Confucian academics and government officials turned up today at the 8th World Confucian Conference, in the hometown of Confucius, for a grand gathering to look for ways to revive and apply Confucianism in today's China.
In commenting on the event, experts said they applauded the revival of Confucianism, even though its current status in the country has changed dramatically over the past century, official media here reported today.
For thousands of years, Confucius has been regarded as a symbol of China's traditional culture, as well as the country's intellectuals.
Experts say the Chinese government and the CPC now hold very different views on Confucianism compared with the past, according to a report in state-run Global Times.
"Since the May 4th Movement in 1919, till the Cultural Revolution (1966-76), Confucianism was blamed by many of China's elites as obstructing the social development of the country," Su Wei, a professor at the CPC's Chongqing Municipal Committee's Party School, told the daily.
It was also despised by the CPC until the economic reforms in the late 1970s, after which it gradually regained support and popularity among the common folk and the government, the report said.
After taking power, President Xi Jinping said in 2014, that Confucius, who is believed to have lived 2,565 years ago, represented rational thinking.
"With Confucianism and other philosophies and cultures taking shape and growing in China, they are records of spiritual experiences, rational thinking and cultural achievements of the nation during its time of striving to build its home," he had said.
"Chinese traditional culture, represented by Confucianism, can provide stable values to enhance social cohesion and a sense of identity," said Wang Xuedian, executive vice-president of Shandong University's Advanced Institute of Confucian Studies.
"The reason the CPC and China changed their attitude toward Confucianism is that China is getting much more confident of its own culture as a result of its development, and the country needs a homegrown culture to counter the impact of other cultures, otherwise it will lose the roots of its civilisation," Su said.
With China's growing global influence, Confucianism might also be getting more influential in other countries and the growing number of Confucius Institutes is delivering Confucianism to other countries through Chinese language education, said Guo Dingping, former dean of the Nottingham- Fudan Confucius Institute.
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