by Zhao Qing
OTTAWA, Nov. 26 (Xinhua) -- China has undergone
fundamental changes during the past 20 years and it is really difficult to sum
up its achievements in simple language, Dashan, one of China's most famous
foreigners, told Xinhua recently.
"It is easy to talk about unchanged things in China,
because there are few of them. But it is really hard to list China's changes,
because there are so many," Dashan, a Canadian national who has become a bona
fide celebrity in China, said during a recent interview in Toronto.
"For the past 24 years, I have been closely tied with
China. My life has been changing along with China, as have the programs that I
perform as well as all the other things I do," said Dashan, whose legendary
ability to speak the Chinese language has made him one of the best comedians in
China.
Born Mark Henry Rowswell in Ottawa, Dashan began
studying Chinese while attending the University of Toronto in 1984. Upon
graduation in 1988, he was awarded a full scholarship to continue Chinese
language studies at Peking University, where he was to begin his infatuation
with Chinese performing arts and his future career as a freelance performer in
China.
In December 1988, Dashan was invited to perform a
comedy skit for the China Central Television (CCTV) New Year's Gala, a variety
program broadcast to a countrywide audience to celebrate Spring Festival. The
performance propelled him to national stardom overnight and earned him the
Chinese name "Dashan" ("big mountain" in Chinese), the name of the character he
played in the skit.
To Dashan, one of the most obvious changes in China
lies in its way of communicating with the outside world, which has become
increasingly smooth. While his first trip to China in 1988 lasted days and
involved two connecting flights and a train journey from Hong Kong to Beijing,
now it takes a mere 13 hours to fly non-stop from Toronto to Beijing, said
Dashan, who travels frequently between the two sides of the Pacific.
He recalled that he had to write letters to his
family during his first two years in China. It took two weeks for the mail to
arrive in Ottawa and another two weeks for him to get a reply.
"Now, everything has changed. I could talk with my
parents on cell phone and it costs only 4 yuan (about 60 U.S. cents) a minute.
Of course you can also talk free on the Internet," he said.
The achievements of China's reform and opening-up
policy are best reflected in the worldwide enthusiasm for learning Chinese
language in recent years, Dashan noted.
"Nowadays foreigners are a common sight for Chinese
people, foreigners who speak fluent Chinese are no longer a rarity. This is only
natural, because as China opens more and develops more, as China's international
status improves, more and more foreigners are learning the Chinese language," he
said.
He added that while many foreigners tend to mention
the tall buildings and the improvement in infrastructure, he thinks the most
important changes in China lie in the increasing opening of people's minds and
their deepening understanding of the world.
Dashan said this point was evident when he partnered
with Chinese comedian Guo Donglin recently to perform the classical French
comedy "Dinner Game," which was warmly received throughout the country.
"I am Caucasian, Guo Donglin is Asian, and we both
enacted French characters. But the audience did not care about the skin color or
nationality, they only cared about the story, which would have been almost
impossible 30 years ago," he said.
As China opens up more to the world and as the
language barrier is overcome, Chinese people find that foreigners are not very
different from themselves. Foreigners in China and local residents now
understand and cooperate with each other much better, Dashan said.
He thinks the Beijing Olympics played an important
role in promoting China to the outside world. Before the Games, much of the
reporting on China in western media was negative and critical. However, a large
section of the press now presents China in a more objective way.
"This is mainly because, before the games, the
reporters had learned about China through other media. But once they come to
China and saw it through their own eyes, their opinion of China inevitably
changed."