China Daily

A time to honor national role models is at hand

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It was with a sense of solemnity and awe that I witnessed Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, conferring the July 1 Medal on the honorees on Tuesday.

The process also had grandeur and at times was emotionall­y touching.

Before the ceremony, the recipients of the medal were received with courtesy on par with that given to visiting heads of state: a motorcycle escort, a warm welcome from pupils waving bouquets and rolling out of the red carpet.

They also arrived, side by side with Xi, at the Great Hall of the People, a place that has also seen the president conferring the Friendship Medal on Russian President Vladimir Putin and presenting the Medal of the Republic to honorees such as the “Father of Hybrid Rice” Yuan Longping and Nobel Prize winner Tu Youyou.

Many of the recipients arrived at the hall in wheelchair­s, some being attended to by a close relative. Some of the medals were conferred posthumous­ly. Chen Hongjun, commander of a People’s Liberation Army infantry battalion, died in a border conflict with India in 2020 and Huang Wenxiu, a college graduate who led poverty alleviatio­n efforts, lost her life in a flash flood in 2019.

But all the medal recipients share one common characteri­stic: They are all ordinary Party members making extraordin­ary achievemen­ts in their everyday lives and work.

They come from various occupation­s, different ethnic groups and diverse education background­s. And during the ceremony they all struck me with their modesty, simplicity and down-to-earth manner.

Ai Aiguo, 71, is a welder who became a leading figure in his profession and tackled hundreds of technologi­cal challenges through five decades of dedicated work.

“I have been a front-line worker for 53 years. I see welding as a source of joy. I will continue to work on the front line as long as my company keeps me there,” he told me.

Ting Bater, born in 1955, has spent more than 40 years improving the lives of people in an impoverish­ed village in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region. “It is an honor that belongs to the CPC members from my region. Many Party members at the grassroots are equally hardworkin­g, and I am only here on their behalf,” he told me in a calm voice.

Some winners of the July 1 Medal have received less recognitio­n in the media for seemingly having undistingu­ished titles and positions. However, they are heroic in a way that truly explains what a CPC member is.

The timing of the event, two days ahead of the 100th anniversar­y of the Party’s founding, is significan­t.

The CPC wrote in its charter that members of the Party will forever be ordinary working people, and they must wholeheart­edly serve the people.

The ceremony, the list of honorees and what they have accomplish­ed, best exemplify that statement, and the character of the Party.

 ?? YUE YUEWEI / XINHUA ?? Above: Zhang Guimei waves to children upon her arrival at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Tuesday. Zhang is the principal of a senior high school in Lijiang, Yunnan province, that offers free education to girls from impoverish­ed families.
YUE YUEWEI / XINHUA Above: Zhang Guimei waves to children upon her arrival at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Tuesday. Zhang is the principal of a senior high school in Lijiang, Yunnan province, that offers free education to girls from impoverish­ed families.
 ?? ZHAI JIANLAN / XINHUA ?? Left: A motorcade carrying July 1 Medal honorees is escorted by motorcycli­sts to the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Tuesday. A ceremony was held in the morning to award the July 1 Medal to outstandin­g Party members.
ZHAI JIANLAN / XINHUA Left: A motorcade carrying July 1 Medal honorees is escorted by motorcycli­sts to the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Tuesday. A ceremony was held in the morning to award the July 1 Medal to outstandin­g Party members.
 ??  ?? Xu Wei Reporter’s log
Xu Wei Reporter’s log

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