Recently, General Secretary Xi Jinping delivered an important speech when he was present at the symposium on cultural inheritance and development. He stressed that “the Chinese culture has a long history and Chinese civilization is extensive and profound. Only by fully understanding its history can we promote creative transformation and innovative development of fine traditional Chinese culture, spread socialist culture with Chinese characteristics and build modern civilization of the Chinese nation.”
“Cultural relics and heritage, with Chinese gene and bloodline, are irreplaceable cultural resources.” The numerous and great cultural relics, created by industrious and wise Chinese people, have witnessed historical changes of the Chinese nation and are the core of the Chinese culture and the Chinese nation. Ruins of Liangzhu Ancient City and Yungang Grottoes have had thousands of years of history. Human headed jar, Jiahu Bone Flute and the eagle tripod are fine collections of traditional crafts throughout history and witness evolution of civilizations. They allow us to see historical changes, which are like surging rivers, leaving glows in the wake.
Now, there are more than 760,000 immovable cultural relics, 108 million national movable ones, 5,058 national key protective unites and 36 archaeological parks. And each one of the unliving relics has reflected ideology, creativity and spirit of our ancestors. It’s like stones on the bed that can tell us how the river ran, how ancient people felt and why Chinese civilization is extensive and profound.
Unliving as they are, cultural relics are steeped in history. Each part of them such as stone, silk, painting and pottery is a legend and represents national spirit. What values most of historical relics is their historical and cultural values. If they can’t be appreciated, studied and spread by more people, value spillover is hard to achieve let alone value increment. Cultural relics are impressive. By interpreting cultural relics with modern perspectives, National Treasure vividly tells their history, showing changes of the Chinese culture. Explore the origin of cultural relics. Many antiquarians, with exquisite shooting styles and tender words, unveil the mystery of cultural relics and lead us to an appointment that travels through time to have an immense feeling of how time flies.
Cultural relics are fossilized history but not dust-covered antique. A growing number of museums have explored ideology, humanistic spirit, values and ethics behind the collections, turned research findings into exhibitions in a timely manner and displayed more knowledgeable and original themed exhibitions. So we can inherit from the past to gain new insights... For us, every piece of cultural relics provides an opportunity to dialogue with civilizations, to touch the pulse of historical development and to listen to marvelous Chinese stories.
In the time scroll, cultural relics amass the wisdom of ancient people and the history of our nation and demonstrate our cultural confidence. To tell Chinese stories well, we need to explore cultural connotations behind relics. Revolutionary cultural relics vividly show the past history such as small carts in Huaihai Campaign, wooden boats in Bejing-Shanghai-Hangzhou Campaign and the scorched earth from Shangganling Front. Normal as they are, they are steeped in spirits and demonstrate the unique code of victory. Each relic left on the land, every page of history written on ancient books and every piece of relics collected in museums are lively materials that arouse our passion for the motherland and boost national pride and dignity.
Cultural relics record the past, reflect the present and enlighten the future. We need to explore the value of cultural relics, tell Chinese stories well and promote creative transformation and innovative development of fine traditional Chinese culture so as to keep the Chinese culture continuous through innovations.