New venue showcases Party's foundation

By CAO CHEN in Shanghai | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2021-06-11 07:57
Share
Share - WeChat
Visitors line up for admission to the new memorial site on Sunday. LIU YING/XINHUA

Floral displays

Xia Bing, deputy Party secretary at Arcplus Group, a Shanghai engineering company that built the new memorial, said it also features a shikumen frontage. The venue is located across the street from the original memorial site.

To improve the experience for visitors, the new memorial boasts displays of peonies, which symbolize prosperity and good fortune, and azaleas, which represents the "ideals and hopes of revolutionaries" in China.

Pan Jianfeng, director of landscaping management at the Huangpu district landscaping institute, said this line of thought originates from Azalea, the theme song to the classic children's film Sparkling Red Star, which was produced by Bayi Film Studio and premiered in 1974.

The movie tells the story of a Chinese teenager during the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression (1931-45).

A gift shop at the new memorial offers 200 types of creative products with a Party theme and with the venue's copyright, which was registered in April.

Zhu Beiliang, from the site's business development department, said the products include stationery, food, handicrafts, textiles and souvenirs.

Zhang Yuhan, a researcher at the memorial, said that above all, the new venue aims to offer a better experience for visitors to learn about the Party's history.

Two retired staff members from the old venue view the exhibition at the new site. CHINA DAILY

To prepare for its permanent exhibition, Epoch-Making Beginnings: Founding of the Communist Party of China, the venue searched for and collected revolutionary relics nationwide, including items from Party members' former residences and memorials, Zhang said.

For example, the display includes replicas of a brown scarf and a white shirt, the originals of which belonged to Chen Tanqiu, a Party member from Wuhan Martyrs Memorial Hall in Hubei province, who died age 47. A whistle used by Shanghai workers during three armed uprisings in the late 1920s is also on display.

Some exhibits have been donated by the public, including a logbook recording the duties of the Chinese military before Shanghai's liberation in May, 1949, and policies introduced after the liberation. The logbook was donated this year by Shanghai resident Liu Shaling.

Liu, who served from 1992 to 2004 as deputy Party secretary at the Memorial for the Site of the First National Congress of the Communist Party of China, said: "I found the logbook when I was sorting out my late parents' belongings. I hope it will be useful in instructing future generations about the Party's revolutionary spirit and in understanding the country's history."

Zhou Zheng, deputy director at the new memorial, said some exhibits, such as documents in Russian, Japanese and English relating to the founding of the Party, had been collected overseas in recent years.

Xu Kaifu, 72, a Shanghai resident, was the first person to visit the new venue on its opening day. He has been going to the site of the CPC's First National Congress since 1971, but has never become bored.

A visitor photographs the front cover of The Communist Manifesto. GAO ERQIANG/CHINA DAILY

He said he has great hopes for the new memorial, especially as it boasts all 72 translated versions of The Communist Manifesto.

"It's the first time I have seen such a complete set, paired with the story of how Party members translated, edited and protected this masterpiece during wartime," said Xu. He added that he was impressed by the number of historical relics on display, compared with those at the original memorial.

The exhibition also includes medals commemorating the 1911 Revolution, which ended China's last imperial dynasty, fliers from the May Fourth Movement of 1919, and a toolkit used by the martyr Li Bai, 39, who died in 1949 during the fight to liberate the country.

Zhang said,"This is an unprecedented display of valuable cultural relics from the Party's founding period. Visitors will gain an understanding of the Party's beginnings and also learn about why it was established in Shanghai."

|<< Previous 1 2 3   
Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US