Vendredi 29 juin 2007

...I hadn't heard about before.

"More Help to Be Given to Returned Chinese", says the headline, so I'm thinking it's just another announcement of some refined package designed to lure Chinese students back to the Motherland when the graduate, but no... 

"State Councillor Tang Jiaxuan yesterday announced a package of measures covering aid, debt-relief and social security to ease the plight of the returned overseas Chinese working on farms set up for them between the 1950s and 70s."

Right. Now, I was well aware that many people, and not only Chinese, came to China in the period mentioned, and for many reasons. But I had no idea that farms had been set up for overseas Chinese who returned to the warm embrace of the Motherland from the 1950s to the 1970s. At first glance my Kiwi eyes think there's something wrong here. Wouldn't such farms have been illegal or counter-revolutionary? Wasn't everything supposed to be collectivised and communise? But the article mentions things like wages and pension payments, so I guess these were state or collective farms set up specifically for overseas Chinese. Unfortunately, the only other information about these farms in the article, beyond the list of measures to be taken to ease the plight of the returnees, is this:

"There are 84 such farms in seven provinces across the country, with a population of about 600,000."

Now, with a population of 600,000, these are clearly collectives. Or maybe state farms, but I'll go with collectives for now. And with 84 such farms in seven provinces, there was clearly some kind of system for organising the returnees into these collective farms. But that's all I can deduce from the rather scant information in this article, and I can't understand how I hadn't heard of such things before.

Anybody know any more about this? I mean, given the time periods involved, the obvious events that occured, and the obvious foreign-connections of these farms and the returnees, one cannot help but wonder...

Par chrislzh - Publié dans : chrislzh
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Vendredi 29 juin 2007

Sounds like the water is trying to come back on. Let's hope this time they manage to put some clean water in the pipes.

Ah, no such luck. At least, not yet. Maybe it'll take some time for the dirty water to be drained out of the system. And maybe we'll be safely moved in to BeiGongDa when the tap water here flows cleanly. Make that 'probably we'll be safely moved in....'. Actually, I just turned on the kitchen tap, let the air bubbles and the usual dirt work their way out, waited a minute, then filled a glass, and the water was even rustier-looking than before. Has some kindly local official decided that everybody around here is so desperately anaemic that we need iron-fortified water?
Par chrislzh - Publié dans : chrislzh
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Vendredi 29 juin 2007

This is a note to this school that I am about to leave:

In future, when refurbishing the foreign teachers' apartments, make sure you buy toilets with seats that can support the weight of at least a 70 kilo man. I'm serious about this. Really. I'm not fat. I am, in fact, incredibly thin. I have always weighed considerably less than the average for a New Zealander. Even here in north China I'm probably on the lighter side of average. If a toilet seat snaps right in two under my weight as I'm trying to take a shit, nearly sending me into the toilet, then there is something seriously wrong, and it's not my weight.

    yours sincerely,

        Disturbed in Haidian

So it's not too bad from my point of view. The toilet is still mostly useable. Of course, should I need to defecate again before we leave I will either have to time it so that I'm near a reasonably clean and useable public toilet or in a well-appointed restaurant, or I'll have to pop next door to the public loos. I'm not sure what lzh is going to do, though.

But given this record I have developed in China of breaking Western-style toilets, I suspect that, if we ever manage to save enough money to buy a house here, we're going to have to install a Chinese-style squat. I've never broken one of those. Yet.

Thing is, I weigh a little less than 70 kilos. How could someone as thin as me have a toilet seat break under his weight? This is ridiculous.
Par chrislzh - Publié dans : chrislzh
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Vendredi 29 juin 2007

Only one more day in this dump. Most of our stuff is packed. Tomorrow we leave. I'm so looking forward to being back at BeiGongDa. I'm so looking forward to living this shithole corner of the capital.

And typically, the water is off yet again. When lzh got up this morning, there was no water. When I got up about half an hour later, the water was back on, but at a very low pressure and slightly discoloured, with a slight tint of rust to it. I'm thinking perhaps I should run down to the local market for a big bottle of mineral water to brew my tea with. I think perhaps the water we have stored here, and the water that has been coming out of the tap for the last couple of days (when the water has been on, that is) is just a tad too mineral. And now the water is off again. Honestly, the only other part of Beijing I've lived in with such an unreliable water supply is Tongzhou. Even the in-laws' village in Yanqing does better than this- and you can drink the tap water in perfect safety up there.

Anyway, never mind, one more day and then we're outta here.
Par chrislzh - Publié dans : chrislzh
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