Xinhua
The snow blanketing mountains in north China’s Shanxi Province has added even more festive spirit to a small village called Fengnanyuan. Red lanterns have been hung in front of villager Shi Hongbing’s new house, decorated with door couplets and other auspicious ornaments. These were what greeted a special guest of Shi — President Xi Jinping — just days ago.
No matter how busy Xi is, he always finds time to be with people in the countryside, especially before the Spring Festival, or the Lunar New Year. Falling on Feb. 1 this year, the festival is the most important holiday in the Chinese calendar and it is a time that is traditionally spent in the company of family.
Xi is a leader with roots in the countryside and has worked his way from a village official to the country’s top post. He is thus widely considered a people’s leader who always puts the interests of the people above all else.
On Sunday, addressing a reception in Beijing to ring in the Year of the Tiger, Xi once again stressed “holding people close to the heart.”
“The greatest happiness is to strive for the happiness of the people,” he said.
DECADE-LONG TRADITION
For 10 consecutive years, Xi, as general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, has made it a tradition to spend time with ordinary people during this festive season. These trips have taken him throughout the vast country, from a border town in the north to a poverty-stricken ethnic minority village in the southwest.
He often brings festival gifts to locals, observes festive traditions such as food preparation, and chats with people about their daily lives.
“As we greet the new year, there is one thing that remains most dear to my heart. That is my fellow citizens who still live in hardship,” Xi once said. “I’m seriously concerned about them and wonder how their food supplies and accommodations are being maintained, and how they are celebrating the Spring Festival.”
During this year’s trip to Shanxi, Xi braved the snow to visit people affected by autumn floods and learned about post-disaster reconstruction, crop replanting, and measures to keep villagers warm in the winter.
When he sat down with Shi’s family, whose old dwelling collapsed in the floods, Xi asked them how they felt about living in their rebuilt house and whether they were able to get enough goods for the Lunar New Year. “He cares deeply about our daily lives,” Shi said.
Every time Xi visits people in their homes, he asks about what difficulties they still have. He even goes into details in rural life such as the access to clean toilets and the shower. He also offers advice on household waste sorting, and shows concern for students with poor eyesight. “I remember everything they have to share with me,” Xi said.
PEOPLE-CENTERED
PHILOSOPHY
Xi’s Spring Festival visits reflect his people-centered philosophy for development. He once said, “To put it simply, my governance philosophy is to serve the people and shoulder my due responsibilities.”
This can be traced back to a time when Xi spent seven years as an adolescent and young adult living and working in a remote village on the Loess Plateau. Xi has said that he understands the hardships of the people because he once lived in an impoverished corner of the country.
This people-first philosophy has been put into action throughout Xi’s political career. Back in 2012, when Xi was elected to the Party’s top post, there were nearly 100 million Chinese people living under the poverty line. Helping these people live better lives became a priority for him.
A monumental anti-poverty campaign has since been launched on a scale unseen elsewhere in the world. Over the following eight years, China’s remaining impoverished residents were all lifted out of poverty.
This marked the country’s successful elimination of absolute poverty, a scourge that had plagued the Chinese people for millennia.
Bearing the people in mind, Xi led them in realizing the first centenary goal of “building a moderately prosperous society in all respects,” honoring the Party’s promise to the people.
Xi’s people-centered philosophy also explains why he ordered unwavering efforts to save lives at all costs during China’s fight against COVID-19, said Liu Jingbei, a professor at the China Executive Leadership Academy in Pudong, Shanghai.