Monday, August 1, 2011

Last Few Days in China

"No Foreigners will be allowed into Tibet"
The last , big "Hurrah" of a year in China was to be our trip to Tibet.  We had arranged to take the highest railway in the world for the 47-hour trip to Lhasa.  We had arranged a (required) tour-guide for Lhasa, the Himalayan Mountains, and even an overnight excursion to the Mount Everest Base Camp. 

Yes!!!  We were sooooo excited about these plans!
 Then, after waiting around for awhile for the Tibetan border with China to re-open, we were told that it "will remain closed for the summer." 
It seems to be about the Big Anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party.



Bouncing back from our disappointment, Qing had the wonderful idea of the six of us taking the train to Chengdu, and then traveling (by bus) west, toward the Tibetan border, going as far as we could into mountainous country similar to Tibet.
Anticipation



















We saw the street-statue guys again, in Chengdu, and again I thought that they were AWESOME!
Kevin and Andi sampled tea, for which Chengdu is famous.
We stayed at Dragon Town International Hostel, again.
Friend and manager, MeiMei, with her beautiful daughter
Bath time
With anticipation, we planned our bus route and bought tickets to "Tibetan country."

We rode past typical river-side factories......
....and places where the road was damaged by recent landslides......
.....and  up into the hills, toward the mountains.  The bus-driver was pretty crazy, passing on curves and passing multiple trucks in a row.  I couldn't look out the front windowof the bus, but Kevin and Andi had no choice, as they had the front seats!  We rode the bus for 6+ hours, toward Tibet.

****Then, the bus pulled over to the side of the road, some armed police officers boarded the bus, and said, "There are four foreigners.  Four foreigners, get off the bus!"  Kevin, Andi, Chris, and I gathered up our stuff, and followed the directions given.  Our back-packs were unloaded from the baggage compartment, underneath the seating.  Qing got off the bus, too, and amid a lot of crying and sadness at the turn of events, Qing and Melody were encouraged to continue on their way, while "Four Foreigners" joined the group of other road-side foreigners who had been waiting there for up to five hours.  In small groups, passengers from Israel, Italy, Wales, England, America, New Zealand, and the Czech Republic had been taken off other buses.  All Chinese people had been sent on.  A bus-load of Japanese tourists was stopped and sent back, while we observed.  When the new "foreigner bus" was full, we were counted (4 times), cash was paid to the driver, and we were sent back down the hills, to the east.

Chris got photos of the "incident", but one of the officers came up, took the camera (thats cord was still wrapped around Chris's wrist), and made sure that all photos taken were deleted.  (Then he gave the camera back.) 

So, waving "good-bye" to Qing, at 7 pm, our new bus driver went careening down the hill, passing on curves, and croaking up and spitting out big loogies every ten minutes, all the way, for the 6 hour trip back to Chengdu.  We were dropped off in the middle of the city at 1:30 am, not near any transportation opportunities, to fend for ourselves.  We got a taxi to the North Train Station, where hundreds of men, women, teen-agers, and children were sleeping (some, on newspapers) all over the loogie -covered parking lot and sidewalks.....sometimes little naked children.....a sea of humanity. 

We stood in a long line of people at 2 am, and managed to buy tickets for an 8 am train, back to Chongqing.  We went to a nearby KFC, which only served soda pop and rice-with-fungus soup.  Played some cards.  We tried to put our heads down to rest, but a KFC guard came through every-once-in-awhile with a megaphone recording , telling people to "wake up and get out."  As there were 30 people sleeping on tables in there, at any given time, heads came up for a couple of minutes, and then went back down. 


Finally, at 8 am, we got on the train, to find that, though we had paid full price, there were no seats available.  ("Standing room only")  We four sat on the rubber mat in front of the train door, leaning on, lying on, and sitting on our backpacks. 


Why were we turned back?  This is the 90th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party, and the Chinese officials do not want foreigners talking to Tibetan people, creating "international incidents."  Apparently, they have widened the zone of forbidden territory to include  Tibetan regions of western China.  We have read  recent news articles about crackdowns in Tibet and in western Sichuan.  We can only hope that the Tibetan people know of the world's continued concern over human rights violations and the future of their people, religion, and culture.
"Seven Years in Tibet" is a good movie to increase awareness of the recent history and struggle in Tibet.

Back "home" in Chongqing, Andi cooked a great meal.
We saw Ma Yanfei again, and celebrated her up-coming teaching job in Germany!
We went out to dinner with another marvelous student, who has been admitted to the University of WA, Seattle, and her mother!

We visited one last Chinese museum.

The "Ba" people reminded us of the Native North Americans:
Chris practiced his cross-bow skills.
We noticed that our wonderful school building......
.....had all the ceramic tiles ripped off the outside of it....???
Kevin and Andi visited one last tea shop.
We bought some wine.....

.....and said "Good-Bye" to China.  It's been a great year.....most of the time!  Our students will always be in our hearts, and we hope to see many of them again.  Living in the BIG CITY was an experience to be fondly remembered for our lifetimes. 


***Thanks to all of you who have taken the time to read this blog, look at the photos, give us feedback, and perhaps learn a little more about another culture and its wonderful people, on the "other side of the planet."  
Signing off now,   Paula and Chris   (aka:  O Ping  and O Fei......Mrs. O and Mr. O)

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Shanghai

SHANGHAI

This historic bridge changes colors....blue, purple, green, red, yellow...
Looking across the river, at "The Bund", from the Oriental Pearl Tower's observation level
Downtown Shanghai

Tonia took us all out to an AMAZING buffet dinner, with lasagna, potato salad, ........ Thank you!
Tonia had come to the U.S., as a "Chinese Language and Culture" teacher in Battle Ground School District, in 1989.  She still travels internationally, as an educator.  Tonia is another "daughter" of Barb and John Rogers.
We spent most of a day in the Shanghai Museum.
Can you find me in this photo?



Most of the items in the Shanghai Museum were private collections, stashed outside of China during the Cultural Revolution of the 1960's, and, since then, returned to be on display in this museum.  There were galleries for bronze-ware, stone sculpture, water-color painting, red-ink stamps (known as "chops"), calligraphy, clothing and fashion, jade, furniture, coins and currency, the Silk Road, ceramics and porcelain........A  window into the history, art, and culture of CHINA.
We took the sight-seeing bus on its entire route through the city, during the day-time, and then (again) at night.  This gave us a good overview of Shanghai.

Most of our trip was on an open-topped bus.


We stayed at the Blue Mountain Backpackers' Hostel for one week.
Our hostel was close to Nanjing Road pedestrian street.
We spent a day exploring Yu Yuan Gardens.









Xintiandi district of renovated homes, now used as shops and expensive apartments
An artist drew sketches of life in Shanghai during the early 1900's.








Inside a restored home.....elegantly furnished



The Chinese Communist Party had its first meetings in Shanghai.
Some Chinese people have suffered greatly in Shanghai.  Originally, the Party gave them hope for better lives.
We spent most of a day at the Shanghai Planning and Exhibition Hall.

There was a HUGE room-sized model of the city of Shanghai.
Yes!!!  Lots of emphasis on planting trees and making Shanghai GREEN.
Some of the exhibits had come directly from the World's Fair 2010, the big EXPO in Shanghai, China.
Most of the pavilions of EXPO have already been torn down.  We had heard that the China Pavilion (which will stay, and appears in this city model) would be re-opened while we were in Shanghai.  But, no, the opening date was delayed.
Another floor of the museum had historic Communist Party posters.
Happy, happy, happy.......
The Oriental Pearl  (TV)  Tower has become the most-recognizable symbol of Shanghai.



We visited it during the day-time, and again at night.


We were lucky enough to have short lines, when we went up inside the tower.
I'm really not crazy about glass floors, in ANY of these big towers!
Chris is more comfortable with extreme heights.

We could not afford to visit the level with the revolving restaurant .....simlar to the Space Needle in Seattle. 

We did visit the "gaming" level, a huge arcade of kids' games.  There was also a roller-coaster on this level, that I thought that I could work up the courage to ride......Sadly, the assistant pointed to a sign and told us that we were "too elderly."    What???

















We went UNDER the river in this train-car, on a rail system, through a wildly-lit tunnel.
Lights, music, and wild sound effects, all the way!
On our very last day in Shanghai, we went to see the most incredible Buddha of all....a solid-piece-of-JADE Buddha.  150 years ago, a guy brought 5 of these jade Buddhas from Myanmar, all the way across Tibet, and then had temples built around each one. 
There was a reclining Buddha in another room of the temple complex.

Other random photos from our week in Shanghai:

Market Street
Transport
Having my Teva sandals repaired by a street vendor...... I actually had these shoes repaired 3 times (different parts) while in China, as I wore them a lot, and tried to live the "reduce, reuse, recycle, refuse" motto.
Store window display....good Halloween costume, I think.
About a ba-zillion rubber-bands for sale