<p>Dressed in matching navy windbreakers and flanking President Xi Jinping, China's freshly appointed top leadership this week made their first group outing to the Communist Party's "holy land".</p>.<p>Xi's choice to visit Yan'an -- a site inextricably linked with Communist China's founder Mao Zedong -- was an important, deliberate indication of the themes of his next five years at the helm, analysts said.</p>.<p>Xi has centralised and personalised power more than any Chinese leader since Mao, culminating in his being anointed with a historic third term following last weekend's Communist Party (CCP) Congress.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/first-edit/xi-s-absolute-power-is-cause-for-worry-1157205.html" target="_blank">Xi’s absolute power is cause for worry</a></strong></p>.<p>The new Politburo Standing Committee he shepherded around the popular "Red tourism" destination on Thursday consists solely of his loyal allies.</p>.<p>"The signal with the visit to Yan'an is one of celebrating a parallel (with Mao) and brooking no opposition," wrote Manoj Kewalramani from the Takshashila Institution in Bengaluru, India.</p>.<p>A 16-minute news segment about the visit on state broadcaster CCTV showed several portraits of Mao, and a report by the official <em>Xinhua news agency </em>mentioned the former leader's name 14 times.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/from-mao-zedong-to-xi-jinping-100-years-of-the-chinese-communist-party-1002489.html" target="_blank">From Mao Zedong to Xi Jinping: 100 years of the Chinese Communist Party</a></strong></p>.<p>The itinerary included visits to Mao's former residence, as well as a hall where a pivotal CCP meeting in 1945 confirmed him as chairman, apparently showcasing Xi's deep interest in party history and its influence on his rhetoric and policies.</p>.<p>But it also harked back to an era when the CCP relied on mass "struggle" to win a bloody civil war, which observers believe has parallels with how Beijing views the current geopolitical climate.</p>.<p>"Among the signals Xi appears to be sending... is prepare for difficult times ahead, and prepare for struggle," analyst Bill Bishop wrote in his Sinocism newsletter.</p>.<p>Xi took the 2012 standing committee to an exhibition about national rejuvenation in Beijing, and the 2017 one to the site of the first CCP Congress in Shanghai.</p>.<p>"The first travels after each Party Congress seems to be about 'remember the original mission'," tweeted the Australian National University's Wen-Ti Sung.</p>.<p>According to state media, Xi on Thursday vowed that his new standing committee would "inherit and carry forward the fine revolutionary traditions formed by the party during the Yan'an period".</p>.<p>Yan'an is revered in Communist Party lore as the cradle of the movement.</p>.<p>Nestled in the remote, arid mountains of northwest China, it was where party members hunkered down after the Long March, a gruelling year-long expedition by foot across the country to escape encirclement by Nationalist troops during the Chinese Civil War.</p>.<p>Tens of thousands died en route, and by the time the survivors arrived in Yan'an, they were a severely weakened force.</p>.<p>Mao and his allies, including Xi's father, lived alongside local peasants in caves as they planned military campaigns.</p>.<p>The CCP's eventual victory over the Nationalists saw the Yan'an period codified as a shining example of the Party's ability to overcome adversity.</p>.<p>Yan'an is also firmly linked to Mao and his consolidation of power.</p>.<p>More than 10,000 people, including intellectuals and artists, were killed during the Yan'an Rectification -- a mass campaign of brainwashing and purges that established Mao as the undisputed leader.</p>.<p>But on Thursday, Xi said that "through the Yan'an Rectification Movement, the whole Party united under the banner of Mao Zedong and achieved unprecedented unity", according to CCTV.</p>.<p>"A firm and correct political orientation is the essence of the Yan'an Spirit."</p>.<p>One of the hallmarks of Xi's tenure has been a focus on intra-party discipline, most obviously through a long-running anti-corruption campaign.</p>.<p>Critics say that drive is a thinly veiled political tool that has eliminated many of his rivals.</p>.<p>Xi tends to think of himself as an "heir of the revolution", according to sinologist Alfred L Chan.</p>.<p>In speeches, he has sought to draw a direct line between the past and present, using history as a source of legitimacy for both the party and himself.</p>.<p>On Thursday, for example, he referred to his personal connections to Yan'an.</p>.<p>During the height of the Cultural Revolution, 15-year-old Xi was sent to the village of Liangjiahe, where he also slept in caves and was shocked at the harshness of manual labour.</p>.<p>He often cites this period as a formative life experience that gave him grit and determination, as well as an insight into the lives of ordinary working-class Chinese.</p>.<p>And it is another way in which Xi attempts to mould his public persona and life story in the vein of Mao, analysts say.</p>.<p>"Xi wants to go back to the orthodoxy of communism in China like Mao," said Alfred Wu, a Chinese politics expert at the National University of Singapore.</p>
<p>Dressed in matching navy windbreakers and flanking President Xi Jinping, China's freshly appointed top leadership this week made their first group outing to the Communist Party's "holy land".</p>.<p>Xi's choice to visit Yan'an -- a site inextricably linked with Communist China's founder Mao Zedong -- was an important, deliberate indication of the themes of his next five years at the helm, analysts said.</p>.<p>Xi has centralised and personalised power more than any Chinese leader since Mao, culminating in his being anointed with a historic third term following last weekend's Communist Party (CCP) Congress.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/first-edit/xi-s-absolute-power-is-cause-for-worry-1157205.html" target="_blank">Xi’s absolute power is cause for worry</a></strong></p>.<p>The new Politburo Standing Committee he shepherded around the popular "Red tourism" destination on Thursday consists solely of his loyal allies.</p>.<p>"The signal with the visit to Yan'an is one of celebrating a parallel (with Mao) and brooking no opposition," wrote Manoj Kewalramani from the Takshashila Institution in Bengaluru, India.</p>.<p>A 16-minute news segment about the visit on state broadcaster CCTV showed several portraits of Mao, and a report by the official <em>Xinhua news agency </em>mentioned the former leader's name 14 times.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/from-mao-zedong-to-xi-jinping-100-years-of-the-chinese-communist-party-1002489.html" target="_blank">From Mao Zedong to Xi Jinping: 100 years of the Chinese Communist Party</a></strong></p>.<p>The itinerary included visits to Mao's former residence, as well as a hall where a pivotal CCP meeting in 1945 confirmed him as chairman, apparently showcasing Xi's deep interest in party history and its influence on his rhetoric and policies.</p>.<p>But it also harked back to an era when the CCP relied on mass "struggle" to win a bloody civil war, which observers believe has parallels with how Beijing views the current geopolitical climate.</p>.<p>"Among the signals Xi appears to be sending... is prepare for difficult times ahead, and prepare for struggle," analyst Bill Bishop wrote in his Sinocism newsletter.</p>.<p>Xi took the 2012 standing committee to an exhibition about national rejuvenation in Beijing, and the 2017 one to the site of the first CCP Congress in Shanghai.</p>.<p>"The first travels after each Party Congress seems to be about 'remember the original mission'," tweeted the Australian National University's Wen-Ti Sung.</p>.<p>According to state media, Xi on Thursday vowed that his new standing committee would "inherit and carry forward the fine revolutionary traditions formed by the party during the Yan'an period".</p>.<p>Yan'an is revered in Communist Party lore as the cradle of the movement.</p>.<p>Nestled in the remote, arid mountains of northwest China, it was where party members hunkered down after the Long March, a gruelling year-long expedition by foot across the country to escape encirclement by Nationalist troops during the Chinese Civil War.</p>.<p>Tens of thousands died en route, and by the time the survivors arrived in Yan'an, they were a severely weakened force.</p>.<p>Mao and his allies, including Xi's father, lived alongside local peasants in caves as they planned military campaigns.</p>.<p>The CCP's eventual victory over the Nationalists saw the Yan'an period codified as a shining example of the Party's ability to overcome adversity.</p>.<p>Yan'an is also firmly linked to Mao and his consolidation of power.</p>.<p>More than 10,000 people, including intellectuals and artists, were killed during the Yan'an Rectification -- a mass campaign of brainwashing and purges that established Mao as the undisputed leader.</p>.<p>But on Thursday, Xi said that "through the Yan'an Rectification Movement, the whole Party united under the banner of Mao Zedong and achieved unprecedented unity", according to CCTV.</p>.<p>"A firm and correct political orientation is the essence of the Yan'an Spirit."</p>.<p>One of the hallmarks of Xi's tenure has been a focus on intra-party discipline, most obviously through a long-running anti-corruption campaign.</p>.<p>Critics say that drive is a thinly veiled political tool that has eliminated many of his rivals.</p>.<p>Xi tends to think of himself as an "heir of the revolution", according to sinologist Alfred L Chan.</p>.<p>In speeches, he has sought to draw a direct line between the past and present, using history as a source of legitimacy for both the party and himself.</p>.<p>On Thursday, for example, he referred to his personal connections to Yan'an.</p>.<p>During the height of the Cultural Revolution, 15-year-old Xi was sent to the village of Liangjiahe, where he also slept in caves and was shocked at the harshness of manual labour.</p>.<p>He often cites this period as a formative life experience that gave him grit and determination, as well as an insight into the lives of ordinary working-class Chinese.</p>.<p>And it is another way in which Xi attempts to mould his public persona and life story in the vein of Mao, analysts say.</p>.<p>"Xi wants to go back to the orthodoxy of communism in China like Mao," said Alfred Wu, a Chinese politics expert at the National University of Singapore.</p>