For many students from Taiwan, a trip to the Chinese mainland is
exhilarating and unforgettable.
Yeh Tien-huei, a sophomore law student from Soochow University
in Taipei, was fortunate to win a place in a delegation of 220
Taiwan college and high school students to visit the mainland.
Invited by the China Soong Ching Ling Foundation, the delegation
arrived in Beijing on Thursday.
"We never expected Beijing to be so modern and beautiful, with
wide streets and a lot of skyscrapers," Yeh said excitedly,
"Beijing is a magnified version of Taipei."
The delegation, organized by the Taipei-based Ten Outstanding
Young Persons' Foundation, are visiting Beijing, Nanjing, Suzhou,
Kunshan and Shanghai in a 10-day trip.
During their stay in Beijing, the students climbed the Great
Wall, met some of the mainland's Olympic champions, visited
universities and met ordinary Beijing residents.
"Before we came, we were looking for the differences between the
mainland and Taiwan," Yeh said. "But now we're here, we've found
that we are so much alike!"
Yeh said she planned to come to Beijing again in the future and
live in the city, as she was won over by the city's profound
cultural heritage.
"Chinese culture is very beautiful and we all have a duty to
carry it forward," Yeh said.
When Yeh took history courses in university, she was touched by
the history of the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression
(1937-45).
"We united to fight foreign aggressors and we have no reason to
be hostile to each other today," Yeh said.
Chen-Yen Ho, a third-year student from the Department of
Electrical Engineering, National Taiwan University, said he was
amazed to see the mainland's progress.
"Seeing is believing and my parents fully supported me coming
here," Ho said. "Such an exchange provides a precious chance to
promote mutual understanding and learn from each other."
Ho said he has made some good friends with mainland
students.
Hung-Wen Chien, honorary head of the delegation, said exchanges
between young people are of profound importance to the future of
the Chinese people.
"Blood is thicker than water," Chien said. "Young generations on
both sides of the Straits should join to create a better future for
the Chinese people."
At the reception banquet in the famous Hepingmen Roast Duck
Restaurant Friday night, Hu Qili, chairman of the Foundation,
expressed a warm welcome to the students.
"The rapid development of the motherland brings boundless
opportunity for young people on both sides of the Straits," Hu
said.
"We hope more of Taiwan's young people will come to the mainland
to further their studies or develop their careers."
Recently, there has been an increase in cross-Straits youth
exchanges. In the middle of last month, the Fourth Straits Youth
Forum was held in Fuzhou.
Headed by Lin Yi-shih, vice- chairman of the KMT, a
more-than-100-member delegation from Taiwan joined the forum.
The forum was co-sponsored by All-China Youth Federation from
the mainland and China Youth Exchange Association from Taiwan.
(China Daily July 10, 2006)