Special report: 2008 Olympic Games
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Volunteers watch Chinese kites at the
Beijing Olympic village in Beijing, capital of China, July 28, 2008.
Elements of Chinese culture have been weaved into designs and decorations
in the village, attracting villagers from home and abroad.(Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, July 28 (Xinhua) -- The Beijing Organizing
Committee for the Olympic Games (BOCOG) will provide a variety of unique
cultural activities during the coming sports gala in August, said a senior BOCOG
official here on Monday.
The Ministry of Culture, Beijing municipal government
and the BOCOG have jointly developed the 2008 cultural program and mapped out
the Olympic Cultural Festival from June 23 to Sept. 17, said Zhao Dongming,
director of BOCOG Culture and Ceremonies Department.
"The cultural festival will last nearly three months
throughout the Olympics and Paralympics. It will be a marvelous Olympic cultural
event with the longest time, the most abundant contents, the largest number of
performance teams and the most complete artistic variety," Zhao said at a press
conference at the Main Press Center.
The festival will host significant cultural
activities with "Meet in Beijing 2008" as the theme, including Asia Night,
Africa Night, Latin America Night, Arab Night, SCO (Shanghai Cooperation
Organization) Night and other song and dance shows.
Nearly 20,000 artists from more than 80 countries and
regions will feature in 600-plus performances, including those from Hong Kong,
Macao and Chinese Taipei.
On Aug. 8 when the Olympics officially opens, the
Olympic Expo will also be launched in a grand way at the Beijing Exhibition
Center.
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Two members of the Libyan Olympic
delegation walk past a poster of "siheyuan", a Chinese traditional
courtyard dwelling, at the Beijing Olympic village in Beijing, capital of
China, July 28, 2008. Elements of Chinese culture have been weaved into
designs and decorations in the village, attracting villagers from home and
abroad. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
"During the Olympic Games, we will strive to make
opportunities for ordinary citizens to share the joyful atmosphere. All the
Olympic cultural squares, as well as most exhibitions, will be opento the public
free of charge," Zhao promised.
According to the official, more than 20 Olympic
cultural squares will be set up in Beijing and other co-hosting cities will also
stage square cultural activities.
During the Olympic period, there will be nearly 40
international and over 150 domestic exhibitions for arts, artifacts, painting,
photography, sculpture, murals and non-material heritage.
While most state-level museums will be open for free
during the Olympics, some historical heritage sites, such as the Forbidden City
and the Gongwang Mansion, will keep requiring admission fee from visitors in
order to better protect the heritages, Zhao explained.
As theatre performances will be aimed for public
welfare during the Olympic Games, the government has started to provide
subsidies for domestic art troupes, together with low-price tickets.
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The photo taken on July 28, 2008 shows
red lanterns at the Beijing Olympic village in Beijing, capital of China.
Elements of Chinese culture have been weaved into designs and decorations
in the village, attracting villagers from home and abroad. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
During the cultural activities, "we definitely put
security as our priority to ensure a worry-free Olympic Games. We will intensify
our efforts to help the public understand the importance of security check,"
Zhao said.
In the Olympic Center Area and Olympic Village,
people can also enjoy Lucky Clouds Theatre, China Story exhibition, Fuwa Mobile
Show, Flag-raising Square performance, folk custom shows and Chinese learning
areas.
Ding Baizhi, deputy director of BOCOG Culture and
Ceremonies Department, said "cultural activities in the Olympic Village have
three features of evening square performances, exhibitions and experience
activities to combine eastern and western culture and help foreign athletes
taste Chinese culture themselves."
At the flag-raising square in the Olympic Village,
art troupes perform every night for 90 minutes, bilingual hostess may invite
spectators to the evening performance of traditional Chinese dances and
acrobatics as well as foreign songs, and 25 Chinese folk artists made group
debut at the commercial street in the village to showcase handcraft art
treasures, such as shadow play, clay sculpture with colorful painting.
As long as foreign athletes are willing, they can
join to learn at the spot, Ding said.
Chinese language learning seems to be the most
popular program in the Olympic Village. There is a special venue, always full of
people, in the village to teach foreign athletes, coaches and officials how to
read and writer Chinese.
"The arrangement of language learning had not been
seen in previous Olympic Games, a difference of the Beijing Olympic Games," Ding
said.