Xi along with his only daughter Xi Mingze, 23 and wife Peng Liyuan visited Yanan village in Liangjiahe, Shaanxi province, where they offered Lunar New Year greetings to the local people many of whom remember his six-year stint in the village in the early 1970s as a worker of the Communist Party of China (CPC).
The new Lunar Year which is also celebrated as Spring Festival all over China will begin from February 18.
She remains out of the public spotlight, and the only available pictures of her are from the 1990s, Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported.
Mingze did not appear in any of the pictures of her visit to the village posted in China's microblogging site as well as the media, the Post report said.
Xi who is regarded as someone from the princeling generation by virtue of his lineage to top political leaders of the past was the first Chinese leader in recent years to grant a higher profile to his wife Peng who is a celebrated folk singer known all over China.
Observers said the trip was aimed at further projecting Xi's image as inheritor of the Communist Party's "Red roots" and his connection to Mao Zedong and other early leaders, the Post report said.
Dubbed "the cradle of the red revolution", Yanan was where top party leaders - including Mao, Zhou Enlai, and the president's father, Xi Zhongxun , forged the ragtag Red Army into a populist guerrilla force and honed their socialist ideology. The party to used it as its base until 1948.
Xi was sent to the village for "reeducation" in 1969 after his father fell out of favour during the Cultural Revolution.
Commentators say Xi wants to emphasise his role as the inheritor of the party's early leadership and demonstrate his connection to the poor at a time when economic growth is slow.
"Xi has 'moved the cheese' of almost all the cliques within the Communist Party except for the princelings - children of the revolutionaries. They are now the basis of his power," Zhang Lifan, a historian and political commentator in Beijing, was quoted as saying by the Post.
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