China Briefing | From Mao and Xi to the Snows, does their legacy in Yan’an continue to define China’s future?
As the Chinese Communist Party gears up for its centenary on July 1, the city of Yan’an – where two of the country’s leaders lived – has become a sacred site
It is also where Americans Edgar and Helen Foster Snow interviewed Mao and brought his story to the West, a prospect that would be much more difficult today
A seller holds a portrait of Chinese President Xi Jinping next to a picture of former Chinese leader Mao Zedong at Dongfanghong Theatre in Yan’an. Photo: AFP
In the annals of the Chinese Communist Party – which is planning elaborate celebrations to mark its centenary on July 1 – nowhere is more sacred than Yan’an, a hilly city in the northwestern province of Shaanxi.
The party may pride itself on being atheist, but it has no qualms in describing Yan’an as a revolutionary holy land. Party members and ordinary people travel there like pilgrims, many dressed in the blue costumes of the Red Army.