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Liu Xuanguo (L front), vice general secretary of the Chinese Red Cross Foundation (CRCF), presents the certificate of donation to Jamaican athlete Usain Bolt (R front) during a donation ceremony in Beijing, capital of China, Aug. 23, 2008. Usain Bolt, who won three gold medals in the men's 100m, men's 200m, and men's 4x100m relay competitions of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, donates 50,000 U.S. dollars through the CRCF to the children in the earthquake-hit areas of China on Saturday, and invites six earthquake-affected children to travel to Jamaica. (Xinhua/Wang Yongji) Photo Gallery>>> |
By Xinhua Sportswriter Zhou Yan
BEIJING, Aug. 23 (Xinhua) -- When the Beijing Olympic
flame goes out and the medal tally freezes, it is more than the gold winners and
the miracles they have created that the world will fondly remember.
Having won the hearts of billions of people worldwide
with his astounding speed and triple Olympic golds, Jamaica's "Lightning" Bolt
stirred the heartstrings of the Chinese on Saturday by donating 50,000 U.S.
dollars to the children in earthquake-stricken Sichuan Province.
Usain Bolt said he wished people in the
quake-battered province would "get through from the tragedy" and move forward
with the inspiration of the Olympic Games.
"We came here, tried to perform well," he said at the
Westin hotel in Beijing. "I hope people enjoy the Games, forget the past and
move on."
"You have to move forward after the disaster. The
Olympics ask people to move forward," said Bolt, who claimed gold medals in
men's 100m and 200m sprint as well as the 4x100m relay at the Beijing Games.
Pictures showing the smiley Jamaican with two
wheelchair-bound girls from the quake-hit areas spread quickly in the Internet
community shortly after they were published at xinhuanet.com. Many netizens put
up postings to express their gratitude and admiration for the sprinter.
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Jamaican athlete Usain Bolt (R) poses for photos with Huang Siyu (C), a girl from the earthquake-hit Yingxiu Town of southwest China's Sichuan Province, during a donation ceremony in Beijing, capital of China, Aug. 23, 2008. Usain Bolt, who won three gold medals in the men's 100m, men's 200m, and men's 4x100m relay competitions of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, donates 50,000 U.S. dollars through the Chinese Red Cross Foundation (CRCF) to the children in the earthquake-hit areas of China on Saturday, and invites six earthquake-affected children to travel to Jamaica. (Xinhua/Wang Yongji) Photo Gallery>>> |
"Thank you, Lightning Bolt, we love you. We'll never
forget your kindness," said a netizen named "Jinpi Huihuang", whose posting was
soon followed by thousands of others.
"May you achieve the best result at every game," most
of them said.
Less than four months after the 8.0-magnitude quake
devastated Sichuan, people cannot brush aside their pains over the loss of lives
and toppled homes there, despite all the frenzy and jubilation the Games have
brought.
The quake of May 12 killed nearly 70,000 people, left
17,923 others missing and destroyed the homes of more than 10 million
people.
Two weeks ago, nine-year-old Lin Hao surprised the
world by walking beside basketball idol Yao Ming and leading the parade of the
Chinese delegation at the Beijing Olympics opening. On Saturday, Lin found
himself in the arms of Brazilian soccer legend Pele.
The little hero from the quake epicenter Wenchuan
County, who had saved two his classmates from the debris, got a yellow jersey of
the Brazilian football team with Pele's autograph on it.
Pele, born in October 1940, is in Beijing to
represent his country that is applying to host the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de
Janeiro. His original name is Edison Arantes do Nascimento.
The Beijing Games have been full of affection, ever
since renowned Chinese film director Zhang Yimou brought Lin Hao to the athletes
parade on Aug. 8.
Despite the heavy losses incurred by the earthquake
and demanding reconstruction work, a record number of 34 athletes came from
Sichuan Province to the Beijing Games, with young gymnast Zou Kai snatching
three golds and tennis duo Zheng Jie and Yan Zi taking a hard-won bronze.
Meanwhile, Zou's teammate and double-crowned gymnast
Yang Wei, from the central Hubei Province, promised to auction off his Olympic
silver in rings and donate the money to Sichuan.
Throughout the Beijing Games, love and humanity have
glittered, in and out of the competition venues, to overshadow even Olympic
gold.
Oksana Chusovitina, 33, picked a silver behind DPR
Korean vault champion Hong Un-jong on Monday, thus becoming the oldest woman in
five decades to grasp an Olympic gymnastics medal.
"This medal is for my son, I could not have done this
without him," said Chusovitina.
The former Uzbek gymnast prolonged her career and
moved to Germany to raise funds for her son Alisher, who was diagnosed with
leukemia six years ago.
Deeply moved by the motherly love behind many
laureates, a Beijing bank employee wrote a letter to Xinhua to describe the
power of love.
"I love Du Li. I Love Phelps. I love them for their
affection to their moms," said Zhang Tianxing, citing how the Chinese shooter
cried during a phone conversation with her mother after taking an Olympic gold,
and how the American superfish wanted to give his mom a hug the moment he got
out of the pool.
Zhang recalled how his mother, a peasant woman who
worked day and night to feed a big family in the rural Henan Province back in
the 1960s, bought him a pair of sneakers with the money that should have been
spent on medicine for her acute stomachache.
"She said I could have been the fastest runner at
school had I had better shoes," said Zhang in his letter.
He did not grow up to be a runner, but a bank
employee in Beijing. But the bitter-sweet memories of his mother, now dead, have
clung to him particularly at these Games.
For winners and losers, love is always there, from
families, friends and strangers alike.
Love from his wife and Olympic gold winner Katerina
Emmons was the best heal to Matt Emmons after he repeated his Athens misfortune
to blow away gold in the last round of men's rifle finals.
Colombian weightlifter Oscar Figueroa may never find
out how many Chinese shed tears for him when all his attempts failed in the
men's 62kg class finals.
"The grief and helplessness in his eyes became
apparent after several failed attempts. Everyone shouted 'go, go' and prayed for
a miracle," read a posting at sina.com shortly after last Tuesday's
competition.
When Figueroa broke into tears after one last futile
attempt, the entire audience felt his pain. "Everyone was heartbroken until his
teammate Diego Salazar won a silver," said Si Ren, a spectator who later shared
his feelings with thousands of people on the Internet.
Toward the end of the Beijing Games, many Chinese are
working out a personal archive listing their own heroes, quotable quotes and
inspiring stories.
Chinese hurdler Liu Xiang, who pulled out of the
110-meter race on Monday because of foot injury, was in the netizens' list of
top 10 tragic heroes as well as the 10 most attractive men at the Beijing Games,
according to 21cn.com.
Liu said he would come back and run even faster after
the pullout. His Olympic record of 12.91 seconds, set at Athens in 2004, was not
broken by Cuban Dayron Robles in Thursday's final.
Liu's tragic farewell from the Games was witnessed by
90,000 audience who had expected him to defend his title, or at least to enter
the finals. Among them were four rural workers who helped build the Bird's Nest,
where the track and field events were held.
Su Jian, an artist from the southern Guangdong
Province, had financed their trip to Beijing and tickets to the Bird's Nest, a
commitment he made a year ago when they agreed to pose for a portrait.
Su's painting was sold for 32,000 yuan (4,570 U.S.
dollars), with which he covered the workers' transportation, ticketing and
sightseeing costs in Beijing.
A Beijinger offered them a three-bedroom apartment
for free.