China Daily (Hong Kong)

Youth League to play vanguard role

People from different sectors of society say they were inspired by Xi’s speech

- By ZHANG YI and ZOU SHUO Contact the writers at zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s young people, united by the Communist Youth League of China, will continue to play a vanguard role in national rejuvenati­on in the new era, people from different sectors said after hearing President Xi Jinping’s speech marking the 100th anniversar­y of the Youth League.

Speaking at a ceremony in Beijing on Tuesday, Xi, who is also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, hailed the contributi­ons made by Youth League members over the past century.

Founded in 1922, the CYLC acts as a pioneer of China’s youth movement, a faithful assistant of the Party and its reliable reserve. It has more than 73.7 million members nationwide aged 14 to 28, and about 43.8 million of its members are students, official data showed.

In his speech, Xi also put forward a new vision for the CYLC, calling on the youth movement to better unite, organize and serve young people, and encouragin­g the nation’s youth to dedicate their wisdom and efforts to national rejuvenati­on.

Wu Qing, head of the Institute of Communist Youth League Work Theory, said he was impressed by the fact that the word “youth” was mentioned more than 30 times in Xi’s speech.

Looking back at the century-old history of the Youth League, Wu said it has been following the Party by organizing and mobilizing young people to become the vanguard force in national rejuvenati­on.

In the new era, young people in China should continue to make achievemen­ts under the leadership of the Party and contribute their youthful strength under the mobilizati­on of the Youth League, he said.

As a mass organizati­on for the Party’s youth work, the Youth League should better serve young people and act as a “bridge” and a “bond” connecting the Party with young people, Wu said, adding that it should also build itself into a strong youth political organizati­on of the Party.

Jin Li, president of Fudan University in Shanghai, said that Xi’s speech showed that the Party and the nation attach great importance to youth work, adding that he felt deeply inspired by it.

“The pursuit of progress is the most valuable trait of young people, which is also the ardent expectatio­n of the Party and the people,” he said, adding that the university will strive to cultivate young talent with patriotic ideals, humanistic feelings, a scientific spirit, profession­alism and an internatio­nal outlook.

Wei Qian, secretary of the CYLC Committee of the School of Chemistry at Beihang University in Beijing, said, “We should always keep young people in mind and become a ‘bridge’ linking the Party with them”, and was impressed by the work the university’s students had done in poverty alleviatio­n, epidemic prevention and control, and volunteer services for the Beijing 2022 Winter Games.

Zeng Ziqing, an undergradu­ate student at Tsinghua University and the CYLC committee secretary of his class, said he felt very fortunate and excited to attend the ceremony on Tuesday at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing to hear Xi’s speech.

As someone from a mountainou­s village in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, he said that the Youth League helped him quickly become accustomed to life at the university and it has also helped him constantly pursue selfdevelo­pment.

“In the future, I will continue to assist the developmen­t of my classmates, help anyone in need, and promote the developmen­t and progress of the Youth League through organizing various activities,” he said.

Liu Lijia, a senior undergradu­ate student at Beijing Normal University, said that as a Youth League member and a probationa­ry member of the CPC, she is always grateful to the Party and the Youth League for assisting her developmen­t.

As an expression of her determinat­ion to devote her future career to the Party and the nation, she said that she had signed up to become a volunteer teacher in the country’s western regions.

“I want to use what I have learned at the university, go to places where I am needed the most, and devote myself to bridging the educationa­l gap between different regions,” Liu said.

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