Special Report:
2008 Olympic
Games
by Xinhua Writer Cheng Yunjie
BEIJING, Aug. 8 (Xinhua) -- Half an hour's drive to
the southwest from the 2008 Olympics' venue, the Bird's Nest, the Capital Museum
is quietly stealing some of the glamour from the quadrennial games.
The Ancient Greek Olympics has unveiled its curtain
there, accompanied by four other exhibits featuring ancient Chinese
civilization.
One week after they were staged in the run-up to the
summer Olympics that opens on Friday, these exhibits are promoting the blend of
Western and Eastern civilizations.
Visitors almost tripled from the usual 5,000 a day to
more than 13,000 on Thursday, forcing the museum management to consider
providing evening services to reduce daytime crowds. That could make it the
first museum in China to open in the evening.
Unlike stadiums teeming with cheering spectators, the
ancient Olympic Games exhibit, enlivened by 166 Greek relics, received only
whispered but frequent "wows". The sculptures, pottery and coins, mostly being
shown for the first time overseas here, conjured up not only sports but also the
long-lost competitions in drama, poems and music.
In the exhibition halls upstairs, there's a low
murmur of admiring gasps and camera clicks, attesting to the awesomeness of the
more than 1,800 top-class art treasures on loan from more than70 domestic
museums, including China's oldest bone flute dating back 8,000 years.
Also on display: a gold-leaf sunbird 3,000 years old,
jade burial suits for royal families of the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-24 AD)
and painted scrolls featuring 87 immortals of the Tang Dynasty (618-907 AD).
"This is indeed a chance that comes once in a
lifetime, as you might visit every Chinese and Greek museum, only to see just a
part of them. Some exhibits, from China in particular, were not even open before
to the general public," said curator Guo Xiaoling.
That explains the endurance of visitors standing in a
line that winds for 300 meters, from the basement to the entrance of the
exhibition "Chinese Memory" on the first floor, and the regrets of foreigners on
package tours who could only stop for a while before rushing to the next site.
"We are facing the increasing pressure of receiving
large numbers of visitors. As the exhibitions will be open till October, we
encourage Beijing residents to visit later," said Guo.
Amid the foreigners who make up approximately 10
percent of the daily visitors, Barbara Rendall was lucky to get in. She lives in
Beijing, where she works as an English literature professor at Beijing
University.
She roamed around the museum, visiting one after
another of the lesser exhibits and even the book stores, happily relishing her
new understanding of China.
"It's wonderful and exciting to move from one culture
into another because it helps you get rid of fixed ideas that are wrong," she
said.
When she first came to China to teach at Xiamen
University in 1984, Rendall was bothered by her inability to find the right food
and coffee. Her then 7-year-old daughter felt bad when older women came up and
touched her blond hair.
"The longer I have been here, the less have I seen
differences in culture, because we feel more at home," she said about having
returned in 2004.
Noticing many Chinese impressed by the Greek pottery
featuring a variety of athletes, Rendall said with a smile: "Who knows? Maybe
after the Olympics, the Chinese would also paint athletes on their pots, bowls
and plates!"
DECIPHERING THE REAL CHINA
Though it's hard to gauge what and how much impact
the Greek relics would have on the Chinese, curator Guo said the museum did try
to bring Chinese and foreign audiences some "genuine" cultural flavor from the
home of the ancient Olympics.
Greek Ambassador to China Michael Cambanis valued the
timing of the exhibitions at the opening ceremony, saying that the 2008 Olympics
mean a lot to Greek people because the event symbolizes the Olympic torch being
delivered from the cradle of Western civilization to that of the East.
Of course, the torch relay from Athens to Beijing was
anything but easy. The trip, envisioned as a good chance for China, an Olympic
host for the first time, to reach out to the outside world turned controversial
amid protests, such as those by "pro-Tibet independence" activists.
"It's no accident that the torch relay has hit so
many snags en route because many foreigners know little about China. Often
times, the Chinese are stereotyped and sometimes misunderstood," said Guo.
For instance, quite a number of foreigners think
China has a fondness for the grandiose. Some think Chinese are too concerned
about 'face' and others wonder why the Chinese people have shown so much
patriotism when it comes to the Olympics.
The key to deciphering these riddles lies in Chinese
culture, Guo said.
"If you can't help gasping with admiration at the
works on show, which represent the pinnacle of world agricultural civilization,
you will sense the long and deeply-rooted pride of Chinese nationality," he
said.
This pride goes back for millennia and was eroded
only in modern times amid foreign invasion and China's closing itself off from
the world.
As the country, comprising one-fifth of the world
population, finally makes its way to economic prosperity, it's natural for it to
pursue a rejuvenation of national pride and culture, Guo said.
Tang Zhaoliang, the liaison officer with the office of the
Beijing 2008 Environmental Building Headquarters, agreed that cultural
perspectives would straighten out many misunderstandings.