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BEIJING, Nov 25 (Xinhuanet)-- Two friends who had the
courage and dogged determination to turn "a big and beautiful dream" into
reality have completed the adventure of a lifetime.
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 Ed Jocelyn and Andy McEwen enter the outskirts of Wuqi on the final
day of an historic adventure, feeling tired yet happy.
| But in the oft-repeated words of The
Carpenters, Ed Jocelyn and Andy McEwen have only just begun. Ahead of them lies
months more work - compiling books and setting up a high-profile photo
exhibition in Beijing.
The self-styled New Long Marchers set themselves the
enormous goal of retracing what is arguably the 20th century's most remarkable
feat of endurance.
Surrounded and facing destruction by Chiang
Kai-shek's Nationalist forces, in October 1934 the First Front Army of the
Chinese Communist Party abandoned its base in the South China province of
Jiangxi. Eighty thousand men, women and children left their homes to walk into
the unknown.
Thousands died in combat or from starvation and
disease. Others fell from fatigue and altitude sickness, or were sucked into the
poisonous swamps of northern Sichuan Province. Twelve months later, only 4,000
were left when Mao Zedong led the remnants of the Red Army into the Shaanxi
village of Wuqi. The legendary effort was to lay the foundations for the
creation of New China and pass into the folklore of a nation.
The length of the journey has been estimated at up to
10,000 kilometres.
Jocelyn and McEwen came up with the idea of
interviewing as many Long March survivors as they could find whilst retracing
their steps, almost 70 years later.
Their aim was to recapture the Long March as a human
experience and to make it accessible and relevant to succeeding generations.
After Beijing Weekend exclusively revealed details of
the project, the pair set out on 16 October, 2002 from Yudu, Jiangxi Province.
Some 384 days later, the pair were greeted by a
1,000-strong throng of well-wishers at Wuqi in Shaanxi Province, having
completed a trek many tried to convince them was impossible.
Between start and finish, they passed through 10
provinces, crossing mountains and raging rivers, battled through the SARS
outbreak, recovered from chronic ill health, were bitten by dogs...and lived to
tell the tale!
Jocelyn, who said he had never been so tired in his
life, also described the final step as "one of the happiest moments of my life."
Their exploits have been reported by media around the
world.
Their remarkable adventures en route are now to be
parlayed into what promises to be an engrossing book, which will be released to
coincide with next year's 70th anniversary of the original march.
The friends - both formerly copy editors at China
Daily - met 11 Long March veterans and interviewed more than 100 witnesses.
They have amassed an amazingly rich archive of
material on which to draw: it includes no fewer than 20,000 photographs which
Jocelyn is this week sorting through.
They hope to repay the kind-hearted sponsorship of
Cao Jian of the Jinglida Photo Studio in Beijing - who donated 400 rolls of film
and developing costs - "with an amazing photo exhibition" early next year.
Guizhou Provincial Tourism Bureau honoured the pair
with the title "Image Ambassadors of the Red Army Trail" while many other
friends and well-wishers helped boost flagging spirits and defray the enormous
costs of the venture.
Before finally setting foot there, McEwen described
Wuqi - the finishing point which so often seemed impossibly far away - as "a
kind of dreamland."
Along the way, the pair have been touched by messages
of support from ordinary people from all walks of life.
Primary school sixth grader Luo Shujing from Guangxi
told them: "I am taking the first step on the long march to study English. I
hope you can make greater efforts and encourage and guide me."
Many others from around the world urged them on with
inspirational messages of support.
Back in Beijing, Jocelyn and McEwen have been able to
enjoy much-missed access to everything from football, coffee and pizza - and, of
course, their beloved cats.
Jocelyn was this week setting about another major
task - fulfilling a promise to send out photographs to many of those ordinary
Chinese who helped them en route.
The pair assiduously took down contact details of
those they met and have every intention of repaying their kindness.
How many photographs might that entail? "Oh, around
1,500," said Jocelyn. "It's a big job and will cost a lot of money which we have
yet to raise. I'm looking for some sponsorship backing for that now."
An eagerly anticipated Christmas reunion with family
and friends back in England will precede a return to Beijing for the publication
of a book and photo album and a photo exhibition. Enditem
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