|
CHINA> Profiles
![]() |
|
A family's two-generation odyssey abroad
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-09-18 11:47 SHANGHAI: For a long time, Fan Qijin had held that every person on earth should wear the same shoes. That was undoubtedly in his mind until his study tour in Japan 28 years ago. When Fan first boarded a train in Tokyo in 1981 shortly after his arrival in Japan, then 37-year-old was a bit shocked to see that no two pairs of shoes worn by ordinary Japanese were the same. "The feeling was so bizarre, as what I saw in Tokyo then was totally different from my country," recalled Fan, now 65, and chief engineer of the Shanghai-based Yangtze Estuary Waterway Administration Bureau under the Ministry of Communications. In the early 1980s, the infant stage of China's reform and opening-up, Chinese people were still dressed predominantly in their identical gray or blue, plus the grass green rubber-soled canvas shoes, dubbed "jiefang xie", meaning "liberation shoes". It was no wonder that Fan felt culture shock, coming from a society where uniformity had been omnipresent for almost three decades. Indeed, the study tour itself had been a "godsend" to Fan, given his "tainted" family background. He fell unfortunately into the "Black Five" Category, a highly politicized term coined for "landlords, rich farmers, anti-revolutionists, bad elements and right-wingers" in China from 1957 to 1976, when the decade-long "Cultural Revolution" ended. Not trusted due to the nametag, Fan had been frustrated in his political advancement at a time when everything in China hinged on political "correctness". Upon graduation from Tianjin University in north China in 1968, Fan was assigned to a military farm in Taishan County, south China's Guangdong Province and worked as farmer for two years. It was not until 1970 when he was transferred to the Qingdao-based No.1 Port Construction Bureau under the Ministry of Communications, that he was finally in a job along the line of his college major -- harbor engineering. An opportunity came his way in the late 1970s, when Deng Xiaoping, chief architect of China's reform and opening up, instructed that more students and scholars should be funded for overseas study to accelerate the country's reform process. As the bureau Fan worked for was in 1980 only assigned one place for overseas study, competition was tough. Fan passed his Japanese language and professional knowledge test, but he still had to face a more complicated check up of political records. "I didn't know exactly how the check-up was carried out," Fan said, "but I knew the process was lengthy." In 1981 Fan joined some 250 people to study in Japan with state funds. And he was to study at the School of Science, the University of Tokyo. Life abroad was tough for Fan, on a state allowance -- 1,000 yen (US$4.5) a day -- could only buy a bowl and a half of noodles at a local market, far from a decent living. "Therefore I didn't want to go shopping at all even though the stores and shopping malls in Tokyo were full of dazzling goods I'd never seen back home," he said. "More importantly, time was so valuable for our generation to learn from foreign countries," he explained. "Imagine how excited we were when being exposed to such an enormous amount of knowledge that China desperately needed during that time." This hunger for knowledge had made Fan's life in Tokyo a simple route between university laboratory and dormitory. "I was a 100 percent learner in Japan then," Fan said. "I didn't have much time to play and the only song I learned in Japan was Spring in Northland." When he completed his study in 1983, all Fan wished was to bring almost every major item back to China, where durables were still a rarity in the 1980s. "Made-in-Japan wrist watch, refrigerator, washing machine, color television set," Fan counted with his fingers. "What really annoyed me was I didn't have enough money for such a long list then," he said. Over 20 years later, however, a much longer list needed his scrutiny when he returned to Japan to give a lecture on China's harbor engineering in February this year. But the difficult part this time was choosing at Japanese stores presents for his family back in China, with no made-in-China tags. "It was like shopping at home as it is hard to find stuff not made in China," Fan added. It's amusing that the electronic photo frame he had carefully chosen turned out to be "made in China". "Things are very different now," Fan said. "From China's international standing to its technological progress, great changes can be seen everywhere." In 1950, China's imports and exports amounted to a mere US$1.13 billion, or 0.9 percent of the world trade volume. The figure had grown in 2008, however, to about US$2.56 trillion or 8.86 percent. "The ups and downs in my life were closely linked to the state of the entire country," said Fan. |
主站蜘蛛池模板: 中文字幕人妻丝袜美腿乱| 色综合中文字幕色综合激情| 国产成人一区二区三区视频免费| 性虎精品无码AV导航| 国产一区二区三区地址| 国产粉嫩一区二区三区av| 日韩精品永久免费播放平台| 免费观看的av毛片的网站| 亚洲av中文乱码一区二| 人妻18毛片A级毛片免费看| 老熟妇国产一区二区三区| 热久久这里只有精品国产| 色777狠狠狠综合| 国内精品久久久久影院日本| 日韩精品一区二区三免费| 欧美激情视频二区三区| 五月天丁香婷婷亚洲欧洲国产| 亚洲国产精品一二三区| 性欧美巨大乳| 国产男女猛烈无遮挡免费视频| 宅男噜噜噜66在线观看| 意大利xxxx性hd极品| 一区二区三区午夜无码视频| 夜夜影院未满十八勿进| 波多久久夜色精品国产| 国产睡熟迷奷系列网站| 国产v综合v亚洲欧美大天堂| 国产在线98福利播放视频免费| 在线精品国精品国产不卡| 精品夜恋影院亚洲欧洲| 日本熟妇色xxxxx日本免费看 | 动漫av网站免费观看| 精品国产成人a在线观看| 四虎在线播放亚洲成人| 国产亚洲色视频在线| 亚洲欧美一区二区三区在线| 日韩亚洲视频一区二区三区| 色欲色香天天天综合网站免费| 久久精品无码一区二区国产区| 女性高爱潮视频| 精品精品久久宅男的天堂|