By Li Qing
Located over 700 km west of Beijing, a private museum is transporting visitors more than 50 years back in time.
The 800-square-meter building in Ordos, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, showcases nearly 1,000 exhibits, including photos, letters, tools and everyday items.
“These old objects witnessed social changes and are mementos of the time,”Hao Yingjie, the museums curator, said. He further expressed his hopes that the exhibits, in addition to informing people about the past, can inspire younger generations to work hard and carve out a better future.
Hao holds a special interest in the possessions of ordinary families in the 1970s since they can recreate an accurate picture of peoples life in that specific era.
Born and raised in a village in Ordos, Hao left school at 16. He first established a company collecting cultural relics and then went on to create a private museum in 2008, at the age of 27.“Through the exhibition, visitors can gain insight into Chinas social progress over time and appreciate the long way the country has come,” he said.
The museum is dedicated to the experience of “educated youths,” young Chinese who had received elementary to high school education and then volunteered to work in remote and underdeveloped regions in the late 1960s. Most had returned to their hometowns by the late 1970s when the policy ended.
Some 1,000 educated youths from Nanjing, Jiangsu Province in east China, once lived in the Ordos grasslands. For them, the museum is a diary of their formative years.
“It reminded me of my youth in Ordos when local herders taught me to herd sheep and farm,” 73-year-old Yang Yumin told Xinhua News Agency. He spent three years in Ordos working in railway construction. “The place nurtured us and tempered our will, which has stuck with us through hardships for the rest of our lives,” he said.
The number of items Hao and his company have collected exceeds 3 million. They have been organized into 70 categories, including the modern history of China, farming culture and the Yellow River.
The company currently has the capacity to operate at least 30 exhibitions at the same time. Starting from this one focusing on educated youths in the Ordos grasslands, Hao plans to expand the “museum community” to feature 32 exhibitions with various themes, such as furniture, sports, transportation and clothing. BR
(Photos courtesy of Hao Yingjie)