The Chinese Dream

来源 :CHINAFRICA | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:k1389520
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  if I had not come to China, I would not have learned so many things and I would have continued to believe in the myths we have at home. So the first lesson I learned in China is believe something only after you see it with your own eyes.
  I come from Ghana, the country Lonely Planet calls“West Africa’s golden child.” I arrived in Beijing from Accra in 2016 on a Chinese Government scholarship to do my Master’s in communication. When I landed here in September, straight from a tropical country where there is no winter, I discovered winter for the first time. I also discovered I didn’t have adequate winter clothes. So on the second day of my arrival, after I had slept for hours to get over the jet lag, I headed for the market with two more friends from Ghana.
  It was an eye-opener! Everything at the mall - the clothes, shoes, bags, you name it - sent us into raptures. They were so desirable and the quality was so superb. In Accra we had the impression that Chinese goods were of inferior quality. But after living in China, I have realized that it’s not the Chinese manufacturers who are to blame but the Ghanaian traders who pass over quality goods and knowingly take low-quality products back home with them so that they can make a quick profit.
  The second lesson came on my first trip on the subway. My two friends and I were unfamiliar with the system and could not figure out how to go to our destination. We went to the wrong station and after having come out of the electronic gate, realized our mistake. We were going to leave the station, writing off the money spent on the tickets, when an amazing Chinese commuter came to our rescue.
  She had been watching us for some time and though she didn’t speak a lot of English, nevertheless, she came over and explained to us where we would have to go. Not just that, she then went to the ticket counter and bought three tickets for all three of us, three total strangers. Back home, we used to think the Chinese were not very friendly. But this incident opened our eyes. During my stay in China, I have met with such kindness and friendliness from both friends and strangers alike. On the New Year’s Day, our Chinese classmates brought dumplings for us to start 2017 on a delicious note. And when we go about our business in the city, so many people stop to talk to us, and to ask us where we are from. Many are fascinated by our hair, asking if they could touch the braids and enquiring how we do our hair.   My classes have given me a valuable insight that I will take back with me to Ghana. During the course, we were educated in media literacy, which means to analyze whatever the media tells you and not to consume everything it says. Back home, there is zero media literacy education. When I go home, I want to start a project for kindergarten students to teach them how to react to all those advertisements on the TV and other channels that promise miracles while selling food products. For example, you have this drink which promises you instant energy. I want to teach them to look beyond the labeling.
  This is very important because of rising obesity and heart diseases worldwide. A lot of it is due to eating junk food and not enough vegetables. The seeds of many of these diseases are sown during school-going days. You have to make them aware from that stage so that they can prepare and protect themselves.
  My course will end around August but I would like to come back to China. My most important discovery is that it is the land of possibilities. It has so many opportunities, you have to just get over the language barrier. My dream is to start my own export-import business; perhaps I can network and find a business partner in China. There are so many people in China like us, exploring so many opportunities. It’s not the American Dream that people are following today. It’s the Chinese Dream.
其他文献
IN a remote village of southwest Ethiopia’s Omer River Valley, about 1,800 km away from the capital city of Addis Ababa, the light of knowledge shines out of darkness - quite literally. In the shabby
期刊
as two women sit talking on the step of an old building in Cairo, a young woman comes and sits between them casually. Dressed in a white blouse and a short red skirt, she couldn’t be any more differen
期刊
Good news for tea aficionados: it is no longer necessary to embark on an epic journey like Chinese famous ancient explorer Zheng He to savor the aroma of African herbal teas. Those who suffer from the
期刊
FOR Haitian author Yves Antoine, his trip to Conakry, capital of Guinea, in April was more than a first-time tourist visit to an off-the-beaten-track destination. It was a time for making mind-to-mind
期刊
IN his mother language Serer, Koumakh Bakhoum’s given name literally means the “initiation master,” namely the one in charge of the rite by which young people officially join the adult community. And
期刊
CHINA has been the largest trading partner of Africa since 2009 and with the rapid growth in terms of the country’s direct investment to Africa. In the first 10 months of 2016, China’s non-financial d
期刊
ALTHOUGH high school students Wang Luojun and Luo Yiting, both 16, were not on a football field that evening, judging by the amount of praise and applause they received, it was as if they had just sco
期刊
The plains of Imbo in Bubanza Province, Burundi, recorded the highest rice yield in Africa in October last year, surpassing the average yield in the area by three-folds. The bumper crop of 13,860 kg p
期刊
Following in the more than two-decade-old diplomatic tradition, which has seen Chinese foreign ministers head to Africa as the starting destination of their international diplomatic engagements every
期刊
IT was fantastic to be selected from more than 80 staff at my media house in Rwanda to attend the 2017 China-Africa Press Center (CAPC) fellowship. The program is now in its fourth year.  As a first t
期刊