Last
night I thought I might nearly be over jet lag but I was wrong. It’s now 2:00 AM local time and I’m
wide awake. I guess for less that
48 hours since leaving home I’m adjusting well enough. Since I usually get up at 5:30 AM right
now my body clock’s only about 4 hours out of synch with local time so that’s
not bad.
I
now have a cell phone, albeit it a used one, that I can now call home
with. It was nice talking with
Wynter and the girls yesterday.
It’s generally our tradition when Wynter or I is on the road to call
home at bedtime to say goodnight to Marit and Mattie. I got the phone early on Sunday morning here and spoke with
them before bedtime on Saturday night back in Texas. We now have it figured out that I’m thirteen hours ahead of
home. If it wasn’t for daylight
savings time I’d be twelve.
I
headed off to the Tiananmen Square are after that. I spent the day visiting all the historic gates around the
square and doing my best to properly photograph them. It’s no small task.
They are so large and hemmed in by other structures that you never can
get a proper perspective. I spent
a fair amount of time at the old south city gate (Zhengyangmen) and the small
museum within it. It was quite
well done and a good history lesson on old Beijing. My only disappointment is that the upper balconies were
closed off so I could not get the perspective of the square I was hoping for.
Zhengyangmen
The
square itself was interesting. As
it was Sunday there was a very long line to visit Mao’s tomb, a building I
consider to be surpassingly ugly.
Nonetheless, there were many in line willing to take the considerable
time necessary to pay their respects to the Chairman or at least have the
opportunity to tell folks back home that they did.
I
have been to the square several times and this was the first time there was
considerable, visible security around the square. In years past you just walked on to the square through any
number of openings in the low metal fence that surrounds it. This time you were shepherded through one
of several screening areas where everyone was searched and all bags were
x-rayed. It wasn’t quite as bad as
US airport screenings but it was still rather disconcerting for me. I wasn’t expecting it. There were plain-clothes cops all over
the place and it wasn’t much of a task to figure out who they were. All were fit, in their mid-twenties or
so and wearing dark track suits or light jackets and blue jeans and an
unsmiling visage. These were in
addition to the many uniformed members of the Peoples’ Army who are usually
there (it is a national monument after all) and the typical local police
force. I also noticed that each
uniformed guard of the People’s Army had a full size fire extinguisher at his
feet. I never noticed this
before. Given that the only things
combustible on that square are the usual cigarettes, guide books and empty soda
bottles I was surprised. After
some thought I realized that one form of local protest involves setting oneself
ablaze. I sincerely hope there is
some other reason I’m missing.*
After
the rather oppressive security on the square and at Tiananmen Gate itself
(Which I bought a ticket to climb up the stairs to and was totally
disappointed. The museum up there
seemed to consist of some old furniture used by China’s leaders for meetings of
import at some point in history.
After a few minute the plain clothes guys creeped me out so I left.)
I
was pleasantly surprised by the atmosphere in Sun Yat-sen park to the immediate
west of Tiananmen Gate and the Forbidden City. It is comparatively new, having been built around 1920 to
honor Sun Yat-sen, an important 20th century figure in Chinese
history. He led the founding of the Republic of China marking the end of
dynastic rule in the 1910’s. The
government he founded was overthrown in China and fled to Taiwan as a result of
the communist revolution but he’s still honored as the second most important
modern Chinese leader after Mao.
Like
most Chinese parks it had the formal pathways, pavilions and gardens you’d
expect. But that’s not what I
found most comforting after the oppressive security of Tiananmen. It was the young families playing jump
rope or catch with their kids. It
was the young lovers snuggling on the park benches and the old couples walking
around enjoying a sunny day. And
it was the grand parents lovingly posing what is probably their one grandchild
for a photograph by the usual landscaped pond. Forget its long history, future potential and all the
rest. This is really the China I
love.
Posing the grand-daughter for a picture.
*At
first I was reluctant to actually include that last bit about self-immolation
thinking it a bit dramatic. This morning in the Global Times I was reading at
breakfast there was an article about two farmers in Jiangsu Province did
exactly that over a land dispute with the government. Yikes.