's aviation advancement, recalling how the aircraft drew large crowds when it twice conducted a flyover at the city's iconic Victoria Harbor during its maiden flight outside the Chinese mainland — a moment he described as "unforgettable to this day".

Cheuk said that the SAR will leverage its well-established status as an international aviation hub and its institutional strengths stemming from the "one country, two systems" framework to help propel the C919 into the global market.

Pointing to Hong Kong's robust legal framework, sound financial system, and status as the largest offshore renminbi business center globally, Cheuk said he has confidence in the city's goal to establish a nexus for aircraft leasing, playing to the global expansion of Chinese airliners.

When announcing the plan to erect a monument to the uprising at the original Kai Tak Airport site in Kowloon — now known as the Kai Tak Cruise Terminal — Wang Jie, president of the Hong Kong Party of China National Aviation Corp and Central Air Transport Corp — an association dedicated to the uprising — said: "It's destined to become both an enduring landmark honoring the patriotic feat and a vital new base for patriotic education in Hong Kong."

According to Cui Xiaofeng, director of China National Aviation Holding Corp, an exhibition hall dedicated to the uprising in Tianjin has opened to the public.

"It's truly a tangible, evidence-based tribute to this pivotal patriotic move, and is expected to stand as a key patriotic education base in the region," he said.

The Air China C919 flight from Hong Kong receives a "water salute" ceremony at Tianjin Binhai International Airport on Sunday. CHINA DAILY

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