Archive for the ‘Mysteries of the Big Jing’ Category

“There are many people in the squ@re today”

perplexed policeman. detain or just shoot?

Soon after flower girl’s detention, a policeman asked me if I spoke Chinese, then asked me to wait. Someone who said he was a Xinhua employee volunteered to act as an interpreter between the policemen and myself & another journalist from Japan who was also asked to wait.

I have to say the Gongans were way more polite this time than they were last year. They kept apologizing for keeping us from work. Maybe I’m reading too much into it but they seemed kind of embarrassed to be participating in this charade.

I was photographed from every angle by five or six policemen and red umbrellas, so I waved to the cameras, as celebrities should. After some questioning (How long have you been in China for? Do you have a Chinese assistant? Have you been to the expo?), our documents were taken away for inspection and returned after about ten minutes. We were still near the phalus and while I was waiting I noticed about half a dozen people wearing white approaching the site. Each of them was alone, none was trying any provocation. They just stood there fro few minutes, took a photos, then went away.

It was getting hot under the Beijing sun with no shade around. The police officer commented that I should have brought a parasol (true). I answered that since they seem to have so many parasols, maybe they could just lend me one. Xinhua guy chuckled but Officer pretended he didn’t hear me (I really shouldn’t say these things. It’s not even funny).

About half an hour passed when another officer came back with my passport. He apologized again for the inconvenience, then said we could go but be careful: “There are many people in the square today. If they gather in big groups, accidents can happen”. 

Gongans are just full of truisms today.

 

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Red Umbrella Day

So it’s the 35th of May again, which everyone knows is just like any other day in wonderland… Red Umbrellas, metal detectors, and girls getting arrested for carrying flowers. Perfectlly normal beast

Red Umbrella day: Been to the square before noon. There, also, a day like any other: a lot (I mean A LOT, few hundred people at least) of tour groups who, surprisingly, mostly used identical red parasols and didn’t seem to be doing much tourism.

Red Umbrella party, around 10:30 in the morning

Urban public space: You get used to it after a while. You stop thinking how bizaar it is to have metal detectors in an entrance to a public square. Security checks were quite severe today and seem to be focused on elderly ladies, who have had every item in their bags scanned and gone through. They don’t hassle foreigners much as far as I could tell. Maybe they know we are all cowards.

Security checks. old ladies are the new threat

Protest? what protest? Outside of the square, a young man of around 18 wearing red-splatted T-Shirt with the digits 1899 was not allowed in. He asked his photo not be taken. Inside: it’s quite difficult to tell which of the visitors are there to commemorate something. A student from Beida with a big backpack: is he a silent protester? a plainclothes policeman? just a tourist? go figure. Two others were a lot more obvious. When I got to the spot near the memorial for the people’s heroes (or whatever that phallic symbol is called), there was one uniformed policeman there filming a young girl wearing white, carrying white roses, and her friend, a boy in a white shirt. They Were filming him back, which seem to have confused him a lot.

Citizen supervision in action: recording police work

It took few minutes for more police (and red umbrellas) to arrive, after which there were few more minutes of arguing, and the girl was dragged into a police van, the guy was more cooperative and walked to the van all by himself (didn’t get photos of the event. It all happened very quickly , but pretty sure there were others around who did). They were then whisked away, supposedly for tea-drinking in an un-disclosed location.

To be continued:Right after the described events, I got busy having my own little annual ritual with the GonganJu. More on that later today.

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The more things change the more they stay the same

It’s this time of the year again. Spring turns into Summer and in the Jing this season means dryness that makes your eyes itchy and memories that make them wet. Come to think of it, its not such a bad balance is it? Very harmonious, one might think.

Yet again dissidents are lying low for few weeks, police presence is heightened, censorship tightened. The lucky few gather in the relative safety of their homes to watch some footage from back then. This is the meaning of political activism in China now: Watching documentaries. And twittering.

In Hong Kong, they will march, as they do every year. In the US the usual suspects will dutifully attend a protest outside the Chinese embassy, shouting slogans that bear no meaning to anyone anymore. Around the white hole in the center of this fair city, which is also - according to ancient wisdom – the center of the world, plainclothes policemen will pretend to read the papers, that will all state there are no news today. Such are the summer rites in Jing. Soon students will go on vacation. Soon it will start to rain. Hopefully.

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One of 1.3 billion
Sadder and not as famous but looked a lot the same

Sadder and not as famous but looked a lot the same

Had in mind to comment once again on current events (to ask, for example, why having the US white house fighting over the interests of oil companies is sinister but having the secretary of states representing the interests of advertisment companies is lofty and moral…) then I realised I dun wanna.

There are so many China bloggers, many of them excellent and most of them a lot smarter than I am and more tuned to current events. I have nothing to contribute really. To  me, China’s appeal has always been in her people: the people I meet and the people I read about. Those who choose to share their stories with me and those whose stories I can only guess. This is (a suggested) story of the first among them, someone I came across nearly seven years ago and who have become instrumental in my China adventure even though I never saw him again. I wanted to write about that person here because the personal is, after all, political; and even when it’s not, the personal is often pretty damn pretty.

So this is how it went:

In the orient’s landscape one’s eye takes in everything except the human beings. It takes in the dried-up soil, the prickly pear, the palm-tree and the distant mountain, but it always misses the peasant hoeing at his patch. He is the same colour as the earth, and a great deal less interesting to look at”. (George Orwell, Marrakech)

He was standing in the passageway on the train, gazing out of the window. A tall, skinny boy of about sixteen, I guessed, though it’s always hard to tell here. The northern city was wrapped in grey gloomy clouds. The boy was wearing an orange T-shirt under a blue jeans jacket, stylish khaki colour army trousers and white Nike trainers. He moved from the window in response to a faint hand gesture from his mother who was sitting on the lower berth. The woman (was she his mother?) wore dark colours, a brown shirt of some synthetic fabric, with thin yellow strips, stuck inside long woolen trousers. Her dark hair was solemnly pinned to her skull, her lips meticulously painted. Her son (was he?) sat down beside her. She put her arm around his shoulder, with moist eyes fixed on his long slim face. Her hand gently stroked the long black eyelashes, the straight nose, the glossy hair, the lips – pressed tightly closed as if to prevent a cry from escaping. His arm went around her waist, holding her close, but his eyes were fixed to the floor. I was sitting on the opposite berth, about fifty centimetres from them, and couldn’t take my eyes off them, trying to decipher some oddity that struck me in their behaviour. It was something other than the air of sadness around them both, and took me a few minutes to figure out; they were ignoring me, totally oblivious to my presence. I had grown so accustomed to being the centre of attention, always stared at, laughed at, treated differently, receiving privileges, always being the strange, fascinating and amusing FOREIGNER. Now, suddenly I found myself on the staring side, trying to guess who these people were, where they had come from, where they were going, and why were they so grief-stricken.

 

The train was filling up. People lifting their luggage to the upper shelves or pushing it under the bunks, shoving each other in an attempt to get to their seats, shouting, joking, smoking. Vendors were carrying delicacies for sale in round bamboo trays over their heads, loudly hawking the goodies. A villager carrying her infant on her back in an embroidered cloth carrier was pushed by the female conductor towards the third class cart. Many people stopped to look at me as they passed by, some greeting me with wide grins, some whispering to their neighbours the news that there is a “lao-wai” on the train. It was the usual hustle-bustle described so colourfully in every guidebook and travel report, the same oriental chaos that I myself had portrayed in letters and diary chapters, finding it ever so exotic. Mother and son – were they mother and son? – were unaware of all around them, weeping silently now, holding hands seemingly unable to look at each other. As I was to discover, they were soon going to part, for how long? And why? My questions weren’t to be answered. I could only speculate.

 

The boy stood again, slowly releasing his hand from the woman’s grip. A long hug and he was walking towards the door, head lowered, long graceful body shrunken, as if burdened with a heavy load. The woman hurried to the window as the train started north. She stood there, waving, crying. I caught one last glimpse of the boy, planted on the platform in the autumn breeze, craning his neck. The train roared out of Beijing station.

 

The image of that young man standing on the platform on Beijing station has stayed with me ever since. That day was exactly one year since I had first come to China. I do not say it proudly, but the truth must be confessed: for the first time in this country, I was seeing an individual.

 

It is tempting to use this boy as a symbol representing everything that China is to me, or representing east-west relations, or the generation gap, or use him to say something post colonial maybe, but I thought, for once, I should just let him be.

 

 

 

 

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Can we do this everyday please?

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This was awesome!

Contrary to all the pre warnings, there was No blockade. Also,  no need for any bunkering up, no police harassment, no cars, no annoying Anhui tourists, No annoying American tourists.

Just  a brilliant autumn morning in Beijing, the streets so quiet and deserted you couldhear birds chipping. people in yellow uniforms gathering around T.V’s or using their cellphones to watch that ridiculous ceremony, on par in stupidity with the Obama inauguration earlier this year, Enough restaurants were still open in close proximity, everyone who bothered to go out was in good mood. Seriously, one of the most enjoyable days I’ve had in Beijing.

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Not much to say about the parade itself, as I ony watched a little bit of it. The girls in white boots were really cute, sure their appearance was demeaning and they are a disgrace for womankind, but who cares? they were pretty.  Just one more thing: I do hope somebody brought Jiang Zemin water when the cameras weren’t on him. The man is Old and shouldn’t be standing for so long.

 

 

 

What about average Beijingers’ thoughts of the parade? Well, from what little I saw, people were happy to have a day off, and many were gathering together in restaurants to watch the events. The mood was pretty festive though quiet, but many were still going about their business, running shops, doing laundry, food shopping etc, while glancing at screens here and there to see the procession.

Some in the neighbourhood took the time to go fruit picking near the MeiShuGuan

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Tired performers on their way home

Tired performers on their way home

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Plastic

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So tomorrow is the big day, and so far, from what I have seen, restrictions weren’t too bad – or maybe it’s just a sign of me growing way to accustomed to security checks. As of 20:00 this evening, the area around Tiananmen was still opened to cars and pedestrians, and man, there were A LOT of visitors there. Everything will be shut down tomorrow though, and foreign journalists didn’t get credentials to over the parade, which caused quite a stir among them.

Meantime. our fair city is being made even fairer with pots of flowers everywhere that can be replaced on the first sign of withering, much like factory workers.  Liked this grotesque plastic jar, supposedly representing China’s time honoured wine industry, or the wine songs of Li Bai or something like that.

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But some people still manage to celebrate with some creativity: check out this 庆 (qing, celebration)  sign made of packets of Zhongnanhai cigarettes. Nice.

 

 

 

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Just as I’m getting ready to post this, it is turning midnight – it’s October First. Happy Birthday to the Good, The Bad and even the Ugly PRC.

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Day Three

10.09.2009

08:00 AM

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Isn’t this pretty? The tappet on this fence concealing  the stage at the square is just so optimistic…

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Workers on the way to the site:

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Not entirely sure what this van is for. How many different kind of cars the PSB has got?

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It’s my party (and I’ll cry if I want to)

The Big Jing is gearing up for the grand 60Th anniversary. Here it how it looks like, hour by hour, for the next 24 days.

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September 08th, 6AM

Heading to Tiananmen, I somehow always end up in Zhongshan park. Even when wishing to observe the ever eerie atmosphere at the big white hole, the small green park is more appealing, and seems uninterrupted by any preparation. except of course for the loudspeakers near the south gate, the like of which Douglas Adams once describes as “Resembling Manhattan in both shape and size”.  Still, the park’s serenity is somehow stronger, somehow fits better with the backdrop of the old palace, than all the commotion outside.

For some reason, the pavement south of the forbidden city is uneven with many broken or loose tiles, and this isn’t likely to change. I guess you should blame it on all those police cars patrolling there at night.

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The previous celebration

Just a reminder what the 50th anniversary ten years ago looked like. Is China better now?

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
Headlines – Mao More Than Ever
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political Humor Healthcare Protests

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Home sweet home – the writing on a Beijing wall

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Taken few weeks ago near Tonghui, south of the 3rd ring road

The building was declared for Chai (拆), according to workers who hung around there, to build a park along the Tonghui river bank. Someone crossed the 拆 and wrote 宅 (zhai) which means “Home” (it is not actually anybody’s home, but a furniture shop named (for whatever reason) Ilinoi

Itay over at Bad Panda has some more on the Tonghui project

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