Communism is 'beyond' them, but Chinese still for the party
BEIJING — Marx might struggle to recognise his heirs among the billionaires, skyscrapers and stock exchanges of modern China.
But as the country's ruling Communist Party meets for its twice-a-decade congress this week, it boasts an 89 million-strong membership that still attracts people motivated by ideology—and self-interest.
"When I was younger, in the 1960s, we were told in school that being in the party signified being someone good," 53-year-old Liu Shimin, a former employee at a stateowned enterprise and long-standing party member, told AFP.
"At the time, you would join it to stand up for socialism. Today, the ideological side of it is a little beyond me. Communism is so vague, no one can say if it will come true," he said.
The Chinese Communist Party was clandestinely founded in 1921 by about a dozen revolutionaries in Shanghai. Since coming to power in 1949, it has survived near-destruction during the decade of the Cultural Revolution—which regime founder Mao Zedong launched against his own cadres—and sweeping pro-market economic reforms.
Throughout, Chinese people have continued to join the CCP in great numbers, with today's membership making it one of the largest political organisations in the world, alongside India's Bharatiya Janata Party.
The Communist Party's membership comprises 6.5 percent of China's population of almost 1.4 billion people. But young recruits do not hide their intentions. They join the party not only to participate in national development, but also out of their own self-interest.
"At first, I never imagined joining the CCP. I only started thinking about it after university, when I had to find a job," said Xiao Wei, a 30-year-old Beijinger. He is employed by the CCP in a residential area. Her work includes relaying instructions; organising public campaigns on fire safety, the environment and health matters; and putting party slogans on display.
Not just anyone can join: Candidates must apply or be recommended, most often by a university professor or their company's party cell. Then, a long selection process begins: courses, dissertations, exams, interviews and a probationary period.
At the end, the CCP chooses candidates based on their high education level, political reliability, or ability to bring something extra to the table. Some are flattered to have received an invitation to join – recognition that they belong to the "elite."
"Today, some join the party to enter the civil service, to have a better job or to gain respectability. There's no doubt about it," prominent pundit Sima Nan told AFP in front of a portrait of Mao hung in his spacious Beijing apartment.