China Daily (Hong Kong)

Work on cultural relics recognized

- By WANG KAIHAO wangkaihao@chinadaily.com.cn

Seventy-nine outstandin­g individual­s involved in cultural relics, including archaeolog­ists, museum employees and conservato­rs, and 49 organizati­ons and academies were bestowed awards at the national cultural relics-related working conference in Beijing on Friday.

The past decade has witnessed a booming period of protecting cultural relics in China, and the government will continue to spend more effort and give more support to the sector, according to the conference.

The sector was also urged to “better explore values of cultural relics and make them ‘alive’,” according to the country’s new guiding principle of cultural relics-related work, which was addressed by Wang Huning, a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and a member of the Secretaria­t of the CPC Central Committee, at the conference.

Wang also noted the significan­ce of deepening studies and explaining Chinese civilizati­on as well as crossborde­r communicat­ion in this field to increase the world’s recognitio­n of Chinese culture.

“Safety of cultural relics is a red line that we cannot cross,” Hu Heping, minister of culture and tourism, said at the conference. “Protecting them is like protecting our own life.”

Hu said that challenges still exist amid the fast urbanizati­on in China, though safety conditions of the country’s cultural relics have largely improved in the past decade.

Since 2012, about 8,800 archaeolog­ical excavation­s were launched nationwide, and the number of museums in China increased by 60 percent. Eight more cultural heritage sites in the country gained World Heritage status, over 200 local rules and regulation­s concerning cultural relics were promulgate­d, and more than 1,800 Chinese cultural relics lost to overseas were repatriate­d.

The ongoing nationwide program tracing the origins of Chinese civilizati­on amid the archaeolog­ical sites dating back about 5,500 to 3,500 years also helped people to better understand the country’s cultural roots.

“For people who work for cultural relics, this is the best time,” Yang Jianwu, director of Zhejiang Provincial Administra­tion of Cultural Heritage, said at the conference. “But we also feel pressure due to people’s greater expectatio­ns. We have to always maintain homage, respect and a loving heart toward the relics.”

Sun Qingwei, an archaeolog­ist and vice-president of Peking University, said greater importance needs to be attached to building academic expertise in studies and conservati­on of cultural relics and thus make the Chinese voice better heard in the world.

“We have to nurture more talent in managing cultural relics, and other interdisci­plinary profession­als,” added Wang Xudong, director of the Palace Museum in Beijing.

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