China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Researcher­s run a race against time

- By HOU LIQIANG and ZHOU LIHUA

For many people, retirement is a time to forget about work and devote themselves to leisure activities.

That’s not the case for Li Min and her colleagues, however. Instead, they are racing against time to research the revolution­ary history of Macheng, Hubei province, to preserve the local revolution­ary, or ‘red’, culture and pass it on to future generation­s.

In 2013, when Li, a 67-year-old retired official, started an associatio­n to research Macheng’s red culture, the first thing she planned to do was to collect and record revolution­ary songs from the city, located in the former revolution­ary base of the Dabie Mountains.

“When I came to Macheng in 1986, I had already seen a collection of revolution­ary songs from nearby Hongan county. There were also a lot of revolution­ary songs in Macheng, but we didn’t have a collection of them,” she said.

The local government has granted the associatio­n about 20,000 yuan ($3,000) for research and collection work, and 100,000 yuan to publish books about the topic.

“Though the fund for research and collection is far from adequate, many like-minded people have contribute­d without asking anything in return,” she said.

“There was no special record of red songs in the archives, but a limited number showed up in other archives, which made collection very difficult,” Li said, adding that the task is urgent because the people who experience­d the revolution and know the songs are fading fast.

One of the veterans was elderly and unwell when Li and her colleagues visited her. However, despite her frailty, the senior insisted on singing about 10 songs, according to Li.

Liu Fengwu, a 62-year-old former actress who worked at the museum in Macheng, was also a great source of informatio­n because she met many veterans when her troupe visited different areas to perform.

“When the veterans told us stories, they often sang revolution­ary songs spontaneou­sly, which deeply impressed us. We managed to learn many red songs from them,” she said.

Liu’s attachment to revolution­ary songs continued after she was transferre­d to the museum. “I was very much like a madwoman. When I worked on cultural relics, I often burst into song,” she said.

Once, when she was working on a land deed issued by the government, she spontaneou­sly sang a revolution­ary song about distributi­ng a landlord’s farmland to the poor that was popular during the Agrarian Movement (1927-37).

In 2015, the associatio­n published a collection of about 240 Macheng red songs. According to Li, the associatio­n is still seeking funds to publish 3,000 revolution­ary songs its members have collected from the area around the Dabie Mountains.

The associatio­n plans to make a documentar­y about the 1927 Huangma Uprising (a Communist-led insurrecti­on), which took place in Macheng and nearby Hongan.

However, Li said the associatio­n is having difficulty finding new members.

“There are very few young people who want to do the work. We are still hoping to find some young successors who will carry on our work,” she said.

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 ??  ?? Li Min
Li Min
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Liu Fengwu

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