Special report: 70th anniversary of Long
March
by Xinhua writer Ni Siyi
BEIJING, Oct. 21 (Xinhua) -- As China gears up for
Sunday's gala in Beijing to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the Red Army's
successful strategic retreat, the Long March, the few remaining survivors of the
odyssey might reflect with sadness rather than with the joy shared by their
offspring.
"My father never talked to me about his experiences
during the Long March when I was a kid, even when I kept on asking," said Liu
Taihang, now in his 70s, whose father was late Marshal Liu Bocheng, one of the
founders of the People's Liberation Army.
"He said the mere mention of the Long March reminded
him of the great losses of his soldiers, the fathers who lost their sons and the
women who became widows," Liu said.
The Communist Red Army was on the brink of complete
annihilation by Chiang Kai-Shek's troops in Jiangxi Province in October 1934.
Poorly equipped and ill-fed, but with little to lose, the Red Army's
80,000-strong First Division re-grouped after several unsuccessful battles and
began its year-long march north in October 1934.
By the time they reached their destination in Shaanxi
Province in northwest China, 12,500 kilometers after their first steps, the
First Division arrived with just 7,000 members, after suffering tens of
thousands of casualties, through starvation, fatigue, sickness and skirmishes.
"FLESH-AND-BLOOD"
RELATIONS
In an attempt to understand what really happened to
their fathers, a group of about 30 descendants of Red Army veterans, including
Liu Taihang, trekked the Long March route earlier this year.
Liu was surprised to find that they were greeted with
identical song and dance performances staged for the original Long Marchers.
Only this time, the descendants of the villagers of 70 years ago took to the
stage.
"The villagers, who are still poor, were told by
their fathers and grandparents that the Red Army soldiers had treated them well,
instead of robbing and molesting them like the warlords at the time," Liu said.
This self-discipline, promoted by late Communist
Party of China(CPC) Chairman Mao Zedong, earned the Red Army a high reputation
among the peasants and inspired villagers to join the march.
LONG MARCH
LEGACIES
During a visit to an exhibition on the Long March
which opened in Beijing this week, President Hu Jintao said, "The spirit of the
Long March belongs to the Chinese people and should be carried forward to build
a modern and harmonious socialist country."
According to Party historians, the CPC survived the
two-year ordeal of the Long March thanks to the dedication of its participants,
the down-to-earth work ethic of the CPC leadership and, most importantly, the
resolute support from the people.
The young men and women, who abandoned families and
farms, fortified the resolve of the leadership, which in turn infused the ranks
with courage and led to the final victory of the Red Army. There is no dispute
that without the people's support, the Red Army and the CPC would have been
destroyed by the better equipped and larger Chiang Kai-Shek army.
Over the past 70 years, the CPC has led China to
victory over Japanese invaders, established New China in 1949 and carried out
nearly 30 years of reform and opening up.
According to Party scholars, even at a time of rapid
economic development, the Long March spirit is still relevant to the Party's
well-being and nation's development since, in certain places, relations between
the Party and the people have weakened and official corruption has chipped away
at the Party's reputation.
In its latest move to address these issues, the CPC
issued policy guidelines this week to promote social harmony by narrowing the
wealth divide and wiping out corruption. "We should remain sober-minded even in
a tranquil time," said the Party document.
By keeping the same sense of impending danger as was
prevalent during the Long March, the Party can make headway with its policies.
And even if Red Army veterans were reluctant to talk about their past, the Long
March legacy should never be forgotten by the people.