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JINAN, Aug. 28 (Xinhuanet) -- Qufu, the birthplace of China's preeminent
philosopher Confucius, plans to restore its ancient city walls and streets ahead
of the philosopher's 2556th birthday anniversary, which falls on September 28.
"We hope to make these things look like what they were thousands of years
ago, and more visitors may come to celebrate the anniversary," said Kong
Xiangjin, director of the Qufu tourismadministration.
About 800 meters of stone slabs will be laid on both sides of the original
entrance of the ancient city compound, resembling theancient streets of the
city, and a park will be established along the city moat, with archaic lamp
poles, pagodas and fences.
Kong said thousands of Confucius believers are expected to comethis year,
including from Hong Kong, the Republic of Korea, Malaysia, and the United
States.
Qufu city used to have several inner cities, and the city wall currently
under renovation, the first ever built of bricks in Qufu, was erected in 1513 to
safeguard the Confucius Temple.
Last year, the local government restored a 5,300-meter wall built in the
Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and torn down in 1970s in the city's urbanization.
The government plans to promote sightseeing streets around the compound,
shopping streets for ancient paintings and calligraphy this year to further
boost tourism, Kong said. A praying ceremony will be held on every Saturday
morning starting next month.
Chinese feudal rulers enshrined Confucianism as the orthodox school of
thought in the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-24 AD). It also spread far into east
and south Asia far back in history, where its influence can still be felt.
Confucius' thought was once almost banished from mainstream culture during the troublesome Cultural Revolution in the 1960s. But it staged a comeback soon after that political chaos, remaining an unshakable school of thought in Chinese people's everyday life. Enditem |