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Taiwan students embrace life on the mainland

Updated: Sep 14, 2022 By CHEN XUE CHINA DAILY Print
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Chen Simo, 19, studying at Shanghai International Studies University. [Photo/China Daily]

CHEN SIMO

A powerful speech was delivered by Chen Simo, 19, in the latest episode of Youth Power.

"We are keenly aware of how closely linked we are. We're both sons and daughters of China and descendants of the Yellow Emperor, and we know that a few drops of water can never separate us," she said, referring to the Taiwan Straits.

Chen, who was born in Taiwan and grew up in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province, regards both places as her home.

Many of her family members in Taiwan have also found opportunities on the mainland. For example, her uncle went to Shanghai 12 years ago to work in the semiconductor industry, since when Chen has proudly told people that many of the chips for smartphones and home appliances are produced at the factory where her uncle worked.

Chen also tries to look for cross-Straits links in her daily life. In Fujian, during a visit to Xiamen and Fuzhou, the provincial capital, she noticed numerous banyan trees. "In Taiwan, there are also many banyans-I guess that the tree symbolizes the connections between the mainland and Taiwan," she said.

She also visited the Palace Museum, both in Beijing and Taipei. She thinks the Palace Museum in Beijing is best-known for its architecture, while that in Taipei is famed for its delicate antiques.

As many streets in Taiwan bear the names of mainland cities, Chen made a fun discovery from a map of Taipei. Taking Zhongshan Road as the vertical axis and Zhongxiao Road as the horizontal one, and also drawing a coordinating cross, she found that Chengdu Road, Guiyang Road and Liuzhou Street are located in the southwest of Taipei. These cities are located in Southwest China.

Chen also found that Jilin Road, Liaoning Road and Changchun Road are located in the northeast of Taipei, and they are named after cities in Northeast China.

"In other words, the map of Taipei is a mini map of China. Each of those streets is like an umbilical cord attached to the motherland," she said.

Such a link was evidenced when COVID-19 broke out in Wuhan. Chen said that when food supplies ran short during quarantine, members of the All-China Federation of Taiwan Compatriots went to her home with rice, noodles and cooking oil.

Chen wants to take her friends in Taiwan to Yellow Crane Tower in Wuhan because the Tang Dynasty poet Li Bai once took his friend Meng Haoran, a fellow poet, there and they both created many beautiful verses. She hopes that by taking her friends to the tower, they will form a new understanding of friendship and connections, which also symbolize the bonds between the mainland and Taiwan.

Following her speech in the Youth Power episode, Chen, who is studying at Shanghai International Studies University, read a poem with her new friend, Wang Licheng.

Written by the late Taiwan poet Yu Guangzhong 50 years ago to express his yearning for the motherland, the poem includes these lines:

Nostalgia becomes a shallow strait;

me on this side, the mainland on the other

Some 50 years later, Chen and Wang, two teenagers from different sides of the Taiwan Straits, read the poem in Quanzhou, Fujian, the area of the mainland nearest to Taiwan.

Zhang Enshuo, 21, studying at Peking University's School of Economics. [Photo/China Daily]

ZHANG ENSHUO

Studying at Peking University's School of Economics, Zhang Enshuo, 21, who comes from Taiwan, said, "I think a lot of misunderstanding stems from a lack of connection, insufficient conversation, or a lack of interaction."

Zhang drew this conclusion because he grew up in Taiwan, and now studies on the mainland. Having lived on both sides of the Taiwan Straits, he is one of many who can see that the gap between the "two sides" would never have existed if there had been sufficient communication.

He remembers a picture from his middle school textbook of residents from Quanzhou, Xiamen and Guangdong-coastal cities and province on the mainland-moving to Taiwan. But such content was soon removed from textbooks, and children younger than Zhang barely had a chance to learn the history of the cross-Straits relationship.

However, Zhang's high school provided students with regular trips from Taipei to Beijing and Shandong province. Zhang visited both destinations, getting to taste the delicious local cuisine, and taking in the beautiful scenery in northern China, which is very different from that in Taiwan. He was also impressed by the warm greetings he received from locals.

Even though these trips were short, they opened up a new world for Zhang. After he returned to Taiwan from the journeys, he developed an interest in the mainland, and looked for books to read about it. He also talked to local elderly people about their time on the mainland before they moved to Taiwan.

"I think that face-to-face conversation and interaction is very important," Zhang said in the latest episode of Youth Power.

These trips were also one of the reasons Zhang decided to study at Peking University, as he longed for a bigger stage.

One of China's leading universities and a world-class institution, Zhang soon found that his place of study is a talent hub and home to the nation's smartest and most hardworking students.

"My fellow students are all super excellent, so the competitive environment is quite different from that in Taiwan," he said.

Such competition is driving Zhang to work harder and learn more.

"We cannot stop learning, because the world is changing too fast-way too fast-and if we stop learning we will be surpassed by others," he said.

Zhang is a member of a Peking University startup company. He is also designing a social media app for college students to discuss whatever they want, whenever they want. By joining this project, he feels he is engaging in what he believes in the most-people-to-people communication.

He regularly updates his social media account with photos and videos for his friends in Taiwan to learn about his life at Peking University. "Many of my friends are curious about how I am getting on in Beijing," Zhang said.

"In my experience, young people across the Taiwan Straits can be good friends through mutual respect, dialogue and interaction. My wish is that with better understanding, we can build stronger bonds across the Straits."

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