BEIJING, Oct. 15,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Editor's Note:
Xi Jinping Thought on Culture, formally put forward in
October 2023, encompasses several key
aspects, including strengthening the Party's leadership over public
communication and culture and promoting the creative transformation
and innovative development of China's fine traditional culture.
Theorists state that the establishment of the thought shows that
the Party's historical and cultural confidence have reached new
heights.
"If there were no 5,000 years of Chinese civilization, where
would the 'Chinese characteristics' come from? And if it were not
for these Chinese characteristics, how could we have today's
successful path of socialism with Chinese characteristics?" Xi once
said.
Since the introduction of Xi Jinping Thought on Culture,
"culture" has become a buzzword throughout China over the past year. In this issue,
Global Times reporters Xu Liuliu,
Chen Xi, Li Yuche and Ji Yuqiao explore various lively practices
throughout the country to study the Thought and turn it into
guidance for work and life.
For 17-year-old Cantonese opera singer Li Man-chit, the costume he was wearing was a
little too small. However, it was indeed a treasure that Li
cherishes very much.
Seven years ago, dressed in traditional clothing, he performed a
selection from the Cantonese opera classic The Purple Hairpin for
President Xi Jinping during his inspection of the Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region (SAR) in 2017.
Xi watched some selections of Cantonese opera performed by
children including Li. Xi said that traditional cultural forms
including Cantonese opera had new development opportunities after
Hong Kong's return to the
motherland.
The president said that he hoped the HKSAR can carry forward the
traditional culture, play its role as a platform facilitating the
Chinese and Western cultural exchanges, and promote cultural
exchange and cooperation with the mainland.
Cultivating successors
Even after seven years, Li still remembers Xi's
encouragement.
In his Thought, Xi set clear tasks for public communication and
culture, including cultivating generations of young people with
sound values and ethics, developing Chinese culture, and better
presenting China to the world.
Li has played various characters over the years, including Xu
Xian, Jia Baoyu, Zhou Yu and
Su Qin. "Cantonese opera has helped
me understand these characters better. The beauty of traditional
Chinese culture conveyed in the story also deeply attracted me," he
noted.
"I want to visit the Forbidden City in Beijing again," the young man told the Global
Times. "And the West Lake in Hangzhou as well. I want to see the Broken
Bridge where Xu Xian and White Snake met."
According to the Legend of the White Snake, White Snake
transformed into a beautiful lady and came across Xu Xian on the
Broken Bridge in the West Lake in order to requite Xu's favor of
saving its life in his previous life.
"In the process of learning Cantonese opera, I can always deeply
feel the breadth and depth of traditional Chinese culture from the
characters I play and the storylines I interpret," Li said.
Cantonese Opera was inscribed onto the UNESCO Representative
List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2009. It is
widely cherished in Cantonese-speaking parts of China, including Guangdong, Hong
Kong, and Macao, as a jewel
in the crown of Cantonese culture.
The Xiqu (Chinese opera) Center in the West Kowloon Cultural
District is the first landmark venue designed for Chinese operas in
Hong Kong. Its mission is to
preserve, promote and develop the art of traditional Chinese
theater, to nurture local forms of Cantonese Opera and to promote
other forms of Chinese opera. It is a major source of inspiration
for the Cantonese Opera community in Hong
Kong.
"Traditional opera has taken on new life," Naomi Chung, head of Chinese opera at the West
Kowloon Cultural District, told the Global Times. Over the past
years, she has participated in almost every activity organized by
the Xiqu Center to popularize Cantonese Opera.
"Extending the vitality of Cantonese Opera, passing on this
precious culture and art form from generation to generation, and
cultivating successors is a particularly important task," said
Chung.
Appeal of Chinese culture
Xi Jinping Thought on Culture bears immense importance in the
pursuit of a stronger China and
the realization of national rejuvenation. Rooted in China's 5,000 years of civilization, the
Thought places a profound emphasis on the preservation and
development of fine cultural traditions.
President Xi has called on the Chinese people to cherish, honor
and deepen their knowledge of the Chinese civilization and
strengthen cultural confidence.
Relics, as carriers of the national spirit, can offer insight
into appreciation of Chinese culture.
The numbers are telling. In 2023, over 1.29 billion visits were
made to museums across the country to see more than 40,000
exhibitions, a new high. In Beijing, long lines can be seen almost every
day in front of the National Museum of China (NMC), which has a large collection of
the country's top historical relics.
Gao Yinwen, a docent from the museum, told the Global Times that
the NMC has always been highly popular among both young and old
visitors from China and from
abroad.
"The biggest tourism rush usually happens during the summer
holiday. I think the volume per day can reach over 20,000
visitors," she said.
Since the summer holiday is a peak time as many students are
participating in study tours, the museum has set up special tour
guides for them.
Gao said one of the most popular exhibitions in the museum is
the permanent exhibition Ancient China.
The Ancient China exhibition was packed with tourists. Among the
crowd, a group of Thai visitors were observing the Chinese ancient
cultural relics as a guide patiently and passionately introduced
the history of each artifact in Thai.
Somchai Jiu, a 60-year-old guide
from Thailand, told the Global
Times this was his fourth time visiting the National Museum of
China. As an overseas Chinese
living in Thailand, Jiu said he
was a die-hard fan of Chinese history and has always been amazed by
the artifacts unearthed from the mysterious Sanxingdui Ruins.
The well-known Erlitou site, where more than 10,000 priceless
cultural relics have been unearthed, is the favorite of
Ge Haiyan, a 46-year-old female
visitor from Luoyang, Central
China's Henan Province.
Ge told the Global Times that she took her son and her father to
the NMC hoping to see more priceless cultural relics unearthed from
Erlitou since she and her family are from Luoyang and live near the
site.
As a Luoyang native, Ge said she has noticed that more people
are flooding into her hometown to visit the Luoyang Museum, which
has now implemented a reservation system due to a need to control
the number of visitors it receives daily.
The project to trace the origins of Chinese civilization, which
proves that China's history
includes more than 5,000 years of civilization, has not only helped
Chinese people to better understand the successive development of
the civilization but also summarized the unique characteristics of
Chinese civilization and its contributions to humanity through a
series of archaeological discoveries and academic research,
Wang Wei, chief expert of the
project and also researcher with the Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences, told the Global Times.
"The firm archaeological evidence regarding the origins of
Chinese civilization is important for enhancing the cultural
confidence of Chinese people, which is visually reflected by the
sharp rise in the number of visitors to museums nationwide," said
Wang.
Root of confidence
Xie Maosong, a senior researcher at the China Institute for
Innovation & Development Strategy and the director of the
Research Center of Chinese Civilization and Chinese Path, told the
Global Times that "cultural confidence" is not just a term that
stands on its own. Museums provide young people with a public
cultural space to acquire knowledge and find themselves. Here, they
gain cultural experiences that transcend time and space, as well as
emotional resonance. A strong sense of cultural belonging is
becoming one of the most prominent tags among today's youth.
The People's Republic of China
just celebrated its 75th founding anniversary on October 1, 2024. The country's achievements have
a historical and cultural logic behind them. The path of socialism
with Chinese characteristics that the Chinese people have embarked
on is deeply rooted in the more than 5,000-year-old civilization of
China, which is where people's
national confidence comes from.
As an experienced guide at China's UNESCO World Heritage site the
Maijishan Grottoes, Li Zekun will never forget Xi's visit to the
site in September.
The site in Tianshui, Gansu
Province, has 1,600 years of history. Li was one of the
staff members at the site who has planned the trip route for
President Xi.
In Tianshui, Xi's visit included a trip to the Maijishan
Grottoes to learn about the protection and preservation of local
cultural heritage.
Li told the Global Times that the No.43 and No.44 caves at the
grottoes were highlights of the trip. Both caves were created
during the Western Wei Dynasty (535-556). Dubbed as the "Mona Lisa
of the East," the buddha statue in Cave No.44 carries a distinctive
gentle and gracious smile, and embodies the refined art of Chinese
sculpture.
Having committed herself to her job for nine years ago, Li has
gained precious first-hand experience with China's diverse culture. She told the Global
Times that her mindset has gradually changed from an immature
graduate to a professional guide who "feels the responsibility to
promote Chinese heritage among the public."
"As a younger generation cultural worker, I have deep confidence
in my cultural roots. Although I know my abilities are limited, I
will still try my best," said Li.
Confidence in one's own culture, seen as a broader, deeper and
more fundamental expression of self-confidence, stands as the most
vital, profound and enduring wellspring of strength for the
progress of a country and its people.
In Xi's words: "Without full confidence in our culture, without
a rich and prosperous culture, the Chinese nation will not be able
to rejuvenate itself."
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SOURCE Global Times