"Red tourism' flourishes in China ahead of party centennial

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, April 20, 2024


"Red tourism' flourishes in China ahead of party centennial
Visitors touch a large Chinese flag that descends above them during a show about the revolution at a Communist Party themed park recently unveiled by Dalian Wanda, a property developer, in Yan’an, China, June 19, 2021. New and improved destinations that celebrate Communism, where people can absorb the official version of the party’s history in China, are helping to increase the popularity of “red tourism” in the country, Gilles Sabrié/The New York Times.

by Sui-Lee Wee and Elsie Chen



NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- The group of tourists, dressed in replica Red Army costumes, stood in front of a red hammer-and-sickle billboard. With their right fists raised, they pledged their allegiance to the Chinese Communist Party.

“Be ready at all times to sacrifice my all for the party and the people, and never betray the party,” they recited, standing proudly next to a giant statue of Mao Zedong in the northern city of Yan’an, the base of the revolution until 1948.

Then, they shuffled off before another group came to do the same.

Mass swearing-in ceremonies aren’t typical group tour activities, but this is “red tourism” in China, where thousands of people flock to places like Yan’an to absorb the official version of the party’s history. At these sites, schoolchildren are told how the Red Army, later renamed the People’s Liberation Army, was created. Tourists gaze at an ensemble of chairs used by Xi Jinping, China’s leader, and other guests when they visited Mao’s home. Retirees take selfies with flower-adorned statues of Mao and Zhu De, the Red Army commander.

The 100th anniversary of the party’s founding July 1 has given Xi an opportune moment to reinforce the value of such pilgrimages. The centennial has also prompted China’s biggest property developers to cash in as they jazz up typically staid “red tourist” attractions, like dull exhibition halls and cave dwellings, and make them friendlier for the era of Instagram and TikTok.

This month, Dalian Wanda, a property developer, unveiled a Communist Party theme park in Yan’an. In it, mascots dressed in Red Army costumes parade down “Red Street,” a long shopping boulevard where visitors can take pictures and buy snacks and souvenirs.

“I think patriotic education is necessary, whether one is a child or an adult,” said Gao Wenwen, a 26-year-old teacher who recently visited the park. “Many people might find it boring, but if you combine patriotic education with what people love to do, which is eating, drinking and having fun, they will feel rewarded.”

The pilgrimages are in keeping with Xi’s call for Chinese citizens to learn from the party’s history. Even before he came to power in 2012, Xi said every “red tourist” attraction was equivalent to a “lively classroom that contains rich political wisdom and moral nourishment.”

Since then, Xi has harnessed the power of propaganda to put the party back into the people’s lives. Wary that the party could be losing its relevance for Chinese people — particularly the young — Xi has said that revolutionary education should start with babies, “so that the ‘red gene’ can penetrate into their blood and hearts, and guide the young people to establish a correct outlook on the world.”

With international borders still shut because of the coronavirus, Trip.com, a travel website that is popular in China, said this month that the number of bookings for “red tourism” attractions had more than doubled in the first half of 2021, compared to the same period a year ago. The company said it expected the numbers to climb ahead of the centennial celebration next week.

Most tours are carefully curated to show a sanitized version of the party’s history. On display: a museum in Shanghai where the first party congress was held in 1921 and Mao’s homes in the mountains of Jinggangshan and Yan’an. Not on display: any reminder of the bloody party purges in Yan’an, the millions of people who starved to death during the Great Leap Forward or the persecutions and deaths unleashed by the Cultural Revolution.

“The thing about China is that there’s only one origin story, and it’s not up for debate,” said Richard McGregor, a senior fellow at the Lowy Institute in Australia and an expert in Chinese politics. “History is at the core of propaganda in China. It’s vital for the party that people feel an emotional connection to that history, and you’re only going to get that on the ground.”




It was in Yan’an that top Communist leaders endured bombings by the Japanese during World War II. It also marked the near-endpoint of the Long March, when the Red Army retreated from the Nationalist troops, known as the Kuomintang.

Wang Biyao, 29, who works in a consulting company in the northern city of Xi’an, traveled to Yan’an recently with her parents, who are among the party’s 92 million members, to commemorate the centennial. Wang said she felt moved looking at the photographs of Red Army soldiers at the Yan’an Revolutionary Memorial Hall.

“Under such difficult conditions, the faces of these revolutionary ancestors looked so positive and optimistic,” she said. “It’s made me think that this is worth learning, that no matter how tough the conditions are, they can never beat the people’s fighting spirits.”

Wang plans to join the party soon.

In a recent show at the Wanda theme park, tourists got close to actors recreating the hardships that the Communists endured during their escape from the Nationalist forces. The show ended with a giant Chinese flag descending on the audience, who reached up excitedly to touch it.

China’s entrepreneurs have spoken proudly of the “revolutionary culture” in Yan’an. State media covered a June 2018 visit by tech titans Pony Ma, of Tencent, and Liu Qiangdong, of JD.com. Both men dressed in Red Army costumes for the occasion. Jack Ma, of Alibaba, has said he went to Yan’an to see how the party “rebuilt hope and confidence.”

Beyond fueling party devotion and lore, “red tourism” has also been good for business. In 2023, the industry’s revenues are expected to reach $153 billion, according to the Qianzhan Research Institute, a data consultancy. That represents an average annual compound growth rate of 14.1% from 2019 to 2023. Wanda said it was planning a second “red” attraction.

In Shanghai, where the site of the party’s first congress has been turned into a museum, a long line of people waited outside Thursday for a chance to see the newly expanded space. Tickets to the new wing of the museum, which opened June 3, are sold out through the centennial.

In Jinggangshan, a small eastern town known as the “cradle of the Chinese Revolution,” tourists and schoolchildren recently traipsed around in steel gray-blue military costumes, red-starred hats and army-green satchel bags. A tourist prayed in front of a shrine dedicated to Mao and his third wife, He Zizhen, in the late chairman’s old home.

Several visitors were employees of a small finance company who had traveled from Shanghai for a team-building trip, combining a day of “red tourism” with another day of meetings.

They had just finished lunch in a restaurant with a giant, beatific portrait of Mao overlooking them. One employee said she was very supportive of the party.

“We are very blessed to have good leaders,” she said.

Her boss was less enthusiastic. When asked what he thought about Mao, he declined to say.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

June 28, 2021

For the Medici, the last great picture show

'New type of early human' found in Israel

Egypt arrests former MP for smuggling antiquities

Colosseum's underground labyrinth restored to eerie splendour

"Red tourism' flourishes in China ahead of party centennial

Major show featuring more than 100 works by Alexander Calder and Pablo Picasso opens at the High Museum of Art

Dutch to check artwork stolen by Nazis for restitution

Galerie Barbara Thumm opens an exhibition of works by Sarah Entwistle

Rhona Hoffman Gallery opens its first solo exhibition of Egyptian artist Wassef Boutros-Ghali

Menstrual cups in museums? It's time.

MAGNUM 2020: A book by Magnum photographers

Fonts as puzzles: Can you solve them?

Jeanne Lamon, who led an early-music ensemble, dies at 71

A graceful place where Bhangra and Bollywood meet

Pandemic changed how musicians and investors see royalties

At Ailey's spring gala, different kinds of hope

New-York Historical Society creates a new division with a focus on New York City's marginalized communities

Artist jetsonorama creates new installation at Fort Garland Museum and Cultural Center

Heather Gaudio Fine Art opens Matthew Shlian's first solo exhibition at the gallery

Gilcrease Museum reveals concept design for new building

World Trade Center hosts art exhibit featuring 28 emerging and established artists

Alex Vardaxoglou opens an exhibition of works by contemporary British artist Mimi Hope

FOMU Fotomuseum of Antwerp exhibits work by ten promising phototographers

Library furniture & an important private collection coming up at Dreweatts

Tips and Best Practices for a Law Firm Website

Car Accident Injuries - When is a Passenger Liable?

What to Expect and How to Prepare for Divorce Mediation

Signs of High Testosterone In a Man

What to show To when one Website Design Company




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful