Sunday, May 18, 2008

14:28

Today began 3 days of national mourning throughout China in memory of the deaths and suffering due to the Wenchuan Sichuan Earthquake of May 12, 2008.

Employees and students here Chinese Academy of Science joined the 3 minutes of silence as the entire institution gathered in the central plaza to join together for the homage. Faculty, staff and students stood in straight lines in an organized fashion to await the moment to begin. The army guards did a salute to mark the moment, and everyone fell silent. As the 3 minutes began, you could hear the wailing of car horns blowing steadily for the entire time as drivers and taxi drivers also gave their salute, in a very noisy fashion.

The effect of the 3 minutes was chilling as the images of the earthquake are so vivid in people's minds thanks to the constant media coverage of harrowing sights, rescues, and devastation.

To provide a first hand account of some of the activities happening in Sichuan, let me include this account by a friend of a friend who runs a public health NGO in Sichuan (Mr. James Heinritz):

"From my vantage point at one of the centers of the relief effort, I
have to say that the government's response has been very impressive.
Within hours, thousands of army troops had streamed into the area and
were digging people out. Medical stations were set up in many of the
worst hit areas and were taking care of everyone who was hurt. Premier
Wen Jiabao was at the epicenter within 8 hours after the quake hit and
was still there on Wednesday when I left to go back to Beijing.
Watching the news, the teams on the ground were working non-stop to
extricate everyone they could from fallen buildings. Ambulances ran
back and forth throughout the night, ferrying the worst injured to
hospitals in Chengdu.

...


It's easy for the western media to bash China, but I see a real
effort here to improve. The current national leadership is fully aware
of the problems China faces and has been making great strides to
address them. International pressure does help, and so does internal
pressure from its own citizens. The hardest part of change here is to
make it happen at the local level where vested interests are so
entrenched. Many say that the rate of change is too slow, but in the 7
years that I've been here, it's been nothing short of remarkable.

About the Red Cross, in China its mission is the same as everywhere
else and is taken very seriously by the government. There is a Red
Cross representative in every health department office in China,
ensuring that the organization's efforts are fully integrated with the
health department's.

On Monday, prior to the earthquake when we were talking casually, the
director and her managers were talking about the situation in Myanmar.
Perhaps bowing to international pressure, the government there had
just allowed the China, Macao and Hong Kong Red Cross into the country
to aid their relief efforts. I haven't seen this mentioned in the news
yet. In China, the government was telling foreign aid agencies to make
donations but not come in. Unlike Myanmar, I believe that China's
reasons are because it already has the infrastructure in place and can
really do this on its own. That's not to say that foreign aid agencies
are not on the ground helping with the earthquake response. I met the
China director of Heart to Heart at the Red Cross office on Tuesday.
They have been working alongside the government in China for more than
10 years.

Dorje Association (www.dorjenet.org) is a non-profit,
non-governmental, non-religious philanthropic organization that I
co-founded in 2006 to help improve the quality of rural healthcare in
China. We have more than 10 projects in western Sichuan, an area
affected by the recent Tibetan unrest, 5 new projects in eastern
Sichuan and another project in Jiangsu Province, near Shanghai. We
help build clinics and hospitals, support the doctors who run them,
and provide advanced TCM (traditional Chinese medicine) training."




Monday, May 12, 2008

Not All Shook Up here in Beijing


Yesterday (May 12, 2008) Central China Province of Sichuan expereienced a 7.8 magnitude earthquake. News coming in from the provincial capital Chengdu tells of deaths in the order of 10,000 or more throughout the region.

Reuters Article

In Beijing, reports of people feeling dizzy while looking at their computers and general hoopla building around an event that didn't in fact really happen here at all. I remained vigilant in my research, only looking up for a moment as text messages beeped all around me as the news agencies spread word of the quake. Such focus could be dangerous for my health!

The Fulbright office reacted with deft speed in circulating notices and locating all of the Fulbrighters in the program, especially the ones working in Chengdu. Within minutes following the quake, the students had emailed the lister serve and assured us of their safety. Will continue to follow the story in Sichuan, looks grim as Asia copes with its second major natural disaster of the season. Sending best wishes to the families and loved ones of the families in Sichuan and Myanmar, as well as the aid workers working on the recovery.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

And Introducing...


here in Beijing I am surrounded by millions of Chinese people, and also by quite a brilliant cohort of young foreigners here to join in the fray of modern Chinese culture, society, and politics.

Let me introduce a few of my Fulbright colleagues' blogs:

1) http://www.greenleapforward.com
http://solarcoaster.blogspot.com

2) From Beijing - The Olympian - Olympia, Washington

Also, an interesting discussion to listen to:

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Let's Make a Deal!


Every single move you make here in Beijing is a process of negotiation. From buying strawberries from the vendor on the corner, to dealing with the landlord, to the old auntie next door with whom we have “an arrangement” to put our wireless router in her apartment, to tweaking out the details with my mandarin tutor, not even to begin with the negotiations at my research institute.

To note about negotiating in Chinese, its all about the “包括…”, that is “including ….”. In negotiating western style you settle the terms of the deal, then quibble over the price. In Chinese style, the majority of the negotiation comes after the price is set, to see how much you can have included with the set price. Is lunch included? Will I have to pay for entry (for a tourist outing)? Will my tuition include a desk & computer? Will rent include a new air conditioner and furniture? Will tutoring include your transportation fees, etc etc etc … The difference is subtle but important.

The carry over into other parts of one’s economic life is also interesting. In the states we can negotiate over the fee / price because people often have a wide range of liquid cash or options for money to spend. In seeing how I spend money in the states in fact, its not so often about the price, but about the thing, the object and how I will get it, often via credit. From education, to clothes, homes, shiny cars etc, the price does not dictate whether or not you will attain the thing. If you want it, one can usually find a way to get it, or a way to earn (procure) the extra income to get the item. Not so in a relatively credit-less society, and one where in days past, income opportunities were few.

With a fixed budget, the strategy for many here is to try to get as much as one possibly can for that fixed amount of income. For example, I know my budget while I am here for a 10 month Fulbright, so I will try to stretch my money as far as I possibly can, so I can have more. I will live in a cheap apartment, so that I can take Chinese lessons. I will bargain when I shop, so that instead of having JUST 3 apples, I can get 3 apples, and a bundle of bananas. When we see Chinese manufacturers or vendors taking shortcuts in quality, we must remember this frame of mind for budgeting, if I use a cheaper fabric, then I can get more profit for buying other things, etc. It’s a subtle difference in negotiating and economic lifestyles, and one that I think many notice but do not understand.

Now I need to go and bargain for my new wallet, see if they will throw in a belt for the same price! =]