Sunday, November 4, 2012

Hui Jia


" Hui Jia "   回家    
China, year two: returning "home"

We've been in China for one year now, and beginning our second year at the Western Academy of Beijing.  It was wonderful to arrive back after our summer holidays and feel settled in our new life. We have a little Chinese under our belts, we know how to get around Beijing, and, best of all, the kids returned to good groups of friends, ready to start the new school year.  Lars is in fifth grade, actively involved in his sport teams: soccer and baseball. Anne-Katrine is an eighth grader; she seems to have transformed into a teenager overnight!
 

No Wang-Wang!

In September, I attended an IB conference on English Literature Manila.  As I was going through Customs in the airport, I happened upon this sign. As I didn't know what Wang-Wang meant, I was a bit worried: what if I was doing it?  Filipinos speak English, but it is combined with words from Tagalog, as well as remnants from Spanish, making some phrases totally incomprehensible to the English speaker.  After some research, we discovered that Wang-Wang actually means avoiding discourtesies, such as cutting in line in front of other people!
The conference was hosted by the International School of Manila. I had a good workshop, and an added bonus of the trip was discovering that my friend and former counselor from Lincoln School in Buenos Aires, Lisa Ball, is now working at ISM. We had a great time catching up.


Chinese National Day and Autumn Festival

Oct 1 marks the National Day of China.  The holiday is also called Golden Week. All of the factories shut down in order to give the workers a vacation and the chance to return to home provinces.  As a result, two things occur: the pollution clears immediately, leaving blue skies and glorious sunny days, and the roads become jammed with millions of people traveling home.

We enjoyed the holiday at home, and spent some time exploring Beijing.  We rambled through the city hutongs near the Drum tower, and took a pedicab ride to Hohai.  Anne-Katrine negotiated a good deal with the driver.

Lars was invited to go with his friend Harold, to the mountains. Harold is half Swedish and half Chinese. His Chinese mother, Naersu, owns a retreat in the mountains, in a small village just one hour outside of Beijing.  She has converted traditional courtyard style homes to make guesthouses. Check out the website at www.shanliretreats.com 
Lars spent four days on his own with Harald's family, and then Joergen, AK, and I joined him for a night. Just behind the village, we hiked up the mountain, through terraced gardens made by hillside farmers: persimmons, crabapples, apple trees, pumpkins. At the top of the hill was a portion of the Great Wall, and some crumbling ancient watch-towers.  The boys scrambled up to the top to have an amazing view of the valley.

The Summer Palace
Our first trip to the Summer Palace, on the other side of the city.  Massive and impressive. The emperor and his family would come here to escape the summer heat.  This is still a favorite spot for locals to come visit.



Writer In Residence Camp


WAB has a property in the mountains that we use for outdoor education. Miao Liang Environmental Center is a sustainable, solar powered camp where we bring kids for a wide variety of activities: collecting samples and data for the Environmental Systems class, historical investigations and interviews of local villagers about the history of the area (the camp is built on the site of a community that was destroyed during the Japanese invasion of Beijing (Sino-Japanese war 1937-1940), and outdoor experiences through our WAB Wild department: learning rock climbing, repelling, and GPS navigation.

We've been looking for ways to use this property in other creative ways. In October, we decided to launch a new program at WAB: the Writer-in-Residence Camp.  I took a group of 15 tenth graders up to Miao Liang (a three hour drive from Beijing) for a creative writing camp. The aim is to bring along a professional author to lead the students in writing activities.  For our first experience we found Henry Clarke, a Shakespearean actor and author from the US who is currently working in Beijing with Chinese Television.  Over the course of two days, the students crafted, edited, revised, and read their own 2 minute plays.  It was a wonderful way for students to escape the traditional classroom and immerse themselves in the writing process.  You can see my article for WAB's electronic magazine, Lianxi at this link:

We had a beautiful, sunny late summer and autumn in Beijing, with only a few high pollution days. It is now turning cold, and we are getting ready for winter. 
The kids are hoping for some 雪 (Xuě)