Tibetan authorities are beginning restoration work on former
residences and office buildings of some of the first Communist
Party members to be sent to Tibet in the early 1950s, which have been
turned into "revolutionary" tourist attractions.
"The government has worked out a list of the revolutionary sites
which need restoring and the second list is soon to be submitted,"
said an official with the Tibetan Regional CPC Committee.
The sites on the first list include the "General's Building",
the temporary residence of Zhang Guohua, the army commander of
theNo.18 Troop of the People's Liberation Army. It was built in
Bomi County, in Nyingchi Prefecture, as the military marched on
Lhasa in 1951.
It is joined on the list by the headquarters of the No. 18
Troop, the first PLA regiment to enter Tibet.
Also set for repairs is the former office building of Zhang
Jingwu, the only deputy to the central government in Tibet from the
liberation in 1951 to 1965 when the Tibet Autonomous Region was
established. The building is located in Lhasa and was opened to the
public in September 2006.
The first village party branch, opened in Kesong village, Nedong
county in December 1959, and put on show to tourists in Maylast
year, is another site to be restored.
"Those buildings have been poorly maintained in recent years and
some of them were damaged to some extent," said the official.
"By visiting the buildings, people can experience the hard times
that their forefathers had to pull through and the sacrifices they
made so that we can be inspired to treasure the peace and
prosperity we have today."
"Red tourism" attractions have grown in popularity in recent
years as more people seek to experience life in revolutionary
times.
The main red tourism attractions include the Jinggang Mountain
in eastern Jiangxi Province, known as the cradle of the
Chinese revolution, and Shaoshan village, Chairman Mao's
birthplace, in central Hunan Province.
(Xinhua News Agency January 6, 2008)