Archive for June, 2010

Rain batters large parts of China, loss of life rises to 379

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

Heavy rain has been battering China’s Yunnan, Jiangxi, Fujian and Guangdong Provinces and the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Large numbers of people have been impacted with 379 killed and many more evacuated from their flooded homes and direct economic losses of 82.4 billion yuan, as shown in this CCTV9 Special Report. I send my condolences and thoughts to everyone who has been affected.

More Terracotta Warriors rise from the earth

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

Chinese archaeologists have unearthed about 120 more figures in their latest round of excavations at the Terracotta Army site that surrounds the tomb of China’s first emperor in Shaanxi province. Some of them were painted in pink, red, white, gray or lilac. Read more at china.org.cn.

‘Forest China’ documentary series

Sunday, June 20th, 2010

Forest China

Forest China is a major production that has taken China Central Television (CCTV) four years to complete. It covers most of China’s major forests and showcases the latest efforts in protecting the country’s ecology. It is in fact the only visual document of modern China’s flora and fauna.

China’s forests include vast forests in the Northeast of China, Qinling Mountains, the Taklamakan Desert, the primitive forest of southeastern Tibet, Shennongjia Mountains in Hubei Province, the Hengduan Mountains, the tropical rain forest in Hainan and the mangroves of the South China Sea.

You can watch Forest China online on the CCTV9 website.

Dragon Boat Festival now has ‘World Heritage’ status

Sunday, June 20th, 2010

Qu Yuan was a patriotic poet who lived in 300 BC. He jumped into the Miluo River in northeast Hunan province to prove his loyalty to his home country, and was drowned. The Dragon Boat Festival, which is held to commemorate Qu Yuan on lunar May 5 every year (this year June 16 in the western calendar), is an important traditional holiday in China. But this year, the Dragon Boat Festival held even more significance for all Chinese.

In September 2009, the United Nations Education Scientific and Cultural Organization honored the Dragon Boat Festival as a World Intangible Heritage. The Dragon Boat Festival, which includes racing boats, eating zongzi dumplings and observing other folk customs, is the first festival in the history of China to be named a World Intangible Heritage.

Read more in this China Daily article.