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More hope for gay rights in China? I don’t know…

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

The Global Times (环球时报) is an international affairs newspaper published by the People’s Daily (人民日报), the official mouthpiece of the Communist Party of China, and it is usually about as entertaining as that sounds.  Unlike the People’s Daily the Global Times is hugely popular in China, my students in Huaihua used to read it all the time (they used its fiercely nationalistic articles to help them craft their essays for school).  Global Times is nationalistic and often goes after foreign governments, which can make it kind of grating to read as a foreigner.  This year they started printing an English version of the newspaper as part of the Chinese government’s multi-billion dollar investment to make the Chinese viewpoint heard round the world (they also want to start a 24/7 English news channel).  The English Global Times has enlisted a wide range of people to write articles and op-eds, including many English speaking expats living in China (even some bloggers), which means the paper has a far more diverse viewpoint than its Chinese mother.

I don’t usually read the paper, though recently the paper ran an op-ed with a headline that got my attention: “More Hope for Gay Rights in China Than in the US.”  How could I resist that?

The author is James Palmer. He is a non-fiction writer who recently published his book The Bloody White Baron, a history of the Russian Baron Ungern-Sternberg (1886–1921).  He lives in Beijing.  Mr. Palmer makes some really great points in his editorial, but in the end his thesis is wrong.  I thought I’d hash out the details here.

He starts by saying that with the recent civil rights losses in Maine (the passing of a Constitutional amendment banning gay marriage) and Rhode Island (the governor forbade gay partners from enjoying funeral rights) have left civil rights leaders “despairing”.  While I am certainly saddened by the developments in Maine and Rhode Island I am not despairing, and I don’t think other young LGBT Americans are either.  There was the recent super-sized march in Washington for LGBT rights and the signing into law of the Shepard Byrd Hate Crimes Bill that in my mind seem to offer a lot of hope and promise for the people fighting for LGBT rights in America.  Plus, the generational divide on the issue of gay marriage makes me very secure in the knowledge that there is no reason to despair, at least not too much.  Of course, Mr. Palmer is right in many ways on this point.  The recent murder, dismemberment and burning of 19 year old Jorge Steven Lopez Mercado in Puerto Rico shows that our society has many problems and that the fight for gay rights in America is not merely about marriage.

He then writes:

If anything, the situation in China can seem worse. Gay marriage isn’t even on the administrative agenda yet, and most Chinese homosexuals still live hidden lives, pressured into marriage by their family.

Yet history and culture may offer more hope in China than in the US.

Not a ridiculous proposition, and one that I have also considered here on my blog.  The question is how far can you take this line of thinking?  Will China have nationwide gay marriage rights before the U.S.?  (Yes, that day will certainly come, both here and there.)  Will China’s gay rights movement follow along a path similar to America’s?  In the end I think the real question that makes such nation to nation comparisons fraught with difficulty is: What are the underlying differences between our culture’s views on homosexuality and how will these differences affect the fight for gay rights?

Mr. Palmer feels the same and he wrote a bit about homosexuality’s (especially male homosexuality) place in Chinese culture and history, something him and I both seem to have an interest in.  He brings up the eminent Jesuit missionary Matteo Ricci (1552-1610), a man more fascinating and game-changing than Marco Polo ever was, who, in his quest to convert the Chinese masses, looked the other way when it came to ancestor worship but could never understand the Chinese people’s acceptance of homosexuality.  He wrote of homosexuality: “It is spoken of in public and practised everywhere without there being anyone to prevent it.”

European societies, as Mr. Palmer points out, were cultures where homosexuality was, “condemned by religion, law and custom, and vicious punishments, even including death, were handed down to gay men.”  In contrast, China had long viewed homosexuality not in such black and white terms.  Many Chinese Emperors were bisexual (all but one in the Han dynasty), male concubines were allowed and often common among the wealthy, and male poets would write romantic lines about their same sex lovers.  While ancient China was never a homosexual paradise, it was also not the judgmental nightmare than Christian Europe used to be.

It was only with the Self-Strengthening Movement, the fall of the Qing dynasty, and the adoption of Western political and cultural ideas that allowed Western ideas towards homosexuality to become the norm in China.  Mr. Palmer points out that during Mao’s reign homosexuality was considered a “Western bourgeois vice,” a line of thinking that some still believe today.  Go figure, the ancient country with a long history of open homosexuality calls homosexuality a Western trend.  However, China’s history does not in and of itself easily translate into an easier fight for LGBT rights in today’s China.

Mr. Palmer mentions the interesting place of homosexuality in Chinese society today:

Today, gay rights in China are less advanced than in Europe or the US. Although a commonly accepted rule is “no approval, no disapproval, no promotion,”and legal persecution is rare, gays rarely live openly and have a difficult time, in particular, coming out to their parents. (Emphasis added)

Many gay men have male lovers in their 20s, get married and have a child – and then, very often, go back to having secretive same-sex relationships.

This is a pretty solid summary of the situation facing gay men in China today.  Gay men are neither hunted nor welcomed.  Gay bars are hard to find, exist as relatively secretive places and are not a place where you want to be seen by your straight boss.  At the same time the bathrooms of gay bars and clubs are covered in government ads urging the use of safe sex  and inside a Chinese gay bar everyone is very open and friendly.  Hell, the government in Dali, a city in Yunnan province, just opened a gay bar in the city today as a way to stop the spread of AIDS and provide a community center for the gay community. Turns out the gay bar has been put on hold due to the intense media attention, the gay volunteers voted not to open it yet.  If you ask me, this is sign of how the development of gay rights is going to be slow going in China.

Mr. Palmer is also right that most gay men in China still marry women and have children after their 20s.  I talked about these “homowives” and the reasons behind such marriages in a previous blog post.  Since coming to Shanghai I have also learned about  so called “sham marriages” (I forget the Chinese name.  If you know it please post it in the comments), which are when the women in a lesbian couple and the men in a gay couple split off into two straight marriages or when a lesbian and a gay man get married.  These sham marriages are purely for show, the fake heterosexual couples only spend the Chinese New Year together while visiting the in laws, for most of the year everyone can be with their true loves.

In finishing up his argument Mr. Palmer compares America’s Christian society and its “tradition of aggressive masculinity that sees gay men as ‘weak’ or ‘unmanly’” to China, a country that “doesn’t have any of this.”  I can understand this argument, and it does hold true much of the time.  For example, in my classroom last year effeminate boys were some of the most popular students and were not harassed as they might have been in America.  Male friendships are also of a different nature in China and can be worlds away from the American tradition.   Of course nothing is this black and white.  The comments posted by Chinese citizens on a recent BBS about Taiwan’s LGBT Pride parade were often deeply derogatory and violent.  So while being “unmanly” in the eyes of a male American may not be much of a problem in China, being openly gay and proud most certainly is.

The fight for gay rights in America is often, as Mr. Palmer writes, preaching against the “low-level homophobia of the playground” and showing that members of the LGBT community are productive and kind people just like everyone else.  At the same time though the fight for gay rights in China often means bringing up a topic that isn’t even discussed on the playground, let alone used derogatorily among students.  When homosexuality is as closeted as it is in most of China fighting for gay rights can be a huge undertaking.

Mr. Palmer seems to be saying that since China lacks a large Christian community (though, in all fairness, it is growing by leaps and bounds) and an American style love of macho manliness, that means that gay rights will flourish here unimpeded.  Maybe, but as of yet most of the flousihing of the Chinese LGBT community is happening outside of the public eye.  China’s gay community has to take the big step of coming out of the closet and promoting others to do the same before real dramatic changes can take place.  Mr. Palmer writes: “It might be that in 20 years time or longer, China recognizes gay marriage, while large parts of the US and Europe continue to be stuck in the past.”  But for this to happen in China there will have to be a strong open gay community, a governmnet not vague in its stance on gay rights, and probably an explosive moment that ushers in real changes.  Just as Stonewall started the modern gay rights movement in America 40 years ago, a strong stand against prejuidce and hiding could bring needed changes to the Chinese LGBT community.  If that happens I would not be surprised if it took less than 40 years for China to reach the kind of support and acceptance that I can find in my home state of Massachusetts.  I and the tens of millions of LGBT Chinese are waiting.

More Obama in China News

Friday, November 20th, 2009

obamagugong

He came and he left.  President Obama’s first visit to China happened this week and unless you were not reading the news you probably already knew that.  While the American newspapers covered his trip here and Fox News entertainers were no doubt discussing it on cable I think I can safely say it was a much bigger deal over here, even if the coverage was not as complete as it was in the foreign press.  The Chinese people love Obama.  His Presidency is historic and an affirmation of everything that is good about American democracy; he’s handsome, speaks beautifully in clear language that English learners over here can understand, and he is not George W. Bush.  The Chinese government were not unaware of Obama’s stardom and they sought to use it to there advantage while making sure that Obama didn’t lecture China on human rights, Renminbi revaluation, and Iran sanctions.  In this respect the Chinese government was by and large successful.

For me, the President’s visit was just a nice treat.  The day that he was here in Shanghai was comforting in a way, it was nice having my government’s leader here.  I was a senior in college during Obama’s primary fight against Hilary Clinton and then I left before the final few months leading up to the actual election a year ago.  I was in Beijing for Obama’s win over McCain, when the financial markets took their worst dives I was enjoying the air on the Himalayan plateau in western Sichuan and when he gave his amazing Inaugural speech I watched it from a smokey Chinese internet bar in Xishuangbanna, right over the border from Laos.  The first time I stepped foot in an America with Obama as President was this July, a few days before July 4th.  It was satisfying in a way that he took a few days to come over here to my home, even if it was a stilted and choreographed trip.

During the whole time Obama was in China (and the lead up to it and the aftermath) there was a deluge of newspaper articles, blog posts, tweets, news broadcasts, podcasts, conversations, photographs, and gossip that anyone interested enough could partake in.  I was reading and watching everything related to his trip (at least as much as I could) and now I am tired.  So if you wanted a blog post glowing blue with hyperlinks to every pertinent and interesting thing on the internet about his trip you’re going to have to look elsewhere.  And man are there many places to look!  My blogroll seems to have disappeared when I uploaded this new design so you’ll have to be a bit creative.  I will say that The China Beat has a blog post up that links to a wide and thorough selection of readings on the President’s trip, though please don’t think of this as anything more than the very tip of the iceberg.

I would like to give you, my handsome and intelligent reader, some observations and thoughts.  After the President’s speech in Tokyo, in which he spoke about his thoughts toward China, he flew to my home: Shanghai.  He arrived here just after midnight during some of the coldest and rainiest weather we’ve had this season.  Chinese netizens were, apparently, happy to see that the President carried his own umbrella.  Here in China, where powerful men project their power and prestige in many gaudy ways, leaders often have people hold umbrellas for them.  I guess Obama got a few hours rest in Shanghai’s Portman Ritz Carlton before waking up early for his daily exercise.

He had breakfast with Shanghai’s mayor, Han Zheng.  Preisdent Obama then drove to Shanghai’s Museum of Science to host a town hall style meeting with Chinese students.  I watched the exchange on the White House website, which had a good quality video stream of the event that wasn’t blocked in China.  CNN International and a couple local Shanghai stations broadcast the meeting as well, though there was no nationwide broadcast and most Chinese people did not get to see Obama answer questions.  At approximately 12 noon he got on stage with Ambassador Huntsman, who gave a short speech in Chinese and English.  Obama then gave his opening remarks.  He mentioned that there are universal human rights that don’t apply only to Americans but everyone on the planet.  The right to practice religion and air one’s thoughts were brought up.

The question and answer period was a dud.  The students that Obama took questions from, he referred to them as “the future leaders of China” or something to that effect, were actually almost all Communist Youth League leaders and one was a teacher.  All had been hand picked by the Communist Party.  On a side note, the Chinese President, Hu Jintao, rose to power through the ranks of the Communist Youth League, which incidentally all Chinese elementary students are enrolled in (in middle school they choose if they want to stay), and his power base is often considered to be connected to the organization.  The questions pretty much all sucked and there were even two questions on the same topic (the Nobel Peace prize), Obama’s answers were likewise guarded and diplomatic.  Obama did take one question (read by Ambassador Huntsman) that had been posted on the U.S. Embassy’s website; the question was regarding the Great Firewall of China, which the government uses to control what people in China can look at on the internet, blocking sites such as Facebook and Twitter.  Obama explained why he doesn’t himself use Twitte and why he thinks that this censorship is bad: “I support non-censorship.”  His answer was initially posted online on Chinese news sites but was then taken down later.  After one hour of speaking and 7 questions Obama left and flew to Beijing.  He was in my home of Shanghai fora little over 12 hours.

In Beijing Obama stayed at the Diaoyutai (Fishing spot) Guest house, a hotel on fancy State-owned grounds near the center of the city.  During the Cultural Revolution this is where Madame Mao, Jiang Qing, the architect of some of that period’s worst atrocities, stayed (Mao always slept by himself, often by his private pool).  President Obama had a nice meal there with President Hu, Ambassador Huntsman, and Secretary of State Hilary Clinton.

Obama in China (Youth Daily) 奥巴马在中国 (青年报)

登罢长城  结束访华

Obama Climbs the Great Wall to Finish China Visit

“我从这里带走的是对中国文明的钦佩,带走的是美国人民的问候。”

“From this trip I have gained a deep admiration of Chinese civilization and have brought the greetings of the American people.”

In Beijing he hit up the must see tourist spots, this was after all his first visit ever to China.  He saw the Forbidden City (see the photo at the top of this post) and walked on the Great Wall.  The above image was on the front page of yesterday’s 青年报 (China Youth Daily).  His last night included a massive super-elaborate state dinner at the Great Hall of the People.  He listened to such hits as “We are the world” and “I just called to say I love you.”  One of the numbers was sung by a group of American students studying in China.  Everyone drank Great Wall red wine, 2002 vintage, a horrible, horrible beverage which I sometimes drink myself (a $4 bottle of wine is just right when it comes to price!).  The country’s 7 o’clock evening news (possibly the world’s most popular news program) gave Obama’s visit almost 20 minutes of the half hour show, the previous day’s town hall meeting had been given about half a minute, I think.  In Beijing Obama also met with his half brother (they share the same father) who lives in Shenzhen in southern China and plays Jazz music.

All good things come to an end and eventually Obama left China for South Korea.  It was nice having him here, even if it wasn’t a solid win for the United States government.  Some fellow American expats here in China seem to think that the whole event was bland, largely useless and showed that China doesn’t look up to the U.S. anymore.  I don’t agree with all of that.  Obama is a crafty diplomatic kind of guy, so to expect some kind of cowboy presidential antics from him are unrealistic, and given the situation our country is in right now (economic turmoil, two wars, massive debt with China, blah blah blah) I think Obama did a great job.  Plus, I was glad he was nice to his guests and left the country without people hating our government.  It pays to have a President that the Chinese people love, and we don’t have to cash in on that just yet.

President Obama is Coming to China!

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

Obama Chinese Magazine

“China and I have a destiny” (via Richard Gould’s Flickr)

My Japanese roommate and I just sat down to watch President Obama’s speech given at Suntory Hall in Tokyo earlier today.  We both agreed that it was a fantastic speech, plus he speaks so elegantly and clearly she had no problem understanding his English.  It is relieving to have a President that makes us Americans look so good.  And for those Americans who like me are making a living in Asia, it was also a great affirmation that our government wants to work with our old allies of the region along with China for a better future both economically and politically.  One line in particular stood out as a good omen of things to come:

“I know there are many who question how the United States perceives China’s emergence.  In an interconnected world, power does not need to be a zero-sum game, and nations need not fear the success of another.”

Outside of Japan and China he has vowed to be the first American President to meet all 10 leaders of Asean, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, which would include the member from Myanmar – a country controlled by a military dictatorship.  I am a big supporter of this move and hope that America can get more involved with Asean in the future, it is one of the world’s international organizations that is going to become vastly more important in the decades to come.  A video of the speech can be seen here at the New York Times’ article of the event.  I highly recommend it.

Even though he talked up America’s relations with China in Tokyo today, we here in Shanghai are excitedly awaiting his arrival in our city tonight tomorrow.  Though his stay in Shanghai will be very short and is not going to include any time when I (or other Americans) can see him, I’m still pumped.  He will be meeting with the mayor of Shanghai, Han Zheng, and then will host a town hall-style meeting with a group of Chinese university students before flying up to Beijing for dinner with Chinese President Hu Jintao.  Unfortunately that town hall meeting is up in the air right now and looks like it may be canceled under the weight of severe limitations being imposed by the Chinese government.  That’s really a shame since that meeting would be the only time Obama could speak with the Chinese people directly on his trip.  I’m not exactly sure how the Chinese government expects to look if it does in fact cancel the meeting.  President Obama is hugely popular in China (try asking a Chinese person what they think of Obama compared to their own President) and if the meeting is canceled then it would look like the Chinese government is trying to hide the President from its own people.  It may just end up that the meeting is heavily censored and that the full minutes of what was discussed will never be seen by the media (except for those working in CCTV, of course).  But that seems just as bad…

In other more lighthearted news regarding our President’s visit to Shanghai, President Obama and his wife Michelle Obama will be staying at the Portman hotel in downtown Shanghai.  It is a swanky looking spot and is located on Nanjing Xi road, possibly the most important and famous road in the city.  I sometimes go shopping in the American supermarket located in the basement of this building, so rest assured if the Presidnent needs Pop Tarts they will be within easy reach.  From my top secret sources living in the Portman I have also learned that the gym will be closed for two days and that certain hotel and residence guests will be moved to the Four Season’s hotel.  So if anyone living there had dreamed of running into the President at the gym and having a game of pick-up basketball, well that just won’t happen.  The Shanghai Urbanatomy Blog has also obtained a memo given to residents of the Portman apartments explaining the increased security precautions.

There’s also the question of whether or not President Obama will see his half-brother Mark Okoth Obama Ndesandjo during his visit, this seems highly unlikely though nonetheless an interesting tangent.  Mark Okoth Obama Ndesandjo has lived in Shenzhen for the past 10 years playing jazz, he has the same father as President Obama.  He will soon release his own book, a piece of fiction that is highly autobiography titled “Nairobi to Shenzhen,” which details his father’s violent and angry parenting history and how he came to China.

And while we are talking about Obama, there is the interesting controversy over the change in his Chinese transliteration that the American Embassy seems intent on going forward with.  Until now his name in Chinese has always been 奥巴马 (aobama), but now the American Embassy wants his name to be written 欧巴马 (oubama).  I am a big fan of the original spelling (I campaigned for the President using this transliteration in Burlington, Vermont during the campaign (yes, I realize there almost no Chinese people live in Burlington)).  For more information on this Danwei has done a great translation and write up of a Chinese article detailing the controversy.

Campaigining for Obama

Me campaigning for 奥巴马 on the streets of Burlington with other geeky Chinese loving Obama supporters.

Oh, and check out this nifty video of how Chinese people in Beijing are getting ready for President Obama’s arrival.  The video includes a flaming Obama statue and Obama style haircuts.  The English edition of Global Times (an offshoot of the newspaper The People’s Daily, the CCP mouthpiece) has published a collection of reactions to President Obama’s visit from people in China.

Now it’s time I go out and celebrate my President’s arrival by dancing with my American friends to some awesome reggae spun by the famous Chinese-Jamacian DJ Clive Chin.  Later.

Update: Our biggest lender tells us some scary things and we seem to hit back, before the President ever speaks in China: “China’s Role as Lender Alters Dynamics for Obama.”  Washington Post: “‘Strategic reassurance’ that isn’t.”

“The majestic way mother nature kills bigots”

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

This title was not written by me (though I like it a lot), it comes from an article I read in the Huffington Post by Allison Kilkenny about how the group Focus on the Family had funded support for an anti-gay referendum in the State of Washington that had failed.  I was drawn to this chart in the article, which Ms. Kilkenny introduces with phrase that is used as the title of this post.  In my last post I was talking about how the passage of Proposistion 1 in Maine, which bans gay marriage in that state, presages nothing when it comes to the future of gay rights.  The world is changing and the plain fact is the future is going to be run by today’s younger generations, while the old will pass on.  When it comes to people’s opinions on gay rights age matters a whole lot.  The world is far different place from what it was when my parents were growing up.

I find is especially interesting that even within the group of 65+ from Alabama (I imagine them carrying pitchforks while burning effigies of Barney Frank and Ellen DeGeneres)  at least 10% still supported gay marriage.  Seems like some pretty strong evidence for the theory that 10% of society is born with homosexual tendencies.  I can’t stop thinking about those poor 85 year-old gays and lesbians from Alabama, none of their peers support their right to marry!  They (and everyone else) should probably just move to Massachusetts, we ain’t no haters.

How age affects thinking on gay rights

Making a Gay Home in China

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

With the infuriating and hateful voice of a slight majority, a referendum repealing the decision of the Maine State Supreme court, which allowed gay marriage in the State of Maine, was passed this past election day.  It’s sad news, especially for a young gay guy like myself.  Luckily, I am not an old man living in Maine with the man I want to marry, though I feel very sorry for that man.  I have a long life ahead of me and I live in Shanghai, so this decision, while completely wrong and detrimental to America’s future and to the principles on which our nation stands for, doesn’t bother me so much.  While the Catholic Diocese (who organized this fight against equal marriage in Maine) may be patting themselves on the back right now, I’m laughing at them.  Anyone who thinks that in 20 years these results would happen again is delusional.  I’m on the winning side in this fight and me and my fellow LGBT Americans are not going to lose hope over this example of 20th century hate that has no place in today’s world.  One of the organizers against Maine’s referendum had it right when they said: “We’re not short-timers; we are here for the long haul.  Whether it’s just all night and into the morning, or next week or next month or next year, we will be here. We’ll be fighting, we’ll be working. We will regroup.” (via The Bangor Daily News).  Besides, I’ve spent a fair amount of time in Maine over the years (like the New Englander that I am) and that State we always be a happy gay place in my mind, no matter what the old haters try to make it.  I try to remember that I still have equal rights in my home state of Massachusetts, Vermont (where I went to school), Connecticut, Iowa, and New Hampshire – so my rights aren’t directly affected.

Now that I have that off my chest lets talk about gay rights here in China.  The big news is that Taipei, the capital of Taiwan, held the seventh annual LGBT Pride Parade last weekend.  While Shanghai may be a really gay city it’s not much into being gay and proud in public during the day, we got Chinese culture and the Communist government here, dude.  Taiwan has a bit of lead on Mainland China when it comes to gay rights and speaking your mind in public, so it’s not very surprising that the parade in Taipei is the largest Gay Pride in all of Asia – 25,000 people joined in the festivities this year.

People were speaking out for gay marriage, the right to adopt children and start families with their partners.  The crux of the problem for gay rights in China and East Asia is that while being gay can be (kind of) okay if it is practiced clandestinely and if relationships are not given the same weight as heterosexual ones, the culture and governments over here don’t want such relationships to be legitimatized.  So I think that the big hurdle for gay rights in China will be in changing people’s minds that being gay can in fact lead to a lasting legitimate relationship, while in America the problem is getting the old and hateful people to recognize that open gay relationships should have the choice to become a sanctified marriage.  Step by step people…

Whatever people want to think, gay people are still going to start serious relationships and live with the person they love – just as humans have for millennium.  I know some gay couples here in China that live together, they’re all either made up of two foreigners or a Chinese person and a foreigner, I don’t know any Chinese-Chinese gay couples living together.  It’s not that big a deal, especially since none of the couples I know live in rural Chinese villages and most live far away from their families.  I was happy to read about just such a couple in a recent article in the New York Times (In China, Apartment Renovation Presents New Challenges) about a gay couple, consisting of a Chinese and American man, who recently renovated the apartment they share in Dalian.

Now, a gay couple talking about a their apartment renovation is about as rare as people wearing red underwear on the Chinese New Year’s eve.  I have a friend here in Shanghai who the night I met him literally never stopped talking about the interior decoration plans for the apartment he shares with his boyfriend here in Shanghai.  We gay guys nest in well-thought out beautiful spaces.  Besides hearing about the issues involved in renovating a Chinese apartment in a minimalist American style, which is a world away from the average Chinese style, it was interesting hearing a little about how an American gay man was making a permanent home with his Chinese boyfriend.  One thing that really intrigued me was the fact that the Chinese man’s father organized the workers for the renovation, transporting them from the family’s hometown five hours away.  The article doesn’t go into the father’s thoughts about his son living with his American boyfriend, though I really wish it had.  There’s also an interesting bit about extortion.  All in all a fun read, even if you aren’t interested in issues related to gay rights in China.  Makes we wonder whether living with your gay boyfriend in a Chinese city might be easier than doing so in some parts of America, minus the extortion, of course.

UPDATE: ChinaSmack has posted a translation of a mainland China BBS post about the recent Taiwan LGBT Pride parade.  It includes some pictures from the parade and a bunch of translated comments written by Chinese netizens.  The comments are by and large very disparaging of homosexuals, though there are some nice comments calling for people to accept homosexual love.  A couple of commenters mentioned God as a basis for their hatred of homosexuals, a sign that religious hatred of homosexuals is gaining ground in China.  It was a kind of sad read for me.  There was no mention in ChinaSmack’s translation about the differences between Taiwan and mainland China when it comes to gay rights or freedoms, which I thought to be rather surprising.

The Life of John Zeidman

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Americans have been coming to China for centuries and they will continue to come long after my generation has left this world.  In fact, the first ones arrived in China in 1784 aboard the ship Empress of China, hoping to trade American ginseng for Chinese tea, porcelain, and other goods.  I have always enjoyed reading and hearing about these experiences, whether they happened a hundred years ago or last week.  Even with the great strides the world has taken and the developments these two countries have made, a trip from America to China is still an undeniable adventure.  Young men and women floating along in their lives in America with no hardened idea of what they want out of life may find themselves taking the flight to China and once there a new world of opportunity opens before them, and yes, even adventure.  China can intoxicate men with its vibrant cities, ancient culture, and a language that can make the most cynical of students see the beauty of learning a foreign tongue.  This country can literally provide everything that some young Americans need to make sense of this world, to see the way forward.

When Mozart first sat down at the harpsichord there must have been a click in his brain, a puzzle fitting into place.  For some, China can provide a similar epiphany.  It was this way for me and I know I am not alone in my sentiments.  While I am not saying I am destined to devote my whole life to China, I am just as sure that there was a profound click in my brain after my first trip to Beijing as a high school student.  It wasn’t something I could just brush off as I headed back to America.  There was something about this country that fulfilled my childhood dreams of foreign discovery in such a profound way and it gave me something useful to pursue in life.  Ever since that cold January day when I landed in Beijing that’s what I’ve been doing.  I don’t know where it will take me, but I know it will be worth it.

If this all sounds overly romantic, please excuse me.  I’ve just finished reading the story of an American that came to China to study a full five years before I was even born.  His name was John Zeidman and for him, like me and many other others, “China seemed to bring everything together.”

The story I read was written by Calvin Trillin and published in the New Yorker magazine on October 7, 1985.  I found my way to this mid-eighties copy of the New Yorker by way of a journalist I respect a lot, James Fallows.  You see Mr. Fallows just published a small article (all articles feel small in comparison to New Yorker articles) for the Atlantic magazine about an American couple who live in the town of Xizhou in my former home province of Yunnan.  To keep it short, they are trying to keep Xizhou from becoming the tourist wasteland that other historical towns in the hinterland of Yunnan have become (I’m looking at you Lijiang).  They run a community center/inn than supports the local arts and provides a more fulfilling way for visitors to appreciate that most beautiful and interesting corner of China.  Something mentioned in the article stuck out at me, though.  In the article we learn that the American husband, Brian Linden, came to China in the early 1980s as a student:

Soon after his arrival, he was spotted by a movie director while jogging down a Beijing street and cast as the lead in a Chinese movie. The film, He Came From Across the Pacific, was based on the tragic story of John Zeidman, an American exchange student who caught viral encephalitis in China and died in 1982.

I had never heard of John Zeidman, but I was instantly interested.  For a Chinese movie to have been made about an American student who came to China at that time, when relations between America and China were just beginning to include student exchanges, it was bound to be, at the very least, a good story and most likely a big deal.  Luckily for me before I came to Shanghai I packed a good chunk of my father’s “The Complete New Yorker,” which is stored on DVDs, and I had the 1984-1997 disc.  So today while there was a lull at work I stuck in the disc and brought up the article.  The information used in this post is entirely from that New Yorker article, unless otherwise noted; there was little more that I could find about him online and no photographs.  If you have a subscription to the magazine I suggest you read the article online.

I would like to add that in writing this post I don’t want to hurt anyone by rehashing a painful story, it was just that I found this young man’s experience in China so absolutely fascinating and heart wrenching.  The fact that no one I know my age living in China has heard of him is unacceptable to me.  Historians tell stories worth telling and this is without a doubt just such a story

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John Quincy Adams

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

If there is a Bostonian who ever sailed from his own harbor for distant lands, or returned to it from them, without feelings, at the sight of the Blue Hills, which he is unable to express, his heart is differently constituted than mine.

-John Quincy Adams

I’m kind of on a John Quincy Adams kick right now, certainly an odd place to be.  I got the above quote from Josiah Quincy’s 1858 biography, Memoir of the Life of John Quincy Adams.

I’m not terribly homesick for the blue hills of Massachusetts, but I will say I’m prouder than ever to be a native son of the Commonwealth.  With the passing of our great Senator Edward Kennedy I am reminded again of the great politicians and leaders that have come from the Bay State and our long and storied past.  I’ve found over the years that there’s no better vantage point to appreciate your home and government than from overseas, so these days I’m trying to find time between reading novels and watching Mad Men on Tudou to read about Massachusetts’ history and about some of the excellent people that have hailed from our state.  It’s a nice change from reading the Chinese news and researching Chinese law.  And what about those Red Sox, huh?  They’re just six games behind the Yankees at 89 and 60.  If we get to the Playoffs (knock on wood) I’m fairly certain I’ll be able to find a bar in Shanghai playing the games, of course, the timing couldn’t be worse here on the other side of the world.

The Inauguration of Presideant Barack Obama

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

(Source: New York Times)

Even though I am in distant Jinghong I went head first into the historical inaugural festivities last night.  I was not about to miss the moment just because it wasn’t on TV here and because there is a dearth of Americans in the area.  However it turned out that watching the inauguration online here was no easy feat.  I had hoped to us the CNN/Facebook live feed, which allowed you to see what other people on Facebook were thinking while you watched, but I was never able to make that work here in Jinghong.  I was, however, close to Facebook all night and updated my status an obscene number of times.  It was a day to feel close to my American friends, no?

My night officially started at the George and Dragon Pub where I tried their wifi connection, no dice.  Then on my way to a internet bar I stopped at the Mei Mei Cafe to try their connection, that didn’t work either though their hamburger was mighty tasty.  I finally ended up in a smokey internet bar filled with, oddly enough, young women screaming at each other while they video chatted with guys in other parts of China.  Even there the connection sucked and I wasn’t able to use the CNN feed.  At the last minute before Biden was sworn in I thought I might have better luck with Yahoo, since they’ve been in China a long time.  And would you believe it I was right!  While the quality sucked and there was an echo the whole time I was able to see the swearing in and Obama’s speech.  I got back to my hostel around 2 am.

This morning the world was still abuzz from the historical moment:

Thomas Crampton compiled a collection of Asian frontpages proclaiming the news.

Reuters tells us that the main Chinese web portals (Sina, Sohu, and others) reworded Obama’s inaugural speech cutting out the bit on defeating communism and governments that stifle dissent.  (A Chinese translation of the speech in its entirety and uncensored can be found on Phoenix TV – Via Shanghaiist)

There is a cool satellite image of the inauguration floating about the internet as well.

In the fashion world… BryanBoy blogged about Michelle Obama’s day dress and her green shoes.

As you can tell I’ve been having a very lazy morning here.

Geithner: Our New Chinese Speaking Treasury Secretary

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

Have you been following the developments of President-elect Obama’s Cabinet?  I have.  Recently Obama announced who will be in his economic team, the people who will have to get us out the immeasurably deep hole we are all sitting in.  The new Treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner, will have the Herculean task of orchestrating the bailout and whatever stimulus package Obama will be giving us (The New York Times reports).

Timothy Geithner is the relatively young president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and as you might know has been the, “primary engineer of the government’s response to the recent financial meltdown.”  But did you know that his childhood was spent all over the world, including in Zimbabwe, India and Thailand?

When he went to Dartmouth for his undergraduate degree, class of 1983, he had a double major in government and Asian studies along with a concentration in Chinese.  While he was at Dartmouth he even worked as a Chinese language drill instructor, was reportedly a very good speaker of the language, and studied abroad in Beijing.  An Asian studies major?  Chinese instructor?  I had no idea!  My mom will be happy to hear that my choice of undergraduate major means I’m in good company.  If you want to learn more you should definitely read this article from The Dartmouth.

This all makes me wonder, what other famous people were Asian studies majors while in college?  I do know that the actor Edward Norton majored in Asian history and minored in Japanese at Yale (short biography here).  I learned that little fact in the summer of 2005 while living in Beijing, where I was offered the job of being Mr. Norton’s stand-in, the guy who stands in for the actor while camera operators take light readings, for the filming of the movie The Painted Veil, a historical drama that takes place in China during the Chinese civil war.  Other than these two men I’m at a loss for what other famous people studied Asian studies.

Americans Studying Abroad in China Up 25%

Monday, November 17th, 2008

As someone who has studied abroad in China a few times I was excited to read the New York Times Article Study Abroad Flourishes, With China a Hot Spot.

The number of Americans studying in China increased by 25 percent, and the number of Chinese students studying at American universities increased by 20 percent last year, according to the report, “Open Doors 2008.”

“Interest in China is growing dramatically, and I think we’ll see even sharper increases in next year’s report,” said Allan E. Goodman, president of the institute. “People used to go to China to study the history and language, and many still do, but with China looming so large in all our futures, there’s been a real shift, and more students go for an understanding of what’s happening economically and politically.”

Interest is surging for sure.   My trip to Beijing a couple weeks ago showed me a city far different from the one I knew just four years ago.  It is starting to feel a little like a expat wonderland of opportunities and comforts.  They just opened China’s first American Apparel and the amount of good Mexican food has skyrocketed.  One thing this article doesn’t talk about are the Americans studying abroad in China to start a new life here.  Something tells me that number is climbing as well.  One quote that tickled me was from a undergrad at Princeton, she said:

“These days, nobody questions why you take Chinese and go to China.”

So true.

Remembering Harvey Milk

Monday, September 8th, 2008

This post may a bit off topic, but I am compelled to write it anyway.  You see I was perusing the Apple movie trailer site (something I do when I’m bored) and stumbled upon the trailer for Gus Van Sant’s new movie Milk starring Sean Penn as Harvey Milk.  Who is Harvey Milk?  He was just the first openly gay person elected to a major political office in the history of the planet and my favorite figure in the history of the struggle for gay rights.  Before Barack Obama was preaching the glory of hope in his campaign speeches I knew a politician that had preached the same message in his speeches: Harvey Milk.  It was Milk who said:

“The true function of politics is not just to pass laws, but to give hope.” (1)

His life and story is a tragic one and more people should know it.  Hopefully this new movie will do just that.

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