Thursday, June 30, 2011

China's going to Party like it's your birthday

There's a party going on in China - July 1 is the 90th anniversary of the establishment of the Communist Party of China. I wasn't aware of this, but apparently July 1 is celebrated each year in the country as a national holiday. As we rode on our tour bus, we noticed a whole series of posters along the highways all over Beijing and Shanghai like these three:
According to my ace translator the phrase at the top of each poster goes something like "warmly celebrating the Chinese Communist party's 90th anniversary." The one in the center focuses on Shanghai (note the Pearl Tower and other distinctive skyscrapers) and says is loosely translated as "Beginning a new drive, and transformative development, using hard work to take Shanghai and build a society founded in modernism and internationalism." My translator assures me this sounds better in Chinese. The final poster includes the phrase "Ten thousand years of life to the Chinese communist party" and features the 56 ethnic minorities in China. China Daily has a complete site for more on the 90th anniversary.


Other new celebrations for the 90th anniversary include the debut of the new Shanghai-Beijing high speed train which will cruise along at 300 kph and the opening of the world's largest sea bridge (26 miles long!). The New York Times also has this video clip about the increasing patriotism in China, particularly in Chongqing:





The times sure are a-changing: I expected military reviews and lines of tanks, but so far I haven't seen any.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Beijing: Arrival, Tiananmen, economics and the Forbidden City

Chairman Mao in the haze
We left North Carolina on June 16 for Beijing via Chicago's O'Hare airport. The flight schedule was a seemingly impossible arrangement where we left Chicago at 9 pm and we arrived in Beijing about 10:30 pm the next night. We were immediately struck by a blanket of fog which we discovered the next morning was actually smog. This haze continued for the remainder of our trip in Beijing, breaking on slightly on the last day when one of my colleagues gasped and pointed upwards - "Look, blue sky!"

We followed AJ's red hat to get us through the crowds.
We began the next morning by visiting Tiananmen Square and the Forbidden City. You probably know Tiananmen from the 1989 protests and Tank Man, but you may not know that it's also the largest square in the world. It was very crowded the day we were there, despite the 95 degree heat and humidity. Beijing and Durham (NC) are on about the same line of latitude and so the climate was similar to ours, but I thought that most of the Chinese people were handling the heat better than I was. (Look for an upcoming post on the people of China featuring something we called "the Beijing belly.")

Workers quickly cleared trash.
To access the square we had to pass through airport-like security, but it was quick and relatively painless. In fact, much of the security measures we encountered in China were very similar: pervasive (cameras everywhere, screenings to enter museums and subways, police and security presence) yet surprisingly non-threatening (police didn't carry weapons, security agents were pleasant and efficient). 

Fans were an ideal good to sell on this hot day.  
The other thing that we encountered for the first time here and which would continue for the remainder of our stay was the presence of vendors, such as this woman. Since we clearly stood out as tourists,  we were magnets to wave after wave of vendors who approached us selling all kinds of merchandise. The minute one of our group bought the first souvenir the "game" was on, as we quickly learned that 
  • a) prices were never listed, 
  • b) prices were negotiable, 
  • c) the exchange rate was in our favor (about 6.4 yuan/dollar) and 
  • d) walking away from a vendor was a very powerful negotiating tactic.
The Forbidden City was for centuries the home of various emperors, their families and their staffs. It was called forbidden because no one was allowed to enter or leave the walled city without the permission of the emperor. We made our way through the city quickly because of the combination of a limited amount of time and the heat, but were able to get a good sense of both the power of the emperor and the continuing respect for the Forbidden City by the tourists, who appeared overwhelmingly to be Chinese (unlike at other venues).

One thing I liked was the decorations on the corners of the roofs: the more little "beasts," as the audio guide called them, the greater the status of that building. The Hall of Supreme Harmony had the most so it could easily be seen as the most important.

Below you'll see one of my colleagues from Western North Carolina as he heads off to visit the Hall of Supreme Harmony. Stay tuned for more Beijing posts this week, and please be sure to leave any questions that you have in the comments below.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Back in the USA

Wow. Having spent the previous 11 days in China, I expected the jet lag, but hadn't predicted the "culture shock" (as one of my trip mates termed it) of re-entry into my own country. Why is the air condition so cold, I wondered. Why does the traffic seem so inefficient? Where are my chopsticks? Most of all, where is my day's itinerary?

The one thing I can categorically state about my visit, and which I will continue to emphasize here, is that what I will share is what I saw and heard - and nothing more. Yes, our visit was facilitated by an organization that is part of the Chinese government. Yes, we got a privileged view of China and often were given "VIP tours" of certain sites that we visited. True, we only saw life in cities and did not get to experience the life of rural Chinese people.

No, I didn't completely lose my mental faculties - I knew at all times that I was in a country with a government that has often been criticized for human rights violations of its citizens. There were security cameras everywhere, and I went through numerous security checkpoints where my bag was X-rayed and I walked through a metal detector.

On the other hand, we were allowed to ask anything, and all of our questions were answered. We were allowed to wander around every place that we visited. We had time in each of the three cities that we visited to travel on our own, and we did. I felt safe, safer than I did in the last big American city I visited (Philadelphia). 

So, take my posts with as large of a grain of salt that you need, and please leave comments with your questions. I promise to answer each one.  --Steve

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Sorry for the lack of updates.

Gentle readers: so sorry for the delay in posting! The combination of the blocked sites, limited Internet access, a broken power adapter and very busy days here have prevented timely updates. I promise I'll do many updates when I get back to the states as well. For now, I am hoping you'll be able to see this iPhone shot of Shanghai. It's not very good quality, but I hope it will help you understand why the Chinese say that their national bird is now the crane!

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Update

The good news: I'm in China and everything is fantastic! The bad news is that I can confirm what I learned just after I created this blog: Blogger.com and Blogspot.com are one of many sites blocked in China. I am working on an alternate blog site and hope to post that link in the next day. If this works, you should be able to read this post and I hope see the photo I took, but I will not be able to know if it works - so please comment below and I think I'll be able to see those replies. --Steve

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Post #1: What to say?

In less than 24 hours I begin my 11 day visit to China. Our group of about 25 teachers will primarily be traveling to Beijing and Shanghai, with a brief trip to Wuxi. I'm incredibly fortunate to get this chance to see China up close and personal, though I find myself trying to answer a dozen different questions at the same time. What is China really like? How do the people there view the United States? How are the people changing as the country becomes more industrialized? Etc., etc., etc.

At the moment I think I'm most excited to start taking pictures! The one at the top of the blog is only temporary*, as I hope to have many more in a few days. Stay tuned for more observations, grand ideas, random thoughts and snapshots aplenty headed your way. Feel free to add your questions and insights in the comments!

 * = by Peter Morgan from Beijing, China (Flickr) [CC-BY-2.0 (www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons