BEIJING – A group of international journalists who worked on China’s media exchange program visited the Chinese Communist Party Museum (CPC) in Beijing on Thursday.
Foreign reporters explored various sections of the museum near Beijing Olympic Park in the northern part of the capital.
The museum features over 2,500 photographs and over 4,500 sets of cultural artifacts, including around 420 original first class national cultural artifacts that reflect the CPC’s incredible 100 years of history.
It serves as a venue for a large, permanent exhibition that shows how the CPC has integrated the Chinese masses and led a new direction.
During his visit to the museum, the attention of foreign journalists was drawn to high-tech films, providing a medium for examining the history of China’s modernization.
Museum tech films are more than just films. It brings back to life a critical moment in China’s modernization history in a way that textbooks can’t.
It’s special to walk into this cinema. A huge screen fills the view, but high-tech pops the image. The sound system will put you right in the middle of the action. It’s a completely immersive experience. The CPC Museum shows how museums use tech to tell stories in new ways.
Foreign journalists who visited the museum are taking part in a new edition of the Media Exchange Programme hosted by the China International Press Communications Centre (CIPCC) in the first half of 2025.
Approximately 120 journalists from over 100 countries around the world participated in this year’s media initiative, which began in late February. The CIPCC aims to provide journalists with a unique opportunity to first-hand learning insights about China and its masses.