Special report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
by Yan Zhonghua
BEIJING, June 3 (Xinhuanet) -- Students from the
United States wrote letters to China to pay their respect and gratitude to top
Chinese leaders and convey their care and wishes to quake-hit Chinese fellow
kids ahead of the Children's Day.
"I want very much to say thank," said Hannah Rudoff,
a student from the Department of Chinese Studies at the Portland International
School, Oregon, in a letter to Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen
Jiabao.
"Dear Grandpa Hu and Grandpa Wen, your love to the
quake-affected in Sichuan has again won worldwide respect for China, I hope all
the leaders of other countries can also make it this way in their
administration," wrote 12-year-old Hannah, who has witnessed the May 12
disaster and the rescue and relief afterwards via television and the Internet.
Hannah said she was deeply touched by those scenes
from television showing Hu and Wen bringing confidence and courage to those
unfortunate in quake zone. "I admire your people-first style and selfless
spirit, and I pay my respect to you!"
The 2006 middle-school graduate said she feels very
sorry for those kids of her age or even younger taken away by the devastating
earthquake. She told the Chinese leaders they have held an art performance
at Portland State University to help raise relief donations.
Elizabeth Krasch, also 12 and Hannah's schoolmate,
wrote a poem to "Uncle PLA" to pay her tribute to the Chinese soldiers who have
been fighting the war against the aftershocks and conducting nonstop rescue and
relief work against the clock ever since shortly after the massive quake.
"Thank you, Uncle PLA!" said Elizabeth in the newly
acquired Chinese vocabulary "Jiefungjun Shushu" meaning uncle soldier of the
People's Liberation Army, "You saved many lives from ruins. You bring hope to
each and every corner of China.
"We will never forget your love to the young, the old
and to the people! I will never forget this new Chinese word that I learned
today!" the 2007 middle-school graduate wrote in the last two lines of her poem.
Another American girl also sent a letter to express
her wish to "hold hand in hand" with the quake-stricken children in southwest
China's Sichuan Province.
"You might have lost your dear father, mother,
grandpa or grandma; you might have lost your dear teachers or classmates. I feel
the same way you do," said Yzmari Duran, 13, "because we are all kids and facing
this we will be scared and be crying.
"I want to tell you that you are very brave! You are
not only strong but also brave! I will learn from you!" said the grade-2 student
of junior high school, who claimed to be able to speak Chinese besides English
and Spanish.
The Mexican-American girl wished to meet Chinese
friends face to face someday, telling them that they are the children in the
global village and that the children from other countries like her care about
them and love them.
"Let's hold hand in hand in our minds, and make best
wishes!" she wrote.
The death toll from the 8.0-magnitude earthquake
three weeks ago in Sichuan increased to 69,019 as of Monday noon, according to
the Information Office of the State Council.