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How they helped fire young hearts
Thousands
of Chinese rallied over the weekend in Paris, London and Los Angeles,
protesting some Western media organizations’ distortion of facts in
Tibet and their hostile attitudes to China’s hosting of the Olympic
Games. During the protests, many Chinese students, especially girls,
wept.
They wept because they felt aggrieved. The hostile feelings about China
they witnessed in those Western countries recently hurt their national
pride. It hurt their love of their country, which is also the host
country for the Games. They were too young to be indifferent to their
emotions.
The Chinese youths went to the Western countries with the purpose of
learning advanced science and technologies and with their admiration for
Western culture.
These people in their 20s were born in the years after China began to
open itself to the outside world. Since their childhood, they have grown
a strong interest in everything Western - from KFC to Christmas tree,
from Hollywood to Harry Potter. And they developed an admiration for
such concepts as liberty, equality and universal fraternity that they
believed originated in the West.
After they had lived there for a certain period of time, however, they
began to realize that the “fraternity” is not universal. Because of
various reasons, they often suffered from misunderstanding, which
sometimes turned into discrimination. Though they were pampered children
at home, they swallowed the misunderstandings and even the insults and
tried to adapt themselves to the local culture.
When riots and violence erupted in Tibet last month, they learned the
facts from their relatives back at home. But they were shocked at the
biased reports about the event in the Western media. It was so obvious
that it was the rioters who killed innocent people, burnt shops and
destroyed public utilities; but the Western media subjectively alleged
that the Chinese government “suppressed peaceful protests”.
The Chinese youths in Western countries could not understand why the
Western media distorted the facts so blatantly.
Then, when the British, French and US media merrily focused their
cameras on Tibetan separatists’ attempts to disrupt the Olympic torch
relay, the Chinese youths were completely disappointed with what they
once thought were fair and honest Western media. And the frequent calls
from Western politicians for boycotting the Beijing Olympic Games
convinced the Chinese youths that hostile elements in Western countries
would never be happy about a China that is growing stronger and more
influential.
These youths, and their peers back in China, are what is dubbed
“post-1980s” in analyses on the generation gap. They were generally
thought to be self-centered, afraid of hardships and uncaring about the
fate of the nation. Their parents and teachers worried greatly about
China’s future,skeptical of these kids’ sense of responsibility to the
nation.
The strong patriotic feelings they demonstrated in their fight against
Western biases and for the protection of the Olympic torch relay should
put their parents’ hearts at ease.
They are drawing lessons from what they have seen and experienced. What
they learned in the past few weeks far exceeded what their teachers had
taught them in many years. They are maturing in the face of setbacks and
discriminations.
In this sense, we have reasons to be grateful to those Western media
organizations for their “turn black into white” variety of journalism,
to those Western politicians with their innate prejudices against China;
and to those, like CNN’s Jack Cafferty, who went to great lengths to
vilify China.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily
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