About Ray

email: rmahoney58@yahoo.com , new Guiyang tel: 187 9860 2861, also: 86-152 5582 4713, 86-136 7173 7017 . In China 18 years, Ray (55 years old) has also taught in Shanghai, Beijing, Shiyan (Hubei), Kuitun (Xinjiang), Lanzhou, Changchun and elsewhere. Was in China-related business in the 1980s and 90s, and in the NGO sector both as a volunteer and in full-time positions. Has also been to India and Pakistan. As of August 2013, Ray is in Guiyang, Guizhou province, to work in a private middle school there, the Guiyang American-Canadian International School 贵阳美加国际学校. A newly created Flickr site, "GoGuiyang," has photos and articles to help people new to Guiyang, like myself, settle in quickly. See the photos arranged into sets: http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/sets/ Also active on Siwawa58 (where I dump my ESL materials), see: http://www.flickr.com/photos/98498293@N05/page1/?details=1, and I re-post material from Youtube (blocked in China) to Tudou and Youku, see: Youku "gelatiao58" http://www.soku.com/search_video/q_gelatiao58?f=1&kb=0412000000000__gelatiao58) and Tudou "gelatiao" http://www.soku.com/t/nisearch/gay%20men%20s%20chorus).

Gay Bars in Guiyang – Malt 麦芽酒吧 ,DD 酒吧

Gay Bars in Guiyang – Malt 麦芽酒吧 ,DD 酒吧 , uploaded at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9662753621/

Malt 麦芽酒吧 Pengshuichi area: on east side of Zhonghua Road a bit north of the post office and Createa, 2nd fl, smallish sit-down lounge bar, no dancing.
贵阳麦芽酒吧:位于贵阳市喷水池邮局向上20米,宜北町旁2楼,tel:0851-6853399

DD 酒吧 – Dancing, drag queen waiter, loud. The Chinese manager Brian used to work at English First.  Directions: from Malt walk north on Zhonghua Rd, turn right at the first intersection, Qianling East Rd, then turn right again before the bridge into an alley sloping down behind a tallish building. DD is on the right.

Review from Utopia-Asia, gay guide,
utopia-asia.com/tipschin.htm :”You can go to a very good and lively (even on week days; show before 10:30pm on week days) bar, full of young gays. It is called DD bar. It’s located on the back side of Yinhai Mansion on Qianling Dong Lu (Qianling East Rd), very close to the cross road with Shaanxi Lu. There is a famous Cantonese restaurant called Nanguifang (just like Hong Kong’s Lan Kwai Fong bar district). You can call the very helpful boss, Mr Brian, 152-8500-1069.” — suehiro, May 30, 2013   贵阳DD酒吧:位于贵阳市化龙桥旁,tel:15285001069 , renfeixiao@gmail.com . Video of DD’s dancing uploaded on Youku:贵阳GAY(同志)酒吧, v.youku.com/v_show/id_XMjgzMjUxMTQw.html

also see: aitongzhi.org/thread-62881-1-1.htm
also see: 贵州同志, www.5dgay.com/jsjb_65.html

 

= = =
Other gay bars:

Zhuti 主题音乐酒吧 is located on Zunyi Road across from the Exhibition Hall, a bit down the road towards the elevated highway and the train station, tel: 139 8404 3722. With renovation of the building behind it, a street restaurant in front of it (usually closed by the time the bar opens), and no sign, this bar can be hard to locate. But persist. Customers are mostly middle age and working class, plus young guys who like mature men.

Ever Bar 贵州缘聚家族公义酒吧, tel: 139 8484 7735, QQ: 513574393, owner: Lao Yu 老余 / Liulang 流浪, address: 贵阳市小十字星光灿烂旁竹筒街 in Xiao Shizi area. Directions: Find the prominent sign 星光灿烂 “Xingguan Canlan” then walk right down an alley past a parking gate. The sign “Ever” is on the left, with the bar downstairs. Windows of the Dicos fast food store on the second floor (entrance in the shopping mall) look out over the side alley that the bar is located on.

Guiyang also has a gay bathhouse, visited mostly by middle aged, married men.

= = =

Life After Dark
Exploits at a Guiyang gay bar – by Sasha Draggeim
<a href=”http://www.theanthill.org/daily-dish” rel=”nofollow”>www.theanthill.org/daily-dish</a>

“If I were a boy …”

I strained to hear the echo of my voice in the dark, shoebox-shaped bar, as crowds of young men swayed to and fro in the audience.

“Even just for a day …”

I was singing “If I Were a Boy” by Beyoncé Knowles in DD, or Daily Dish, one of the two gay bars in Guiyang, Guizhou province – a city generally described by non-Guiyang Chinese people as luohou, “backwards.” I had chanced upon this bar a few months earlier with a friend, and before long it became my main source of social interaction.
Here, in a tiny bar on the backside of a building in the central city square, men of all shapes and sizes had gathered to celebrate the fourth anniversary of the group leader, Fantasy, and his partner Little Ni. I was one of the performers scheduled for the event.

It was also a sad evening. In the glow of stage lights above the square glass stage, I could see Fantasy’s resigned expression. In a few months, he was going to be married off by his unknowing parents to a woman from the countryside. When I asked him why he couldn’t just tell his parents, he sighed, “They are too old, I can’t tell them now.”

What would he do with Little Ni, my friend and I asked. Fantasy lowered his voice. “I don’t know, maybe I could see him once every two weeks. You know, I’ve been married once, but it didn’t last very long. My wife filed for divorce, she said I didn’t love her.” But his parents still didn’t know why.

Every evening, Fantasty dutifully had dinner with them, said good-night, and then crept out of their shared home to make his grand entrance at DD at around 11pm. Among those waiting for Fantasy would be Brian, the bar owner, a man from Guiyang who spoke smooth English and had traveled to the Netherlands. With a confident half-smile, he often spoke of gay bars in Shanghai and Beijing, big cities where you could come out as gay even outside of the bar.

Maybe that’s why Brian was the most audacious when it came to family. “I will move to the Netherlands, get citizenship through marrying a man – it’s legal there! – adopt a child in Europe, and tell my parents it’s mine.”

Like Brian, the rest of the gang – Little Handsome, Cheetah, Little Jian – were known to us only by their pseudonyms. During the day, they went to work, ate out with their colleagues, spoke softly, and dressed neatly. But at night, they transformed.

Little Hao, his delicate features masterfully highlighted with makeup and an affected tragic expression, smiled daintily while sipping a beer. On stage, Cheetah stunned everyone with his flexibility in Michael Jackson-esque group dances. Little Handsome transformed into a catty Peking opera diva and performed the Dan part – a female Peking opera role once sung by men, dressed to kill in a billowing robe and full stage makeup.

DD was a place to drink, to smoke, to forget about weddings and parental pressure – just to be.

Guests crouched around low tables, drinking beer by the crate. Sad events of the past were forgotten. Such as how Little Jian had attempted to take his life after a breakup with his PLA boyfriend, uncontrollably posting sentimentalities and photos of himself with an IV in his arm on Weibo.

But they were back together now, and even pale Little Hao was looking lively tonight. Conversation flowed, above the booming music, about what subversive act was being planned by the owner of the rival gay bar. I had heard that it was bigger and newer than DD, but had never been there out of loyalty to my friends.

“Cause I know how it hurts, When you lose the one you wanted, Cause he’s taken you for granted, And everything you had got destroyed.”

Though Fantasy had mixed feelings about the evening, most of the others didn’t know about his upcoming wedding arrangements, and the atmosphere was almost maniacally jovial. After all, “there is a dish [available man] every day” (每天都有菜) – the expression which gave rise to the bar’s name.

My song was drawing to a close.

“If I were a boy, I think I could understand, How it feels to love a girl, I swear I’d be a better man.”

It was Fantasy’s favourite song, and I looked back at him. A tight crowd enclosed the stage at the front, but Fantasy stood in the back by the DJ system, working the sound, padded headphones drooped over his neck. Smoke clouded the room, the lone disco ball swirled, and I could see dancing particles of light reflecting in his wistful smile.

Sasha Draggeim is a PhD student in Chinese pedagogy at The Ohio State University

Update from the author 2014.1.20: “I have found out that apparently Fantasy’s bride-to-be is a lesbian, which is a relief because at least it means she is aware of the situation.”

Rita Willaert photos of Guizhou’s minorities, on Flickr; and debate about value of tourism / reality of the minorities a tourist sees

many, many good photos of Guizhou’s minorities, see www.flickr.com/photos/rietje/

But is it real? Or just for tourist dollars?

image from article “National Tourism Fair kicks off in China’s Guizhou,” 2013-04-19 , Xinhuanet,news.xinhuanet.com/english/photo/2013-04/19/c_132323642.htm )

Tourism in Guizhou: the legacy of internal colonialism.
Authors Oakes, T. S.; Lew, A. A., Editors Lew, A. A.;Yu, L.
Book Tourism in China: geographic, political, and economic perspectives. 1995 pp. 203-222, ISBN 0-8133-8874-0, Record Number 19951805070
Abstract:
This chapter explores the role of tourism as a development and modernization strategy in Guizhou Province, China. In particular, it examines how tourism is promoted as part of broader efforts to commercialize the rural economy in Guizhou. Although tourism-enhanced commercial development in remote rural areas offers a practical solution to rural Guizhou’s lack of economic integration, a lingering political economy of internal colonialism is, in many ways, being reinforced by tourism development. This is illustrated on two levels. At one level, the geographical concentration of tourism income in urban areas is being encouraged. The tourism industry in Guizhou is state owned, and locally initiated commercialism, particularly in rural areas, remains undeveloped, due to powerful urban-bureaucratic control of tourism planning, investment and development. On another level tourism involves a process whereby particular images and experiences of places are constructed and sold to the tourist. This chapter traces the historical patterns of both the internal colonial legacy and the post-Mao reforms as they have affected Guizhou’s society and economy. It suggests that tourism, as a state sponsored modernization strategy is, in many ways, being channelled by the historical political economy of internal colonialism. For the state, modernization entails very specific and limited goals, ranging from a more civilized society to a stronger army. Yet, the representation of China’s non-Han periphery is very much implicated in this burgeoning discourse on Chinese modernity. Tourism development in non-Han regions of Guizhou should thus be viewed within a framework which perpetuates representation of China’s non-Han periphery as the antithesis of modernity. The state-controlled centralization of tourist investment, revenues and planning means that there are few opportunities for local engagement with tourism development, such that ethnic regions such as Guizhou are portrayed for tourists according to the dominant images expected of such regions: their remoteness, backwardness, and un-modern primitivism.

See: http://www.cabdirect.org/abstracts/19951805070.html;jsessionid=6CBAE06ABBC2BC4D6B4D7EC2F341D5F1;jsessionid=56DBAA00FE9179BF82CE102F387C45C9

Eco Forum Global Annual Conference Guiyang 2013 生态文明贵阳国际论坛2013年年会

Eco Forum Global Annual Conference Guiyang 2013 生态文明贵阳国际论坛2013年年会  , more detailed content  at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9650584051/in/photostream

China commits to building eco-civilization

China will commit to its international obligations and work with countries around the world to build an eco-civilization for a better Earth, President Xi Jinping said in a congratulatory
letter to an environmental forum on Saturday.

In the letter, Xi extended his congratulations on the opening of the Eco Forum Global
Annual Conference 2013, which was held in Guiyang, capital city of southwest China’s Guizhou Province.

He said the forum concentrates on the international community’s common concerns about building an eco-civilization. He expressed his belief that the results of the forum will make positive contributions to protecting the global environment.

The president said building a beautiful China is an important part of the Chinese dream of
national rejuvenation.China will work in line with the idea of respecting, complying with and protecting nature, and implement the national policy of saving resources and protecting the environment, so as to promote green, recycling and low-carbon development, he said.

He said that to leave a good environment for future generations, China will incorporate building an ecological civilization into its economic, political, cultural and social development, and shape the industrial structure, production mode and people’s lifestyles in the spirit of saving resources and protecting the environment. (Source: Xinhua)
(from http://www.cciced.net/encciced/newscenter/update/2013/201308/P020130821362600799621.pdf )

Guiyang Symphony Orchestra 贵阳交响乐团

 
Guiyang Symphony Orchestra 贵阳交响乐团
The Guiyang Symphony Orchestra 贵阳交响乐团 Guìyáng jiāoxiǎng yuètuán, abbreviated GYSO) is an orchestra founded in 2009 in Guiyang, Guizhou province. It is organized under the auspices of the Cultural Institute of the Guiyang People’s Government and Xingli Group, a large retail group in Guizhou. www.chinagyso.com , email: gyso@gysochina.com . See video of performance at: www.gyso.cn/Pages/Show_News.aspx?news_id=412
电话:+86 851 5509898
传真:+86 851 5513372
邮编:550003
联系地址:贵阳市南明区市南路265号贵阳大剧院贵阳交响乐团

Tongren,Guizhou missionary history 贵州铜仁传教士历史: Local Girl Braves Danger of Bandits and Jap Attack- Life of Missionary in China Is Far From Being Dull- Local Girl in China -Zimmer Dec 5 1939 article

Tongren,Guizhou missionary history 贵州铜仁传教士历史:  Local Girl Braves Danger of Bandits and Jap Attack- Life of Missionary in China Is Far From Being Dull- Local Girl in China -Zimmer  Dec 5 1939 article, , see larger image:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9638579787/sizes/l/in/photostream/

Photo caption: Six weeks away by mail, when it gets through, Mrs. Silvia Zimmer will be spending here Christmas in Tungjen with her husband, Gerald, and their 18-month-old baby Sherwood

[copy of the original newspaper article supplied by Zimmer Foundation, www.zimmerfoundation.org , via former English teacher in Tongren, Guizhou and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer Sky Lantz-Warner (now at the University of Dayton, in Ohio), slantzwagner1@udayton.edu ]

The Morgantown Post, Morgantown, W. Va., Tuesday, December 5, 1939

text of news article:

“When a plane flies over Morgantown, one rarely notices it.
When an airplane buzzes over the horizon toward Tungjen [Tongren铜仁], China, a former Morgantown girl picks up her baby boy and runs for the hills.
Now that the Japanese have pointed the nose of their war machine into Southern China to rivet shut the backdoor through which supplies have been coming to the Chinese, the war is closer to Mrs. Gerald Zimmer, the former Sylvia Zinn.
Her mother, Mrs. Josephine Zinn of 160 Fayette street, pointed out Tungjen on a detailed map of China. It is located in Kweichow [Guizhou贵州] Province.

Located in Interior

This former University co-ed lives six weeks away by mail in the hinterlands of China, 1,400 miles west of Shanghai. Starting at Peking, she and her husband, Gerald Zimmer, kept one jump ahead of Jap bombers in their move in the interior.
“Tunjen is thirty miles from the nearest road,” Mrs. Zinn explained. Everything must be shipped in by boat to this city of 24,000 persons located in a region of mountains.
Raiding the river boats is a lucrative source of income to the bandits. The Zimmers just missed having their belongings fall into bandit hands. [missing text] … enough to meet their I.O.U.’s by the first of the year.

Bandits Beheaded

Telling of measures taken against the bandits, Mrs. Zimmer wrote in her last letter:
“Bandits aren’t bothering us now, Thank goodness! They (the soldiers) have been tracking them down and killing them. Friday four of them were beheaeded outside the North Gate. We had to come past there and there were two bodies and four heads still there…an awful sight.”
High walls completely surround the city and the residences of the missionaries are walled in also. Yet despite this, the bandits make raids on the city.
A raid on the North Gate near where the Zimmers live caused a bit of an uproar what with bullets zipping close to the house. The noise wakened the Zimmer’s baby boy before he could be taken to a safe place on the first floor.

Help One Another

The bandits made off with some loot and a couple Chinese women after killing several of the city’s residents.
Missionaries stick together in China, regardless of denomination or creed. If some difficulty arises, word of it travels fast and far.
The supply of powdered milk for the Zimmer child was low and prospects of replenishing the necessity have been bad at times.
“They were down to the last spoonful one time,” Mrs. Zinn said, “when a bundle arrived from a distant missionary’s wife. It contained a supply of the needed food. Another time, a missionary coming in from the ‘outside’ stopped and left a supply.”

Things Happen

Teaching and taking care of a house are but part of the day’s work for Mrs. Zimmer. The most [unclear text]… things pop up for her [missing text]… saying a woman nearby had taken poison,” Mrs. Zinn related. “Sylvia hurried after the girl, trying to think of the remedies she had heard of for poisoning.”
Arriving in the room with the stricken woman, she set to work and applied two of the remedies she remembered. They saved the woman’s life, the Chinese doctor told her later.
The Chinese have a simple faith in the ability of the missionaries to cure their ills. Mr. Zimmer treated as many as a thousand persons at one time for minor ills while on one of his trips in the surrounding rural region.

Going to Stay

The Zimmers carry their share of the burden of the missionary work for the region. Mr. Zimmer is the only white man for miles around. An American nurse and the widow of a missionary are the only other white persons in Tungjen.
Does the increasing difficulties have them stumped?
No sir!
“They are determined to stay until 1942 when their first six years are up,” Mrs. Zinn stated. Meanwhile, the former Marion, Ohio, youth and the West Virginia University co-ed are having the time of their lives doing the work they thoroughly enjoy in the midst of one of the most exciting chapters in the world’s history.’

= = =

Rev. & Mrs. Gerald R. Zimmer were Educators who, in the middle 1930s decided they wanted to be missionaries and went to China to preach and teach. They went to a very remote area in the interior, to a small town of Tongren. There they lived with the people, learned their language and customs and worked to improve their situation.

The Zimmer Foundation initiated a scholarship program in 2004 that supports the major cost of education for students annually for the second, third and final years at Tongren University. Now, over twenty students have been provided scholarships. It was our vision that at least two students will be added each year over a ten year program. Many donors have allowed us to exceed our visions of the scholarship program. The selection of the students is based upon their academic achievements and financial needs. The student’s family is identified with an income at or less than the poverty level established by the Tongren prefecture officials.

In villages of rural China, many students are the first of their family to complete college. Zimmer Foundation has arranged to financially support specific students with financial needs. The eligibility for receipt of such scholarships is first year college students with academic excellence who come from very poor families. Often these are children of farmers whose annual income is less than $264 USD. The families earn below the declared poverty level defined by each county.

The Zimmer Foundation for China was established to implement holistic programs to improve the economic and spiritual conditions in rural Guizhou. The Zimmer Foundation is a US 501(c)(3) tax exempt organization established in memory of Rev. & Mrs. Gerald R. Zimmer who served in China 1936-1948.

The Zimmer Foundation for China
7702 Lake Vista Ct. Suite 202, Lakewood Ranch, FL 34202, USA
Phone 941-306-5022, E-Mail : info@zimmerfoundation.org , stanzimmer@charter.net  (from www.zimmerfoundation.org/about/index.php )

see also:
Tongren University: Love Has No Boundaries (about Zimmerman Foundation, for Tongren, Guizhou) , & interview with Sky Lantz-Wagner, Peace Corps teacher, 2012, www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9509507136/

Zimmer Foundation for China, www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9509318418/

Tongren University 铜仁学院, Guizhou prov.,http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9509392752/in/photostream/

Oakland University (Michigan) – Guizhou exchange

Oakland University (Michigan) – Guizhou exchange , from http://www2.oakland.edu/sehs/ou_china/overview.htm,   posted at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9635577189/

The partnership between Guizhou Education Bureau, Guizhou, China and Oakland University, Michigan, U.S.A., was established in 1986 by the first OU delegation to China. Over the past 20 years, this unique partnership has been successfully and productively developed and expanded, beneficial to students, teachers, administrators, and many other participants from both sides. The partnership consists of five major components: the Summer English Language Institute, the MAT Joint-Masters Program, the Oakland-China Educational Consortium for School Districts, the Leadership Training Project, and the Visitors Exchange Programs.

Program Coordinator:Dr. Ledong Li, Oakland University, Pawley Hall 450 D, 2200 North Squirrel Road, Rochester, Michigan 48307, USA ,  Email: l1li@oakland.edu , Phone within United States: 1-248-370-4373 Fax: 1-248-370-4367, Phone from China: 001-248-370-4373 Fax: 001-248-370-4367; sehs@oakland.edu

HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment in Guizhou 贵州的艾滋病

 

HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment in Guizhou   贵州的艾滋病

uploaded at:http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9626460063/in/photostream

 

“”Our school held a big event to mark the 25th World AIDS Day”

user: GuiZhou Business School time:2012-12-1

November 30th 2012 — On the eve of the 25th World AIDS Day, sponsored by Guizhou province AIDS Committee and Guizhou province Poverty Alleviation Office, we school held a big event “Take action to prevent AIDS” . Xu Jingju, the director of Guizhou province AIDS Committee, Gao Chunxiu, the deputy investigator, Mr Yang Hongyuan, and Quan Xianjun, the clerk of Guizhou province Poverty Alleviation Office came to our school and were involved in the activities.

Xu Jingju, the director of Guizhou province AIDS Committee, gave us an enthusiastic speech, in which she introduced the current work and the obtained achievements, meanwhile she appealed “Participation, Dedication and Prevention by all people “, which means by establishing a healthy and civilized life style and actively participating in the public benefit activities of preventing AIDS, we should make contributions to defending our homeland.

Then Mr Yang Hongyuan gave us a lecture about how to prevent AIDS, during which the present students competed to answer the relevant questions. At last, the big event ended with a wonderful performance.

(from www.gzssx.com/ENGLISH/eshownews.asp?nid=3333 )
= = =

China province project reaches out to young people
06 September 2006

The guidebooks call it ‘remote’, ‘undiscovered’ – China’s south-western province of Guizhou is home to some examples of extreme natural beauty including China’s largest waterfall, the ‘Huangguoshu’ and the Zhijin Caves, famous for their massive-scale stalagmite stone pillars.

But despite its remote location and idyllic surroundings, the province, like every other in China, is increasingly affected by HIV. From a few individual reported cases in 1993, it is currently estimated that about 37,000 people in Guizhou are living with HIV. There are signs of the epidemic becoming progressively generalized and increasingly women are becoming infected.

With hope and help – A self-help group for people living with HIV in Guizhou
A joint HIV prevention and care project, run by Guizhou provincial authorities, and UNAIDS` Cosponsor UNICEF is making some headway towards tackling the growing figures and at the same time involving people and groups from all sectors in the AIDS response. Established in 2001, the project focuses particularly on young people, tackling the often difficult issue of injecting drug use and its crossover with HIV, as well as providing care and support for people living with HIV.

“The initiative contains three key areas – development of a strategic plan on AIDS involving high-level advocacy and media mobilization; HIV prevention among children and young people in and out of school and within drug rehabilitation centres; and care and support to children living with HIV and their families,” said Christian Voumard, UNICEF Representative and chairman of the UN theme group on AIDS in China.

The project aims to build and involve all key officials and provincial groups in the AIDS response. Vice Provincial Governor of Guizhou Wu Jiafu underlines how the initiative has helped bring people together. “As government officials, we now know how we can work together with multiple sectors to confront AIDS and support people living with and affected by HIV. This network is now implementing the national policies and local policies to support young people, people living with HIV and their families to fight against the disease and its social impact,” he said.

“Though the resources here are very limited, we’re confident that we can get ahead of the HIV epidemic with the participation of all these young people and people infected and affected,” he added.

Results so far have been extremely encouraging. Provincial policies on HIV have been put in place and training sessions with authorities and project managers are already underway. Since the project’s inception, 45 high schools have developed curriculum on HIV and drug use prevention in eight of the province’s prefectures, reaching more than 70,000 children and young people.

Voluntary testing and counselling services have been set up within seven drug rehabilitation centres across the province.

“By knowing my HIV status and with all the knowledge of prevention of HIV, I will stop sharing needles with my friends and engaging in high risk sex,” said one young man at the Tongren prefecture drug rehabilitation centre.

Through the initiative, gradually people living with HIV are being brought to the forefront of the response in the province. A number of self-help groups of people living with HIV have been developed with the participation of 50 people living with HIV. More than 100 family members and 26 children and their families participated in care and support campaigns in the prefectures of Guiyang and Tongren, receiving community based care for family life and schooling.

“I never imagined it could be possible that authorities and big organizations would care about us –people living with HIV—and our children,” said one man living with HIV from Tongren prefecture who has been involved in the programme. “I lost my hope because of the pain of disease, social discrimination and poverty, but this is helping to restore the hope by supporting me and my children.”

UNICEF was the first major donor on AIDS in Guizhou province and provided some of the ground work for other donors’ work in the area. Programmes supported by the US Center for Disease Control and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria (Round 4) have since benefited from this in their support to Guizhou.

UNICEF will continue to support the project in their new 2006-2010 programme and activities will be expanded to include prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) and increasing care and support for children affected by AIDS.

The joint project in Guizhou is focusing particularly on young people
“This programme has been an example of bringing together a variety of different groups within the AIDS response – and crucially invovles young people and people living with HIV,” said UNAIDS Country Coordinator for China, Joel Rehnstrom.

“We are seeing the project help reduce numbers of new infections, as well as break down the barriers and taboos of involving people living with HIV – which in turn is breaking down stigma and discrimination related to HIV.”

UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot is visiting China from 7 – 12 September to encourage continued leadership and commitment and to mobilize a truly multi-sectoral response to AIDS in China. As part of his visit, Dr Piot is participating in a three-day mission to Guizhou, visiting the Hui Long community and Zhijing County. Dr Piot will meet with representatives of provincial government and city leaders and visit various key sites that focusing on HIV and drug use.

(from http://www.unaids.org/en/resources/presscentre/featurestories/2006/september/20060906china/)

English corners in Guiyang 贵阳的英语角: Mon 7:30 pm @ Coffee Time 素年咖啡, Thurs @ Guizhou Normal U.’s Mao statue

English corners in Guiyang 贵阳的英语角: Mondays 7:30-10:00 pm  

Mondays 7:30-10:00 pm at NEW LOCATION (as of Jan 2014): Black Rock 黑石, Caijiajie, near Xiaoshizi  蔡家街商住楼二单元二号(建行背后)
coffee shop tel: 136 1851 1183   [former location:Coffee Time 素年咖啡 , (across from Jiaxiu Pavilion, behind Victoria维多利亚) ]

Thursdays 7:30-9:30 pm at Guizhou Normal University at the Mao statue 贵州师范大学,毛主席雕像

There is also an English corner on Saturdays at 2:30-5:00 pm at the Guizhou Provincial Library 贵州省图书馆 (Beijing Road 北京路), on the 4th floor in the foreign language book collection section.

The Protestant church on Qianlingxi Road 黔灵西路 occasionally also has an English corner on Tuesday nights. 

And there is an English corner in a Korean restaurant in a shopping center in Jinyang.

American education delegation visit to Guiyang, 2007 — Mao-Mart: Always Low Prices!

American education delegation visit to Guiyang, 2007 — Mao-Mart: Always Low Prices!

larger image at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9612469434/sizes/l/in/photostream/

Mao-Mart: Always Low Prices!

17 July,2007By: David Besozzi

This morning we visited a middle school affiliated with Guizhou Normal University.

We were met at the gate by the school’s principal. The school actually placed a banner in English and Chinese at the gate welcoming us, as well as in the reception room.

The principal mentioned that today was an auspicious day – 17th day, 7th month, of the 7th year – all those sevens, very lucky indeed! The school has a total of 3,000 students and 200 faculty and staff.

At this point, the principals ‘speech was typical of these sort of government sponsored events (very Party like) – he emphasized the similarities and differences between the American and Chinese systems of education – like yin and yang, he said. China emphasizes the group, while America focuses on individual. The principal went onto say that both countries have the opportunity to learn from the strengths of each other. Interestingly, in the middle of his introduction speech, the principal’s cell phone rang and he took the call (a common occurrence at these events). He never lost his place and continued with his speech after finishing the call. He then concluded by stating that the school builds on traditional approaches but also looks forward to the opportunity to meet and learn from educators from abroad. Afterward, we broke out into happy applause (although I was wondering if we would be given any information of substance – it wasnt ‘looking too good).

We then got another welcome from the Chair of the Foreign Affairs Office in Guizhou, Miss Chin – “welcome on behalf of the Foreign Affairs Office,” she said, and then told us she is very busy getting ready to leave for a trip to the United Kingdom later in the day. With that, she got up and left. These introductions were looking very “official” – meaning useless in terms of learning anything of substance.

We then met with Mr. Zhou, the Director of Education for the province of Guizhou. He proceeded to supply us with a variety of statistics on Guizhou schools: by the end of 2006 they had 470 million students (not sure if that is accurate). They also have 40,00 primary schools, 1,500 middle schools, and 482 senior middle (high) schools (Again, these statistical figures are always suspect).

Mr. Zhou stressed that the goal of education in Guizhou is to meet the needs of all students – fairness is the goal. He also emphasized the need for curriculum reform and quality education. Al right, at this point, I am beginning to think that we are being given a very typical Party speech – although not presenting us with all “sunshine and roses,” the speech was less informative than the education related presentations we have heard elsewhere. It isn’t enough to keep repeating the “equality and fairness” phrase over and over. Given what we have learned about migrant families and the plight of “left behind children,” the rhetoric we received today seems a waste of time. I think the old fashioned approach to meeting with foreign educators still practiced in Guizhou reflects the degree to which the province has not met the sophistication level we experienced elsewhere, especially Beijing. They still need to break from the routine of the past and the practice of presenting the rhetorical Party line (Beijing presentations also promoted party policy, but did it in a way that was not always obviously Party rhetoric).

Well, I’m not so sure how useful this meeting was. Nevertheless, they had great snacks! I also had a chance to meet with and talk with a high school student, a miss Xue Shuyu. She had lived in America for a year in Pennsylvania where she went to school and took here classes in English. I was astounded at her level of intelligence and her commitment to her studies.

All of the students that were present seemed to be of a similar character. It made me think that in the United States we are not doing enough – our students will find it difficult to compete with these young people in a global market place. If we don’t reform our education goals, it is potentially possible that we will fall behind. However, Miss. Xue also admitted that the one problem faced by students in China is the overwhelming amount of study and preparation they are required to do for school. She would have preferred some sort of balance between study time and free time. She particularly liked how in America she had some choices and freedom to study topics of her choosing. This is not always an option for students in China. perhaps Miss Xue, and others like her, may build a bridge between our two systems, making it possible for Chinese students to experience the best of both systems (now I’m sounding rhetorically Party like).

Following lunch, we headed towards a section of Guiyang where Professor Belsky had noticed a giant Mao statue. These were common during the Cultural Revolution, but most had been taken down in the years following that controversial period of Chinese history. So, off we went in the bus to check it out. Upon arriving, it was apparent that the statue was very large — it was the largest I have even seen. Interestingly, it now sat in front of a new skyscraper/office building.

Both the building and the Mao statue faced in the direction of the main park located in Guiyang along the water front area of the Nanming River. However, on closer inspection, the park was more than a park. At both ends the park there was a triangular structure composed of glass emerging from the grassy area of the park – they looked very much like the I.M. Pei designed entrance way to the Louvre in Paris, France. However, these two pyramid structures were not entry ways into a museum. No, in fact, they were the entry ways into one of the world’s largest Wal-Mart Supercenters!

If you look closely, at the back left of the glass pyramid, you can see Mao in the background:

The entire structure was underground, essentially the full length of the park itself, the green lawn being located on the roof of the structure.

It was massive and inside one could buy all things one expects to find at a Wal-Mart and more. Chinese tastes for food are different than in the United States. As a result, different varieties of food are available.

However, the Chinese do not differ in the desire to purchase items at an affordable price. Hence the smiley-faced Wal-Mart discount signs everywhere.

The irony of this discovery wasn’t so much that Wal-Mart was taking over China just like it is America, but that the location of the structure is opposite a giant Mao statue. The man must be spinning in his grave – all that revolution and Mao has to stand for eternity staring at a Wal-Mart Supercenter (makes one consider the hypocrisy of kicking Starbucks out of the Forbidden City – no one seems to care about the sanctity of Mao, especially if it means cutting off access to “Always Low Prices!”).

Following our adventure at “Mao-Mart,” We were taken to visit a local industry – a drug manufacturing factory. The name of the company was Li Shuan Gyao Ye and they manufactured a drug that basically acts like a sore throat remedy.

According to the director, the drug is completely made of natural herbs, as opposed to Western medicine, which often uses chemicals (I am not sue that his statement is 100% true, but it reflects the Chinese perception of Western medicine). They even gave us a free sample box to keep.

We were then taken on a tour of the plant, but we had to wear protective clothing on our heads, body and feet. So, we dressed in the appropriate clothing provided and took a tour of the plant,

Sorry, no photo were allowed so I cant show the plant. It was remarkably clean, especially since the part of the city where this factory was located was not. After our tour, we headed back to our bus, but not before passing a company bus with the image of a famous spokesperson (a comedian).

We then took our obligatory group photo.

Some of us jokingly wondered what the chances might be that we would see our picture or a group photo on a bus in Shanghai the following week expressing our love of the product. I imagined it might look like the following:

After the company visit, it was time to head back to the hotel for some well needed rest.

(from http://admin.bhbl.neric.org/~dbesozzi/FOV2-001011C0/FOV2-001011C2/S00DE53FE-0193EC1B?Plugin=Blog )

Hall of Confucius Studies, Guiyang 贵阳孔学堂, in Huaxi district, opened in 2012

Hall of Confucius Studies, Guiyang  贵阳孔学堂, in Huaxi district 

see larger image at:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9617680700/sizes/l/in/photostream/

more photos of the Hall of Confucius Studies in Guiyang at: www.gywb.cn/topic/view/id/78.htm

reference photo: students in Guiyang, late Qing era,  photo from http://img1.soufun.com/bbs/2011_12/06/18/guiyang/1323166809645_000.jpg

全球12国大学校长参观贵阳孔学堂 Coming of age ceremony

大成殿内孔子及先贤圣像

贵阳市道德讲堂总堂在孔学堂开讲

 孔学堂鸟瞰效果图

孔学堂 大唐果

在孔学堂举办的成人礼上,正宾为参礼者加冠。

在孔学堂举办的成人礼上,正宾为参礼者加冠。

孔学堂大成殿效果图。

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The Workshop of the Council of the Confucius Institute Headquarters Convened in Guiyang

from Hanban, 2013-08-01

Guiyang, July 28th, 2013 – The workshop of the Council of the Confucius Institute Headquarters was convened in Guiyang. Mr. Li Jun, Vice Secretary of the Guizhou CPC Provincial Committee; Mr. Zhao Qizheng, dean of the School of Journalism and Communication at Renmin University of China, the former chief of the State Council Information Office; Madam Xu Lin, Chief Executive of Confucius Institute Headquarters, Director-General of Hanban; Mr. Li Zaiyong, Deputy Secretary of the CPC Guiyang Municipal Committee and Mayor of Guiyang City attended the workshop and delivered speeches.

In his speech, Mr. Li Jun thanked Confucius Institute Headquarters for organizing the workshop in Guiyang. He said that an important reason for holding the workshop in Guiyang was that Guiyang has got the Hall of Confucius Study. The Study is more a school than a “temple”, which mainly serves as a venue for lectures, research, and training. And the purpose of the Hall of Confucius Study is not to restore the ancient ways but to revive and pass on the elements of the outstanding traditional Chinese culture under new historical circumstances, and to help realize the “China Dream”. He hopes friends from various countries often come to Guizhou, offering their care and help to the Hall of Confucius Study in Guiyang, which makes greater contribution in promoting traditional Chinese culture.

Madam Xu Lin pointed out that Confucius Institutes are flourishing and warmly welcomed in various countries, and have been in a new phase of development. Improving the quality of management, upgrading training for local Chinese language teachers, and implementing the Confucius China Study Plan are the basis for the sustainable development of Confucius Institutes, which enables the pursuit of development on a higher level, helps to integrate into foreign universities and local communities, and better serves the demands of the world in learning Chinese language and culture.

During the opening ceremony, Confucius Institute Headquarters (Hanban) and the Guiyang municipal government jointly signed a framework agreement for strategic cooperation.

During the conference, Mr. Zhao Qizheng gave a lecture about the differences and similarities of Chinese and foreign cultures, and the Chinese and foreign discourse systems. Representatives from countries including the U.S., the UK, Germany, Spain, Australia, Kenya, Brazil, and Chile made discussions and exchanged views about how the Confucius Institute can better integrate into foreign universities, better serve the public of various countries, increase its influence, and they offered advice on how the Confucius Institute could maintain a sustainable development as well.

(from english.hanban.org/article/2013-08/01/content_507342.htm )
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全球12国大学校长参观贵阳孔学堂University leaders at the Confucius Institute

 

Overseas university heads tour Guiyang Confucius Institute

By Li Yang and Zeng Jun ( chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2013-08-06

The public lecture provides a platform for communication between scholars and the public. Also, it is part of the cultural development plan of Guiyang,” said Zhao Qizheng, the president of the School of Journalism, Renmin University of China.

University representatives from the US, Great Britain and South Korea watched the Chinese traditional coming-of-age ceremony at the Guiyang Confucius Institute on July 30.

The ceremony has three sections: a capping ceremony, a hair-pinning ceremony and a shooting event. A total of 50 boys and girls dressed in Han costumes participated in the ceremony.

Isaac Mbeche,vice-president of the University of Nairobi, Kenya, said at the event: “The Confucius institute was established in 2005 in Kenya, providing undergraduate and postgraduate education. Students there cannot only learn Chinese but also Confucian culture.”

“The Guiyang Confucius Institute’s architecture is amazing,” said Fred Hillmer, the president of the University of New South Wales, Australia.

Hillmer said: “Learning Chinese has become a fashionable thing in Sydney. There are more than 500 people learning Chinese in our university.”

Seven years ago, the University of Edinburgh established a Confucius Institute. Now, it has more than 2,000 students,said Timothy O’Shea, the president of the University of Edinburgh.

photos:
Overseas university heads tour Guiyang Confucius Institute
University leaders at the Confucius Institute

Overseas university heads tour Guiyang Confucius Institute

Coming of age ceremony

(from www.chinadaily.com.cn/m/guizhou/guiyang/2013-08/06/conten… )
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贵阳孔学堂落成

2012年10月31日

贵阳孔学堂落成
——弘扬传统文化 构筑精神高地

弘扬中华民族优秀传统文化,构筑促进地方经济社会发展的“精神高地”。9月28日,贵阳孔学堂落成暨孔子行教雕塑揭幕仪式在大将山麓、花溪河畔隆重举 行。国务院参事室主任陈进玉讲话并宣布落成,省委常委、市委书记李军为孔学堂管理处授牌并致辞。

中央文史馆副馆长、中国文联副主席冯远,国务院参事、国家汉办主任、孔子学院总部总干事许琳,国务院参事车书剑,省人大常委会副主任顾久,人民出版社 编辑部主任方国根,南京大学中国文化书院常务副院长李承贵,联合国教科文组织文化遗产专员、中国文物技术学会副秘书长杜晓帆,世界遗产基金会中国区经 理李光涵等出席。

市委常委、市委宣传部部长兰义彤主持仪式。省委宣传部、省文明办、省发改委、省旅游局、省教育厅、省文史馆、省建筑设计研究院等省直部门和单位负责人 ,市领导李忠、陈石、王保建、马长青、刘文新、张平、刘俊、朱元俊、帅文、庞鸿、李作勋,以及市人大常委会、市政府、市政协其他领导出席。
孔学堂地处花溪十里河滩国家城市湿地公园中段,背倚大将山,俯瞰花溪河。占地130亩,建筑面积2万多平方米,因袭宏伟、大气的汉唐风格,并融入贵州 地域建筑元素。主要建筑包括大成殿、杏坛、讲堂群、六艺学宫、乡贤祠、阳明祠、奎文阁等,主要功能是讲学、研究、修习,兼具祭祀、礼典、典藏等功能。

在落成暨揭幕仪式上,陈进玉代表国务院参事室、中央文史馆、国家汉办和孔子学院总部,对贵阳孔学堂的落成表示祝贺。他说,贵阳建设孔学堂,是贯彻落实 党的十七届六中全会精神的重要举措,是实现贵州省委、省政府“构筑精神高地,冲出经济洼地”要求的重要助推力,将为全市、全省乃至全国的青少年加强思 想道德教育提供重要基地,为提高本地党政干部的文化素养和“官德”境界提供重要平台。从孔学堂的建设,我们看到了“贵阳速度”,感受到了贵州、贵阳在 西部大开发中正在迅速崛起。
陈进玉表示,国务院参事室及有关机构将在国学进校园、进机关、进企业等方面加大对贵阳市的支持力度,推动世界各地的孔子学院与贵阳孔学堂加强交流。希 望贵阳孔学堂越办越红火,贵州、贵阳经济社会发展更好更快。(讲话全文另发)

李军代表市四大班子向孔学堂的落成表示祝贺。他说,文化是民族的血脉。一个民族要真正强大,必须使本民族的优秀文化延绵不绝、繁荣发展。当前,我们自 身发展状况和面临的外部环境都发生了很大变化,迫切需要建立与市场经济相适应的、根源于本民族传统文化的社会主义精神文明体系。孔子创立的儒家学说是 中华民族传统文化的主脉。贵阳与儒学文化有着很深的渊源,贵阳加快发展既需要高楼大厦,也需要精神文化殿堂。在此时、在此地建设孔学堂,就是贯彻中央 的要求,坚持古为今用,实现弘扬中华民族优秀传统文化与彰显社会主义文明新风的有机结合,构筑“精神高地”,为冲出“经济洼地”提供强大精神力量。

李军强调,孔学堂必须立足贵阳、面向全国、放眼世界,真正成为一个开放的平台。要通过开设国学讲坛,举办学术交流会、研讨会等载体,吸引海内外儒学名 家前来讲学、研究,促进儒学文化的传播与发展,培育广大市民对优秀传统文化的认知与认同,增强民族文化自觉自信。通过坚持不懈的努力,使贵阳孔学堂成 为一个硕儒、名流汇集的地方,成为一个弘扬、研究儒学文化的重要场所。

李军说,在孔学堂建设过程中,得到了各级领导和有关各方的热情关怀和积极帮助。设计单位精心构思,工程建设者高质量、高效率完成建设任务,相关单位全 力配合,民营企业慷慨解囊,广大市民和专家学者踊跃建言。李军代表市四大班子向参与、关心和支持孔学堂建设的各级各方表示衷心感谢。

中国孔子基金会等省内外136家相关机构和组织发来贺信,认为贵阳孔学堂的落成对弘扬中华传统文化、构建社会主义和谐社会、建设中华民族共有精神家园 具有重大意义,必将推动当地经济社会文化全面健康发展。

仪式上,李军向孔学堂管委会主任蒋星恒和孔学堂管理处负责人授牌。出席仪式的领导和嘉宾为高达9.28米的巨型孔子行教雕塑揭幕。仪式前,领导和嘉宾 们兴致勃勃地参观了孔学堂。

各区(市、县)、市直各部门,捐建单位负责人,贵阳市儒学研究会成员参加仪式。

(from www.gysdj.gov.cn/dwgk/ShowNews.aspx?NewsID=13332 )
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全球12国大学校长参观贵阳孔学堂
发布时间:2013-07-31 09:41:03 来源:贵阳晚报 作者:周然 庞博
导读:7月30日,孔子学院总部理事及全球12个国家的大学校长来到贵阳孔学堂参观。来自美、英、韩等12个国家的大学校长,在孔学堂观看了中国的成 人礼仪式:50名身穿汉服的少男少女,在广场上…
全球12国大学校长参观贵阳孔学堂
7月30日,孔子学院总部理事及全球12个国家的大学校长来到贵阳孔学堂参观。
中国人民大学新闻学院院长、前国务院新闻办公室主任赵启正参观之后表示,虽然他是第一次来到孔学堂,但这里与他想象中孔子当年的学习环境很吻合。 “举办的公益讲座,既有利于贵阳的文化发展,也给学者提供了一个服务群众的机会。”
来自美、英、韩等12个国家的大学校长,在孔学堂观看了中国的成人礼仪式:50名身穿汉服的少男少女,在广场上按照传统礼仪,进行拜孔圣、三谢礼 等活动。
据多国的大学校长介绍,他们各自的学校都已设立孔子学院,希望能通过此行,增进与中国的文化交流。
全球12国大学校长参观贵阳孔学堂
全球12国大学校长参观贵阳孔学堂
声音
肯尼亚内罗毕大学副校长姆贝奇:
肯尼亚在2005年就建立了孔子学院,并建立了完善的课程体系,按照本科生、硕士生、博士生分级,学生不但要学习中文,还要学习儒家文化。但比较 起来,贵阳孔学堂更新、更宏大,这里举行的成人礼等活动也十分吸引人。
澳大利亚新南威尔士大学校长弗里德里克·休默:
这可能是我看过的、有史以来最好的孔学建筑,与我所在大学里的孔子学院相比,这里的建筑更恢弘。在悉尼,学中文已成了一件很时尚的事,仅在我的学 校里,就有500多人学习中文。
英国爱丁堡大学校长提摩斯·奥谢:
7年前,爱丁堡大学有了孔子学院,现在已经有超过2000位学生在这里学习中文。早在1852年,英国爱丁堡大学便接收了第一位中国留学生,叫做 王宽(音),希望今后爱丁堡大学孔子学院有机会与贵阳孔学堂开展交流、合作。
巴西圣保罗州立大学孔子学院院长路易斯·安东尼奥·保利诺:
贵阳孔学堂非常漂亮、壮观,没想到在山水之间还隐藏了这样一片古色古香的建筑群。古代的孔子一定是在这样的环境下给学生上课的,希望下回还能来贵 阳做客。(周然 庞博)
(from dygz.yxgz.cn/guizhoulvyouzixun/2013/0731/153513.html )
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[poor machine translation:]

Completion of Guiyang first Confucius Classroom Confucius birthday

September 28,2012

WASHINGTON, Guiyang, 28 September (Reporter Wang Chao Anna)

28 September is the 2563-year old Confucius birthday, the first Confucius Classroom in Guiyang Huaxi Wetland Park was completed, the school set ritual, ceremony, classical education, Guoxue Tourism Forum, cultural industries and functions as a ‘public Guiyang friends about literature, reading classic study of Chinese culture, learning, I can appreciate the unique beauty of Huaxi Wetland Park.

The Guiyang Municipal Party Committee Propaganda Department, Deputy Minister, the Confucius Classroom Management Director Hou Nan told reporters Kong Xuetang functional orientation: ‘heritage and carry forward the Confucian Temple, enlightenment and open a new wind-base’ ritual, collection, research, enlightenment , six arts five basic functions, as far as possible, to the civil and moral education, ideological and moral education of minors and the public a wide range of spiritual and cultural needs. Xuetang Kong, to build a platform of Confucian Studies in Guiyang to meet, play features a respected Confucianism to promote the transfer of Chinese cultural exchange the results of the study of Confucianism, the Confucian heritage and dissemination. Worship, rituals, songs, recreation, tourism, culture, economy, and other functions as one of the community projects.

The school building complex covers an area of ​​130 hectares, with a total construction area of ​​nearly 20,000 square meters. Architectural design for the architectural features of the Han and Tang style. Taken the traditional interpretation of the type system was a vertical and two horizontal triaxial networking ‘trend. vertical axis is the ‘ceremony axis’, a symbol of the core ideas of Confucius’ Rites’ and’ benevolence ‘lattice Stargate, Dacheng Hall, Xingtan building two horizontal axis wind axis row axis’,’ wind axis’ a symbol of enlightenment thought of Confucius , lecture group who teach college Khe Sanh, Six Arts Xue Gong, wave ‘a symbol of wisdom and practice of Confucius, Xiangxian for discussion during the conference and scientists to give lectures and learning base. Temple, Yangming Temple, Cravens Court building for worship Guizhou, the ancient sages and celebrities collections Confucian culture classic.

Today can be the influence of Confucianism worldwide transmission of Chinese and Western cultures, so China. Been a mainstay traditional world Heiner, a respected nation Long to spread Rise of Confucianism traditional Chinese culture, deputy director of the Guizhou Provincial People’s Congress Gu have a positive view of the role of the great powers. (End)

(Original title: Guiyang first Confucius Classroom Confucius birthday completed

(from www.cool-news.us/news-1718211-Completion-of-Guiyang-first… )

全球12国大学校长参观贵阳孔学堂

 

贵阳孔学堂540人的“成人礼”
2013-05-05 09:06:59  贵网  进入贵社区   复制本文地址


540名学生进行“成人礼”宣誓

拜双亲父母,感谢养育之恩。

礼射活动

成人礼上,女孩行笄礼。

成人礼上,男孩行冠礼。

 

在孔学堂举办的成人礼上,正宾为参礼者加冠。

在孔学堂举办的成人礼上,正宾为参礼者加冠。