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MUSEUM THAT CHARTS PARTY HISTORY BECOMES NEW BEIJING LANDMARK

General Secretary has highlighted importance of studying CPC's past

By YANG WANLI | China Daily | Updated: 2021-10-01 00:00
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As this year marks the centenary of the Communist Party of China, the Museum of the CPC-a new landmark in northern Beijing-is set to be a hot destination during the weeklong National Day holiday.

As a site devoted to the permanent and comprehensive exhibition of the Party's history, it shows how the CPC has united and led the Chinese people in blazing new paths and demonstrates the fine spirit and precious experience it has drawn from within.

In the three months since its public debut on June 19, the museum has attracted about 100,000 visitors from various sectors, including government agencies, enterprises and colleges.

On June 18, President Xi Jinping, who is also general secretary of the CPC Central Committee, visited an exhibition at the museum with the theme "staying true to the founding mission".

During the visit, Xi, who is also the chairman of the Central Military Commission, said the Party's history is the most vivid and convincing textbook.

"The past 100 years have seen the CPC unswervingly fulfilling its original aspiration and founding mission, working hard to lay a foundation for its great cause, and making glorious achievements and charting a course for the future," he said.

Xi stressed that it is necessary to study and review the Party's history, carry forward its valuable experience, bear in mind the course of its struggles, shoulder the historic mission, and draw strength from its history to forge ahead.

The exhibition has four parts: the founding of the CPC and the victory of the New Democratic Revolution; the founding of the People's Republic of China and the socialist revolution and development; reform and opening-up, and the start of socialism with Chinese characteristics; and carrying forward socialism with Chinese characteristics into a new era, building a moderately prosperous society in all respects, and embarking on a new journey toward fully building a modern socialist country.

Li Fengxian, a 72-year-old retired accountant who lives in north Beijing, visited the exhibition recently. She said she also visited the museum site regularly before the completion of construction.

"I was born the same year as New China was founded," she said. "I have witnessed how the country has grown stronger and stronger under the leadership of the Party. I had to go and visit the museum at the first opportunity."

Having experienced the country's development under the leadership of the Party, Li said her generation felt deeply that today's happy life and prosperous society hadn't come easily.

"It's a miracle that a country that could hardly even feed all the people decades ago has now become the second-largest economy in the world," Li said. "It is the Party that leads us to the bright future."

At the museum, more than 2,600 pictures and more than 3,500 pieces or sets of exhibits reflect the extraordinary 100-year journey of the CPC.

Among the items are the manuscript of Karl Marx's notes from Brussels, and scenes depicting the first CPC National Congress and the famous Zunyi Conference during the epic Long March (1934-35).

"Seeing the notes is like having a conversation with Karl Marx by traveling back in history," said Li Zongyuan, deputy curator of the museum. "Visitors will feel a close connection with the great people and gain a strong awareness of our responsibility to better practice Marxism in China with our own characteristics."

Also on display are boards showing the establishment of revolutionary bases, footage from the founding ceremony of the People's Republic of China, and weapons used during the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea (1950-53).

Charts relating to poverty alleviation and models of the Huoshenshan and Leishenshan hospitals built in Wuhan, Hubei province, to fight the COVID-19 epidemic last year are also on display.

Foreign visitors have also been impressed. Konstantin Shepin, a Russian journalist who has been working in China for nearly two decades, visited the museum recently. He said the visit was a lively class to help understand the Party and its history.

"I was cheered up and more confident about the future of China after viewing the exhibition displaying the historical, theoretical and social logic of China's development in the past 100 years," he said, adding that it was wrong for many foreign media outlets to view China's development and the leadership of the Party in isolation.

"There is a popular song among Chinese people, Without the Communist Party, There Would Be No New China. It shows that the Party plays a crucial role in China's achievements. What is exhibited here is the best proof and more people from abroad should learn about it," he said.

In the museum's post office, Shepin bought a commemorative envelope with the postal code 100100.

"The number marked both the Party's 100th anniversary and also its future targets," he said. "I brought one as a gift to commemorate the Party's birthday."

The CPC was founded in 1921, taking up the mission of "seeking happiness for the Chinese people and rejuvenation for the Chinese nation".

With just over 50 members at the time of its founding, the CPC is today the world's largest governing party, with more than 95 million members, and leads a country of more than 1.4 billion people.

Song Fei, a high school student in Beijing, made an online appointment to visit the museum as soon as she saw the notice announcing its imminent opening. Both her parents are Party members.

"For our generation, which has grown up in a peaceful time, it is a bit difficult to be aware of how our happy life came about unless we learn the history," she said. "Without a deep knowledge of the past, it is hard for people today to imagine how many difficulties were faced by heroes of that time to found the CPC."

After seeing the exhibition, Song said she was impressed by the early days of the Party.

"Facing so many challenges and even threats to their lives, the Party members could still bear their belief and mission in mind and sacrificed themselves for the country and its people. It's so touching," she said.

"Seeing how the CPC's leadership has made our country increasingly prosperous, I am even keener to join the Party and make my own contribution. The Party's centenary is an opportunity to commemorate the martyrs. We must pass on their spirit, generation after generation."

 

Foreign diplomats and representatives visit the Museum of the Communist Party of China in June. FENG YONGBIN/CHINA DAILY

 

 

Visitors at the museum in July. PENG ZIYANG/XINHUA

 

 

People read about the early history of communism during a visit to the museum in July. CHEN XIAOGEN/FOR CHINA DAILY

 

 

Visitors look at an exhibit in the museum in July. CHEN XIAOGEN/FOR CHINA DAILY

 

 

The simple but grand museum building, in a photo taken in June. CHEN XIAOGEN/FOR CHINA DAILY

 

 

 

 

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