Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - The story of Qinghai-Tibet railway construction

The story of Qinghai-Tibet railway construction

In the 65,438+10,000 construction team of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, a "red female soldier" is active.

They are a track production team composed of 26 female employees of China Railway 11th Bureau, and they are known as "Snow Lotus entering the forbidden zone of life". These girls from "Land of Fish and Rice" said with a smile that they were "half asleep and half awake, hungry when eating, and I don't know whether it is a man or a woman", but they set a world record for the daily output of plateau rail track arrangement and won the "National May 1 Labor Award" and the "National May 1 Women's Award".

The communication between husband and wife depends entirely on text messages, and the touching details of the meeting of the proud son have made the audience excited. "Participating in the construction of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway is the purification of the soul and the sublimation of the soul." Guang Jun ended his report with an adapted military song "For Who": "For whom, for the take-off of the western regions, for the beauty of the motherland, I took the silver thread to Lhasa and ushered in the whistling of the snowy plateau. Although bitter and tired, I have no regrets about dedicating my youth to the motherland and the people! " ?

Qinghai-Tibet Railway is listed as one of the four landmark projects in the Tenth Five-Year Plan, ranking first among the key projects of western development 12. Foreign media in China commented that the Qinghai-Tibet Railway "is the most difficult railway project in history" and "it will become one of the most spectacular railways in the world".

The Qinghai-Tibet Railway has pushed Tibet into the railway era, narrowed the temporal and spatial ties between Tibet and the mainland of China, and boosted the economic development of the Qinghai-Tibet Belt. It is called the road of development, the road of unity and the road of happiness.

References:

Baidu encyclopedia of Qinghai-Tibet railway