Founded in 1994, it publishes Cultural China, a large-scale overseas cultural academic journal, and advocates replacing confrontation with dialogue, rallying domestic and foreign forces, and renewing and rebuilding Chinese culture. 1995 has been recognized as an educational charity by the Canadian government and can issue tax-free receipts. From 65438 to 0997, the Canadian government made a careful evaluation of the organization's finance and achievements, and successfully obtained the status of non-governmental organization (NGO), which was the only NGO in China in Canada at that time. 1997 Promote the culture of clean government in China, raise funds overseas, cooperate with the Development Research Center of Fudan University in Shanghai, and jointly promote the exchange of clean government research with the support of Shanghai CPPCC. From 65438 to 0999, China-Canada clean government exchange meetings were held in Shanghai and Vancouver, and Shanghai's clean government construction achieved great results. With the support of Canada's Minister of International Cooperation and Prime Minister, 1998 won the first China institution funded by the Canadian Council for International Development (CIDA) during the period of 1999-200 1, and successively held moral education lectures and trainings with the National Institute of Higher Education Administration, Confucius Foundation, East China Normal University and other institutions to promote moral education in line with the new era. 1999, recommended by Vancouver Consulate, invited to the State Council Press Office to express opinions on human rights, freedom, reunification of Taiwan Province Province and other issues. 200 1 Start an education project to help poor children and adolescents in Guangxi and Yunnan until 2009. The number of teachers and teenagers in rural areas of Guangxi and Yunnan has exceeded 3,000. In September 2002, the government of China invited Wen Geng to take media people to Tibet to learn about the situation and exchange views with the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China. In 2003-2004, Dr. Liang was appointed by China as the director of Tibetan Culture Protection and Development Association, honorary director of Chinese Yanhuang Culture Research Association and director of International Confucianism Society. In 2003, he was appointed as a member of the International Leadership Committee of Trinity University in Canada.
Dr. Liang visited poor children in Guangxi. In 2004, Wen Geng was invited by the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs to attend a regional consultation meeting. In 2004, the Cultural Renaissance (International) Foundation and the Cultural Renaissance Association were established. The Cultural Renaissance Research Center has branches in the United States, Australia, Hongkong and Singapore, and representative offices in Malaysia and Taiwan Province Province, with more than 6,000 members and tens of thousands of supporters. Uniting overseas Chinese with the concept of cultural China has reached more than 100,000 people in the past ten years, and Dr. Liang's radio comments have reached more than one million people in four major cities in North America. Among the 132 poverty-stricken counties identified by China government, 49 poverty-stricken counties belong to Guangxi. Therefore, Wengeng started the "Basic Education Project" in 2002 to help minority students in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region of China realize their learning dreams. /kloc-since 0/0, this project has been widely supported, enabling Wengeng to support more than 5,000 teachers and students in six counties (Ziyuan County, Longsheng County, Yangshuo County, Rongshui County, Gongcheng County and wuxuan county) in Guangxi. In 2006, Wengeng launched the "Scholarship Program for College Students" to remove economic obstacles for children in poor mountainous areas and realize their dream of going to college.