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Local retirees sing Red Army revolutionary songs in Zunyi in southwestern China’s Guizhou province on April 12, 2021. The group, aged from their late 50s to over 80, gather regularly to sing to tourists visiting the nearby Zunyi Memorial Museum. Photo: AP

China’s Communist Party pilgrims mark centenary in wave of Red tourism at historic sites

  • The cradle of the Chinese revolution is drawing tourists and party faithful, boosted by 2021 party celebrations and China’s post-pandemic rebound
  • Party leaders, historians and educators are pushing to reach young people, to boost their interest in modern Chinese history
Xi Jinping
On the 100th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party, tourists are flocking to historic sites and making pilgrimages to party landmarks.

On a street where the Red Army once roamed, a group of retirees in historic pastel-blue army uniforms belts out tunes made famous through countless films, television shows and other forms of propaganda.

Historic locations in Jiangxi and Guizhou provinces – the sites of revolutionary leader Mao Zedong’s early battles, his escape from Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist forces in the Long March and the cementing of his leadership in Zunyi – are experiencing an influx of tourists this year as post-pandemic travel returns to China.

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In Guizhou, tourism in the first quarter of 2021 had already recovered to 2019 levels, local official Lu Yongzheng said. The province, among China’s top tourist destinations, received millions of tourists who brought in billions of dollars in revenue.

On a recent government-organised tour, descendants of the Red Army told stories of their forefathers at the Zunyi Memorial Museum, which houses artefacts from the period and hologram recreations of a key meeting at which Mao established his dominance.

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Kong Xia grew up listening to stories of hardship and toil and the arduous Long March, a military retreat in which her grandfather, Kong Xianquan, took part.

In the epic journey, the Communists travelled over treacherous terrain to eventually establish their World War II capital in the dry northwestern province of Shaanxi, from which they would expand and eventually triumph over their Nationalist rivals in 1949.

On the 100th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party, tourists in China are flocking to historic sites and making pilgrimages to party landmarks. Photo: AP

Kong Xia describes her grandfather’s life to pass down stories of the Communist Party’s humble beginnings, especially to younger generations whom she worries may be losing interest in history.

“They should understand [the history] but may not be interested” Kong said. “I think this kind of suffering will inspire us to cherish our happy and peaceful lives today and do our jobs well.”

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In 2016, the Zunyi museum launched a travelling exhibit that tours colleges and universities throughout China. And to spur interest among younger visitors, it trained more than 100 “young curators” in primary or middle school to tell fellow students about the period of history.

“They aroused a very good response, especially among the visitors of their age,” said the museum’s deputy curator, Zhang Xiaoming.

Souvenirs of the late Communist leader Mao Zedong are sold at a gift shop at the Jinggangshan Revolution Museum in Jinggangshan in southeastern China’s Jiangxi province. Photo: AP

Crowds of tourists also visit the mountain ranges of Jinggangshan in eastern Jiangxi province, known as the “cradle of the Chinese Revolution”, where Mao fought his early battles and the revolutionary army was formed.

The rise in tourism is also spurred by a campaign announced by President Xi Jinping in February to educate the Communist Party’s 91 million-plus members on its history and ideology.

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A chronology of the People’s Republic of China in the past seven decades

A chronology of the People’s Republic of China in the past seven decades

True to the campaign, Bi Qiumei, who is in her early 70s, says she came to the museum “to pay homage to the revolutionary martyrs and Mao Zedong, and to see how China’s revolution succeeded”. She has been a party member since 1983.

“We are very excited,” she chuckles, with old friends and classmates in tow.

Villages around the historic sites are anticipating an influx of tourists marking the centennial.

Enveloped by the mountain ranges is Mayuan, an idyllic village of just over 1,000 people. Flowers adorn newly paved concrete roads lined with rows of guest houses in an area where Mao’s forces once trained for guerilla warfare.

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Government poverty alleviation programmes and the arrival of tourists prompted one villager, Xie Xiaomin, to return to Mayuan to build his own guest house in 2017.

Now, the guest house has over 30 rooms with 80 beds. Each room costs around 100 RMB (US$15) per night.

The village itself, Xie says, can now host up to 1,000 guests.

“I’m full of confidence about this year” because of the centennial, Xie said.

A tourist takes photos of a painting depicting the late Communist leader Mao Zedong, at the Jinggangshan Revolution Museum. Photo: AP

Xie’s grandfather, Yuan Wencai, helped establish a revolutionary base in the village and fought with Mao’s army.

Photographs of his grandfather in his youth and of his grandmother posing with Mao and revolutionary general Zhu De decorate the guest house’s entranceway.

Such personal stories will become part of the tourists’ Mayuan experience.

“I would like to speak as long as there’s a need and they’re willing to listen to me,” Xie said.

Events are being scheduled nationwide to mark the anniversary, including exhibitions, films, plays, concerts and awards for long-serving party members. A ceremony is also expected on July 1, the day the nation marks the centennial, with a speech by President Xi Jinping.

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