Archive for the 'Beijing Olympics' Category

Changing the face of Beijing

t was with amuzement and a smidge of sadness that I read an article in the Hong Kong South China Morning Press this morning titled, Kudos to Beijingers for good manners. Over the last four years the Beijing government as undertaken a campaign to teach Beijing people manners.  The Office of Capital Spiritual Civilisation Construction Commission distributred a booklet about proper manners to 4.3 million households and 5 million people had been given classes on how to behave in public.

Highlights of what these 5 million people have been taught:

*Don’t match white socks with black shoes (one of my personal pet peeves!)

*It is bad taste to wear more than three colors.

*Only shake hands for less then three seconds.

*Don’t jump queues (lines we call them in America).

*No spitting.

*People were discouraged from visiting neighbors in pyjamas and slippers.

*Men were told to refrain from helping women carry their handbags. (This has definitely not filtered down to Shenzhen where everyday I still see a couple holding hands while they walk with the man having a purse slung around his shoulder or carrying down by his side. And I had just assumed it was his purse all this time!).

*Visits to new friends should not last longer then 10 minutes.

*Don’t swear.

*Women were told to stand with their feet slightly apart, in a V or Y shape, when wearing skirts.  Why is that??

*Males and females were cautioned against putting their faces too close to members of the opposite sex when talking in public. (Must have something to do with the rampant problem of halitosis).

I find it sad that so much effort has been made to try and change the face of Beijing for the tourists who will be visiting during the Olympics. Does anyone really care how others dress? Spitting, though disgusting, has more to do with the pollution problem rather then poor manners. Clean up the skies and I guarantee I will cease to have the need to spit in Shenzhen. Of course waiting patiently in line is an expectation that Americans have, though I have become quite accustomed to jumping queue and find it can be quite time saving even when driving. Though I have never carried a purse, I do always get a smile when I see some bloke carrying his girl’s purse and wonder why no mention was made of the man who carries one while walking solo. And what is with having women stand in a V shape?? Who cares how a woman stands, at least she isn’t squatting. Speaking of squatting, I have finally mastered the technique but hardly find it comfortable to rest that way in public let alone private. Wonder why no mention of not squatting when not in the bathroom?

On the other hand, any effort to have a city of well dressed citizens, smiling while they patiently wait in line keeping their swear words in their thoughts and spit in their mouth can only be a good thing. Wonder if these classes would work in say, New York?

Shenzhen Torch Chaos

The Beijing Olympic torch was in Shenzhen yesterday and passed within a few hundred meters of my office. I had thought about walking up to the main street to join the masses to see the torch go by but had a lot of work to do since I have been out of the office most of the past 3 weeks and am headed back to the States again on Sunday. And also because I missed out on the chance to carry the torch I had some mixed feelings about seeing it where I should have carried it!

First the Shenzhen relay was postponed because the flame reached the top of Mt. Everest and it can’t be in two places at once. The 208 Shenzhen torchbearers were told they only had 1 minute to cover 200 meters each rather then the originally planned 2 minutes which isn’t that big of a deal. Then apparently based on reports in the South China Morning Post , “The Olympic flame was extinguished briefly during the torch relay in Shenzhen yesterday, and witnesses reported that people tried to grab the torch and had to be wrestled to the ground.” And another story indicated that planned route was abandoned because there were too many people and the organizers wanted to take a safer route which angered the tens of thousands of people who had been waiting at the corner and led to some rioting. Mainland media reports, however, said the flame was extinguished because the crowds were too excited and that “normal precautionary measures” were taken to ensure public safety. And not surprisingly, Chinese television, which was filming the progress of the torch, hurriedly cut away. None of the Chinese media carried the story and the South China Mornng Post, in Hong Kong, concentrated on the triumph of the torch reaching Mount Everest.

Maybe the passage of the Olympic torch on the mainland may not be as smooth as expected…

Some Links with more stories and details:

Jesse Warren’s Flickr Site with Photos

Shenzhen: Local Chinese Extinguish Olympic Torch in Protest?

Shenzhen Olympic Torch Relay, The Corner The Relay Forgot

Unknown protesters in Shenzhen attack Olympic runners and extinguish the flame

Spectator Only

Has been quite awhile since I blogged. Not quite sure why I haven’t been in the mood to share my ups, downs and the goings on in my life over the last few months but alas am going to try and get back into the habit once again. Not just because I want to share with whoever happens upon my little piece of the internet but rather it is a good way for me to vent and chronicle the details I would like to remember.

My quest to be an Olympic Torchbearer did not end with me being selected to run with the torch. However, it did leave me feeling loved and touched because of the quotes that my friends, coworkers, family and friends of friends left. I received a total of 5,639 votes which placed me in the top 15 vote getters. Ultimately, the top vote getters from 8 different countries were chosen to be the torchbearers and I congratulate each of them.

So it looks like I will be a spectator only at the 2008 Beijing Olympics!!

Olympic Torchbearer

Lenovo is sponsoring an “Expats for Olympic Torchbearers” contest and I need your vote! Please cast your vote at http://pub1.chinadaily.com.cn/olympics/torch/members.shtml?mid=228 and pass the link on to your friends.

Badminton

img214070082.jpgAlmost four months ago, Pei Lin registered both of us for phase 1 of the ticketing process for the Beijing Olympics next summer. As a legal resident in China I was afforded the opportunity to register for tickets just like a Chinese citizen. Of course not everyone is created equal as the type of ID held had to be chosen. They ranged from a foreign passport to active military and all sorts in between. I didn’t hold out much hope of getting anything since the tickets were so oversubscribed and it didn’t matter how early you registered before the June 30 deadline.

Well, today I received an email saying I have confirmed my place at the Olympics! Three tickets to Badminton on Saturday morning, August 9, the second day of the games. Not exactly my sport of choice but nonetheless we have guaranteed tickets to at least one Olympic game. Pei Lin hasn’t received an email yet, but I am sure his Chinese passport will grant him tickets to an event or two.

Who wants our third ticket??