China Daily

Xi, other leaders attend 40th anniversar­y gala

- By AN BAIJIE and WANG KAIHAO Contact the writers at anbaijie@chinadaily.com.cn

President Xi Jinping and other Party and State leaders attended a grand gala marking the 40th anniversar­y of the country’s historic journey of reform and opening-up on Friday night.

The gala, held at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, showcased China’s great achievemen­ts since reform and opening-up was initiated by late leader Deng Xiaoping in 1978.

Over the past 40 years, China has recorded an average annual GDP growth rate of around 9.5 percent, fostered a middle-income population of 400 million and lifted more than 700 million Chinese people out of poverty, accounting for more than 70 percent of the global total.

The gala was among a series of recent high-profile official activities commemorat­ing reform and opening-up.

On Nov 13, Xi visited a major exhibition at the National Museum of China to commemorat­e the 40th anniversar­y.

Friday also saw the global release of a cross-border, coproduced documentar­y to review the achievemen­ts of reform and opening-up in the National Museum of China. The three-episode production How China Made It is being aired on online streaming platform Youku.com and broadcast worldwide through the US-based Discovery Channel starting Saturday.

The coproducti­on, filmed using ultra-high-definition technology, is a joint production of the China Interconti­nental Communicat­ion Center, a State-owned media group in China; the Discovery Channel; Youku; and Meridian Line Films, an independen­t production company based in Yorkshire, England.

The voice-over is in English, with English-Chinese bilingual subtitles.

In the documentar­y, many ordinary Chinese people from different fields are invited to share their personal experience­s in recent decades to reflect the huge developmen­t of society and the economy of the country.

“This production chooses individual touches to better tell Chinese stories because each one of us is a witness to this great process,” Chen Lujun, director of CICC, said.

“China, on one hand, preserves the traditiona­l colors of Eastern culture,” he said. “But it unrolls a dazzling modern picture as well. It’s our responsibi­lity to help the rest of the world better understand this country.”

“Reform and opening-up not only changes China,” said Tony Qiu, general manager of the Discovery Channel in China. “This unique path to success also has a lasting influence in other countries.

“This project combines local elements with a cross-cultural mindset and viewing habits,” he said. “That way, it can vividly show that China has developed together with the whole world.”

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