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5 things to love about China

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Venkatesan Vembu
Wednesday, January 02, 2008 03:10 IST

Journalists reporting on China are often criticised by Chinese interlocutors for focussing more on the country’s socio-economic and cultural problems – of which there are plenty – than on what’s good about it.

A Chinese official once bitterly complained to me that some of my reportage was overly critical of China. It isn’t true, of course: as a journalist reporting on China from an “Indian perspective” and for an Indian readership, I’m acutely conscious that many of China’s problems are similar to those that India faces, and I try to reflect that in my writing. But in the spirit of openness that characterises Indian media and society, I also look at the dark underside of China’s undisputed economic rise, and its impact on social and cultural mores, with a fair element of criticism. No to do so would be dishonest.

But, hey, this is the festive season, and a new year is upon us – a year in which China hopes to host the grandest Olympics ever. And after a recent backpack tour of southern China, and some enduring, warm interactions with ordinary Chinese people, I’m gushing with goodwill for China. In that spirit, le me list here some five things that I unreservedly love about China.

No religious/caste wars: Sure, China witnesses over 80,000 “mass incidents” every year, and of course it goes too far in repressing religious freedom. And the ‘spin’ that the government puts on building a ‘harmonious society’ is sickeningly syrupy. But China doesn’t witness bloodletting in the name of religion or caste, of the sorts you see in India from time to time. As a corollary, you don’t have politicians spewing communal or casteist poison and campaigning on platforms of hatred. You don’t also have mad mullahs issuing fatwas on tennis stars’ skirts and so on.

Project implementation, not politics: As opposed to India, where everything from building a bridge to signing nuclear deals with other countries is viciously politicised – and put in deep freeze for eternity – China gets things done. The emphasis is on project implementation, and even if the methods employed may not be above criticism, it is a huge contrast to the Indian way.

Women at work, safely: Wherever you travel in China, you’ll see women at work, participating as productive forces in the economy. Not just in traditional occupations, but as bus drivers, toll booth operators, factory workers, and in hospitality services and in new-age industries. Many of them relocate to cities far away from their hometowns and families, stay in dorms, and return home only twice a year. (It happens in India too, but not on the same scale as in China.)

And although the commodification of women in hospitality services is complete, on the streets of China’s cities and towns, women are not subjected to rape or “eve-teasing”, as in India. I’ve seen women pedalling alone at midnight in many cities and towns, without fear of “molestation”, which is an index of how civilised a society is.

A sporting superpower. The Beijing Olympics this year will confirm China’s supremacy in international sports. Contrast that with India’s signal failure on this count, and you have to wonder how China, which too is a developing nation, with the same problems of widespread mass deprivation, “punches above its weight”.

The warmth of strangers: But perhaps my most compelling reason to love China is the indescribable warmth and kindness of ordinary folks. Wherever you travel, you’ll be touched by open-hearted hospitality that, to be fair, you’ll experience in parts of India too. If you can speak a bit of Chinese and will join them for a Sunday-morning choral singing session (or tai chi) in the park or for a round of mah jong or Chinese chess, you’ll find yourself enveloped by their hospitality and good cheer. It’s enough to get you singing Ai Wo Zhong-guo (I Love China).

DNA - World - 5 things to love about China - Daily News & Analysis
 
China will of course come in second at the Olympics. It's just amazing how China manages to beat athletes from so many other rich countries whose sportsmen/women get training in the latest facilities.

A lot of the good thing the journalist mentioned sound like something a tourist will see. It is not until you actually spend a decade in a country that you realize it's problems. Maybe he thinks there is no rape, but there actually is.

He is probably right though. In a country that executes people for the pettiest reasons, raping someone would mean certain death.
 
No question that China is infested with a host of problems and faces many challenges. Any countries in the world have their own s*t to deal with. Irrespective of that, to many observers, China seems moving in right direction.

Olympic-wise, “punches above its weight” may only be deemed as euphemism to some, probably include the author himself if one cares to read between lines.
 
as a chinese i am gratitude for all of you to focus on china .as we all know china has got a rapid speed of development in the past 30 years .from beginning of the reform and opening up policy starts, some military and economic progresses has been achieved. for having just only 30 years reform ,our country can't mention in the same breath with developed countries.we certainly have many inadequacies. for example our laws are imperfect . gap between poor people and rich people more and more greater .but we are trying our best to solve these problems. i hope that 2008 olympic games in beijing will give you a nice impression.
or english is not my tongue , i am afriad i can't express my thinking correctly and clearly . so i am sorry for that.
 
Well said, E.B.

Hopefully, 2008 Olympics would be more than just to impress foreigners, but rather to impress the Chinese themselves with new inspiration, rationality and confidence.
 
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