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BEIJING, May 18 -- While senior executives of some of
the most powerful companies in the world are having a powwow on how to better
tap into China's market, their spouses are busy savouring the best of China's
culture.
The spouse programme for the 2005 FORTUNE Global Forum, held from Monday to today in Beijing, is a showcase for
what China has to offer and a crash course in the appreciation of the country's
rich heritage.
"To walk into a place filled with such a long
history, to experience what has been written so much about, to appreciate the
beauty of an ancient tree or a magnificent ceramic, it was overwhelming," said
Gillian Deane, whose husband, Roderick Deane, is chairman of Telecom Corp of New
Zealand.
Mrs Deane was describing her walk inside the
Forbidden City and watching a Peking Opera performance at Dongyuan Theatre,
where emperors and their concubines used to enjoy the show.
"There is so much vitality in the country," she
added. "Yet history stands side by side with new things, and they blend so well.
The power of tradition is universal. It's like our DNA. It can explain why China
in the present is so vibrant."
The spouse programme is a prudent mix of the old and
the new. History seeps into every aspect of the tour. For example, the train
that took the 129 spouses to the Great Wall was powered by the Mao Zedong
locomotive, which usually runs freight trains from Beijing to Kowloon and was
specially retrofitted for this occasion.
"I have to pinch myself to realize how breathtaking
the scenery is," Caroline Bird, whose husband, Andrew Bird, is the president of
Walt Disney International, marvelled while standing on an unrestored section of
the Great Wall on Monday.
Nicknamed the "Wild Wall," the remnants not far from
the tourist-swarmed Badaling section make up the location where General Li
Zicheng led his peasant rebel army in attacking and breaking through in 1644 and
eventually ending the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).
"It is an honour to be standing on the Wall, which
has been kept in its natural state," said Anita Zucker, who had also taken some
time to wander on Beijing's streets.
"China is modernizing rapidly, yet its history has
been preserved so well," added Jerry Zucker, her husband, who is chairman,
president and CEO of The InterTech Group. He is attending the forum but took the
first day off for the tour because Monday's sessions were not related to his
profession.
Yet, at the foot of the Wall is a commune of villas
so artistically audacious that several visitors' jaws dropped upon entering some
of the buildings. Not everyone agreed that it would be suitable for living, but
it is definitely avant-garde.
Like the avant-garde architecture, the rising young
stars of China's diving scene represent the future. The guests applauded
heartily when they visited the training pools for some of China's best divers
and swimmers.
Li Na, 21, who won the gold medal in the 10-metre
platform at the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, made a splash. More accurately,
barely caused a ripple when she showed off a few of her award-winning dives. The
spouses asked a hundred questions: They were curious about her background, her
training routine and her willpower to win another Olympic medal three years from
now.
(Source: China Daily)
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