BEIJING, July 8, 2024
/PRNewswire/ -- A news report from Beijing Review:
"Coming to China has really
been a dream of mine for a long time, from when I was a child,"
Harriet Parkinson, a rising senior
at Brigham Young University in
the United States, said while
attending the Bond With Kuliang: 2024 China-U.S. Youth Festival,
which took place in Fuzhou,
Fujian Province in southeast
China, on June 24-28.
The seed was planted in the heart of this American girl when she
was only 5 years old. At that time, her parents helped her make the
choice to begin taking the Chinese classes offered by her school in
Minnesota.
In June, she finally set foot in China for the first time and said she was
fascinated by every new thing she saw and experienced. When talking
about the biggest takeaway from this trip, Parkinson said she made
many wonderful friends here, learning their stories and sharing
experiences with each other.
The event was co-organized by the Chinese People's Association
for Friendship with Foreign Countries, the Fujian Provincial
Government and the All-China Youth Federation. It gathered more
than 200 American youth and over 300 of their Chinese peers.
About 50 activities were held during the weeklong event,
including the planting of friendship trees, dialogues, intangible
cultural heritage exhibitions, performances and sports matches.
Chinese President Xi Jinping sent a congratulatory letter to the
event, saying he is pleased to see young people from all walks of
life in China and the U.S. gather
in Fuzhou to relive the story of
Kuliang, pass on the love of Kuliang and help enhance exchange and
understanding between the two peoples.
Young people are energetic and full of dreams, and the future of
China-U.S. relations lies in young people, Xi added.
Kuliang, Kuliang
The picturesque Kuliang, or Guling in standard Chinese, is
situated on the outskirts of Fuzhou. From 1886 to the 1950s, people from
more than 20 countries, including Britain, France and the
United States, built villas in Yixia Village in Kuliang to
spend the summer, fostering a harmonious coexistence with local
villagers and thus contributing to the enduring "Kuliang
stories."
Many children of these families, after leaving China, have continued to recall those days,
telling their children and grandchildren about their childhood
paradise. And today, Kuliang continues to tell tales of friendship
that has lasted for a century.
Josh Adams from San Francisco, California, still vividly
remembers a scene of his childhood, where his great-grandmother
would make a pot of fragrant jasmine tea every afternoon, saying it
had a flavor reminiscent of the jasmine tea from Kuliang.
Adams' great-grandparents arrived in China in 1907 to teach agriculture at a
vocational school in Fuzhou. His
great-grandfather, Arthur Billing,
rose from teacher to principal, and even sponsored several Chinese
students to study in the U.S. His great-grandmother was dedicated
to educating young Chinese women, believing that they also deserved
education opportunities despite education in China mainly being reserved for men at that
time.
In 2017, Adams visited Kuliang for the first time, eagerly
tasting the local jasmine tea. "That was the memory I had. It was
exactly as I was having tea with my great-grandmother," he
said.
During Adams's second visit to Kuliang in June, the Guo
family—who bought the Billings' villa before they returned to the
U.S. in 1948, invited him to the house for a family dinner, and he
exchanged contact information with a fourth-generation member of
the Guo family, a young college graduate.
"The friendship between the two families continues to be
cherished and passed down," Adams said.
Claire Ashmead, a doctoral
student at the University of Michigan
Medical School, was on her second visit to China. But this time, she arrived able to
speak fluent standard Chinese.
In the fall of 2012, Ashmead, then a student at Princeton University, participated in an overseas
exchange program that took her to Kunming in the southwestern
Chinese province of Yunnan to work
and study Chinese, and she lived with a Chinese family for a
year.
Noting that it was a beautiful time in her life, Ashmead said
she felt very fortunate to be in China again. "China is very interested in extending a hand
of friendship to America. I think that bodes very well," she
added.
"When we talk about things like America or China, they don't mean anything without the
people that make up those countries," Ashmead said, underscoring
that the story of Kuliang is one of families coming to China and developing strong friendships. And
that has created a blossoming effect where more family members have
more friendships.
A lovely coincidence was that Harriet
Parkinson and her brother David
Parkinson, who is now a medical student at the University of Michigan, were both invited to attend
this trip and only found out just before departure. With a sense of
"meeting a familiar face in a foreign land," they spent some
unforgettable moments together in China.
Nanjing, Nanjing
After completing their itinerary in Fuzhou, a small group of American youth also
visited Nanjing in the eastern
province of Jiangsu from
June 28 to July 1 for activities
organized by the Global Young Leaders Dialogue (GYLD). GYLD is a
program that regularly takes international participants on tours of
different regions across China to
offer them the opportunity to gain a more in-depth understanding of
the country.
Zoey Chopra, a student at the
University of Michigan, said he
couldn't wait to order a takeout of local duck blood vermicelli
soup and tangbao, or soup dumplings, on the night he arrived in
Nanjing. "Although it was very
different from my usual diet, it was delicious!" he said.
During their stay in this capital of six ancient Chinese
dynasties, which has rich and distinctive culture, the young
Americans visited historical sites such as Zhonghua Gate, the Qinhuai River and the Nanjing
City Wall Museum that showcase the history and beauty of the
city.
At the Nanjing Yunjin Museum, they were amazed by a
demonstration of the operation of the city's ancient wooden looms.
Yunjin, with a history of more than 1,600 years, also known as yun
brocade, is an exquisite kind of silk brocade indigenous to
Nanjing. It was inscribed on the
Intangible Cultural Heritage List of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization in 2009.
"I hope to come back to China
in the future and learn more, not only about Chinese art, but also
about its deep history and culture," Leila
Assadi, a sophomore from the University
of Iowa in the U.S., said.
This was not Rigel Adams's first time in China, but he said he was still impressed by
its rapid changes in recent years.
Being a graduate from the University of
Washington, he first came to China in 2016 when he was a student at Lincoln
High School in Tacoma, Washington
State. During President Xi's first state visit to the U.S. in 2015,
he visited Lincoln High School and invited 100 students from the
school to visit China. "Through
travel, you will know China
better, and hopefully, you will like China," Xi said.
Those times that Rigel Adams spent experiencing Chinese culture
and meeting Chinese people left an indelible mark.
During the group's visit to Nanjing University on June 29, he served as a host for a seminar, where
Chinese and American young people exchanged views on such topics as
global climate change responses and protection and inheritance of
intangible cultural heritage.
"American and Chinese youth should build more connections and
work together to create a more collaborative and better future,"
Chopra told Beijing Review, adding that dialogue is important to
promote mutual understanding.
Brandon Chan, a financial manager
at Seton Medical Center in the U.S., who was also part of the group
visiting Fuzhou and Nanjing, said it is interesting for young
people from different countries and cultural backgrounds to engage
in these kinds of dialogues.
Chopra, along with the other members of the group, also tried
their hands at making traditional lanterns, lacquer fans and other
forms of Chinese intangible cultural heritage while in Nanjing. He said these activities introduced
to the participants different cultural values and sense of history,
helping them understand the people and culture on the other side of
the Pacific.
China, China
"This is my first time in China
and the real China is completely
different from what I imagined. I was deeply impressed by the
friendliness, kindness and hospitality of the Chinese people,"
Andria Tupola, a Honolulu City
Councilwoman from Hawaii in the
U.S., told Beijing Review.
"The more I get to know about China and the more I'm here in the country, I
think it's just about one word... It's the word 'friendship'—one
thing you cannot see or touch, but that's how you learn about each
other," Tupola said during the seminar at Nanjing University. She said she was deeply
moved by the interactions among the youth from both countries.
Many of the young Americans participating in the visit expressed
their intention to return to China
in the future to learn more about the country. Harriet Parkinson was one of them.
In college, Harriet Parkinson
minored in Chinese while majoring in urban planning. She became
friends with many international students from China, learning from them how to make
dumplings and play mahjong, and having hotpot parties together.
According to her, Chinese students in the U.S. have also made a big
leap to share their culture with Americans. She told Beijing Review
that she has decided to apply for graduate programs in China, and a place at Nanjing University in Nanjing is her goal.
"I can think of no better place for a young person to get to
know about the wider world and its marvels than China," said Lisa K.
Heller, U.S. Consul General in Guangzhou, Guangdong
Province in south China,
while she was in Kuliang for the festival.
"Let us continue to build on the foundation of friendship in the
future," she added.
Shen Xin, Secretary General of the Chinese
People's Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries, said
"the only purpose of [hosting such activities] is to let our young
people to talk with, listen to and learn from each other."
"During those interactions, you may find we do differ a lot, but
we can also find a lot of things in common. So we can do something
together for a better future in this world," he added, hoping that
youth from both countries would forge long-lasting friendships.
"I expect we will work together, especially as the youth, that
we can build up more bridges and both countries can become more
successful," David Parkinson
said.
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SOURCE Beijing Review