To reignite a nation, Xi carries Deng's torch

0 Comment(s)Print E-mail Xinhua, August 20, 2014
Adjust font size:

Since Xi Jinping made his first trip as China's leader to Shenzhen, symbolic hub of Deng Xiaoping's reforms, similarities between the two statesmen have grown, despite the years which separate them.

On the eve of the 110th anniversary of Deng's birth which falls on Friday, China is holding a series of activities to celebrate the late leader's life, and rethinks how to push forward reforms across a society with far more diverse and conflicting interests than 30-odd years ago.

THE FUTURE IS NOW

On Monday, Xi vowed to promote the reform with "real guns and real knives", a phrase that stresses determined and concrete steps to achieve a certain goal.

In 2014, the first year for China's grand reforms, there should be a good start for reforms of the following years, Xi made the remarks at a meeting of the central leading group for comprehensive deepening of the reforms headed by himself.

The opportunity to commemorate Deng is a chance to publicly demonstrate confidence in new breakthroughs, said professor Xie Chuntao of the Party School of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC).

Mao Zedong liberated China in 1949. Deng, who led the country from 1978 to 1992, engineered its economic boom. Jiang Zemin set the target of a socialist market economy and Hu Jintao raised a the concept of scientific development that stresses sustainable growth tied inextricably to social welfare.

To join their ranks, Xi and his team must now build a modern society, ruled by law. Today's challenges are no less pressing than those of pervious epochs.

Despite the magnitude of the Chinese economy, the country is confronted with an urban-rural divide and huge income disparity. Issues like health care, education, housing and the environment will not solve themselves.

It is directly from Deng that Xi inherited his "magic tool" -- reform and opening up -- which he described as "the only route that can adhere to and develop socialism with Chinese characteristics".

When Deng launched China's economic modernization more than three decades ago, the nation had lost its direction after the social and institutional cataclysm of the Cultural Revolution. Xi's first official trip after becoming leader of the CPC was to lay flowers at Deng's statue in Shenzhen.

At that time foreign media still questioned whether the new leadership was ready to make the necessary breakthroughs to solve China's problems. Nearly two years later, and China is fully immersed in perhaps the boldest set of economic and social reforms ever.

A "decisive" role for the market, equality between rural and urban residents, relaxation of the one-child policy, judicial independence and the closure of forced labor camps are just a few of the milestones already passed along the way. All were regarded as stormy seas that must be traversed before new engines could propel the huge ship onward.

The CPC's war against corruption and pursuit of major figures previously considered untouchable, including Zhou Yongkang, is a crucial part of the big picture

"Although we live in a different time and are faced with different problems, the legacy of Comrade Xiaoping remains relevant," said Wang Zhan, director of the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.

"Today, the key to solving problems still lies in reform, in emancipation of the mind and in seeking the truth through facts," he said.

LEGACY

For Nian Guangjiu, 77, Deng's policies changed not just his destiny but those of his children and grandchildren. Born into a rural family in east China's Anhui Province, Nian was able to sell sunflower seeds roasted with skills he developed by himself thanks to Deng's policies. Compared with seeds roasted by state-run factories, "Shazi" products were delicious and inexpensive, and quickly became more popular.

Nian's small business expanded till he employed more than 100 people. He made a million yuan in the 1980s, an enormous amount of money in China of that time, and all impossible without reform and opening up. In 2001, his entrepreneurial son Nian Qiang started promoting the brand to more than 2,000 stores and invested 170 million yuan in a production base.

"To develop the company, I had to reform the management style adopted by my father two decades before," Nian junior said. He is now planning to purchase an American company and crack a bigger chunk of the nut market.

In a speech in 1992 on his landmark "southern tour", Deng urged officials to be bold in reform and have the courage to experiment. "We must not act like women with bound feet," he famously said, echoed by Xi during the third plenum of the 18th CPC Central Committee when he said the CPC must win the tough battle of comprehensively deepening reforms. Xi frequently displays a similar practical attitude to that of Deng in grappling with thorny problems.

Follow China.org.cn on Twitter and Facebook to join the conversation.
1   2   Next  


Print E-mail Bookmark and Share

Go to Forum >>0 Comment(s)

No comments.

Add your comments...

  • User Name Required
  • Your Comment
  • Enter the words you see:    
    Racist, abusive and off-topic comments may be removed by the moderator.
Send your storiesGet more from China.org.cnMobileRSSNewsletter