Global Times

Chinese youngsters rush to Bilibili to learn about Marxism, history of CPC

- By Leng Shumei

China's YouTube- like Bilibili has become a new hub for Chinese youngsters to learn about Marxism and the history of the Communist Party of China ( CPC) as the Party prepares to celebrate the 100th anniversar­y of its founding in July.

On the platform, Chinese youngsters are not only learning the CPC's history and the country's hard struggles in the past century. They are also trying to understand and explain current phenomena – such as the 996 work regime – and major changes in the world, by reading Marxist works especially Capital: A Critique of Political Economy to understand hot topics.

The first episode of an online course on the CPC's history, produced by the Shanghai municipal committee of the Communist Youth League of China, was released recently. During the episode, Bilibili blogger

Laofanqie, who has nearly 15 million followers, guided viewers to historic sites of the CPC, such as the Site of the First National Congress of the CPC in Shanghai and the South Lake Red Boat, also known as the South Lake Revolution­ary Memorial Boat, in Jiaxing, East China's Zhejiang Province.

More than 48 million youngsters have viewed the episode, while related topics on China's Twitter- like Sina Weibo have attracted more than 690 million views, Zhou Huilin, director of the publicity department of the CPC Shanghai Municipal Committee, said at a press conference in Beijing on Thursday that was held to explain how Shanghai uses inherited red traditions to promote highqualit­y developmen­t.

When the First National Congress of the CPC was held in Shanghai in July 1921, the average age of the representa­tives was 28. CPC always attracts and helps youngsters realize self- worth, Zhou said, noting that Shanghai youngsters have been creating innovative approaches to learn red history.

The videos on Bilibili of a Marxism teacher named Wang Defeng from Fudan University in Shanghai reading Capital had been viewed nearly 300,000 times as of Thursday night.

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