BEIJING, Aug. 8 (Xinhua) -- Overjoyed Chinese cheered
and applauded in front of their TVs at home, beneath big screens in bustling
city squares or in remote villages on Friday night, sharing the passion and
glory of the long-anticipated Olympic Games as they opened in Beijing.
The glittering opening ceremony, inside the new
National Stadium, or Bird's Nest, in the capital, was witnessed by more than
100,000 in the stands and by billions in China and around the world as it was
live broadcast.
Many people interviewed by Xinhua said they felt
honored and proud that their country was finally able to host the biggest sports
event in the world.
Thousands of local residents gathered beneath a giant
screen at Shangxiajiu Square in Guangzhou, in southern China, to watch the
opening ceremony. Many wore T-shirts saying "I Love China" and "Go, China" and
many of their faces were painted with Olympic symbols.
At one dormitory, more than 100 migrant workers in
Guangzhou gathered to watch the event on TV.
"Usually I don't watch sports too much on TV, but I
couldn't miss it this time. Our country is getting stronger every day. I think
all of us should be proud," said 22-year-old Zhou Xiaobing.
"All those audio and video technologies in the
performance made me feel like in the space age," said Su Shaoyun, who lives at a
small town Baofeng in northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region.
What impressed her most was "footprints" made by
fireworks. "They looks like deities walking by or UFO landing," she said. "The
firework performance was so wonderful. It reminded people that it is the Chinese
who invented powder."
LONG DREAM COME TRUE
An editorial in Friday's English-language newspaper
China Daily said the opening of the Beijing Olympics was a Chinese dream come
true.
"The dream lasted 100 years, unfulfilled, until
tonight," it said, adding that the 16-day Games should help the outside world
better understand the host country.
"It is impossible to miss the historic coincidence of
the Games happening on the 30th anniversary of reform and opening, which has
permanently transformed China," it said.
This opinion was echoed by Yan Hongchang, resident of
Xiaogang Village in east China's Anhui Province. A spontaneous move by 18
peasants in the village 30 years ago triggered a reform that eventually changed
China's countryside.
"After 30 years of opening-up, China not only could
host the Olympics but also host a very good one," he said. "I am so proud of our
country."
But for proud father Huang Zhengyu, the feeling was a
bit more personal.
At his home in Taizhou, Zhejiang Province, Huang
waited anxiously for the Chinese delegation's procession because his son, Huang
Haiqiang, is among the 639-strong Chinese team.
His 20-year-old son will take part in the high jump
during the Games.
Huang said his wife and he decided not to go to
Beijing because "we fear that our presence might cause stress for our son. So we
decided to just stay home and watch TV with our relatives."
"It is the greatest honor for an athlete to
participate in the Olympic Games. I am so proud of my son," Huang said.
The father said he was worried about an injury to his
son's foot, which the young man said had healed.
"I hope he can score a medal for China," Huang
said.
In Urumqi, capital of northwest China's Xinjiang
Uygur Autonomous Region, Memet Ismail's family began preparing supper an hour
earlier than usual so they could watch the ceremony uninterrupted.
"I'm very happy to see so many friends from all over
the world come to our country! The Olympics are a seed that grows friendship and
peace," he said, while watching the performance with his wife and daughter.
"As a Chinese, I feel very proud," he said.
OLYMPICS A JOY FOR ALL
Many foreigners living in China also joined in the
joy.
"This is no doubt the best opening ceremony I've ever
seen,unquestionably. The production is amazing,"said Fredrick A. Hutchison, a
69-year-old U.S. native who lives in Xining, capital of northwest China's
Qinghai Province.
Hutchison, a veteran sports journalist who had
covered the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City and the 1972 Munich Olympics, said the
performance at the opening ceremony was "absolutely" full of the Chinese
characteristics.
"I think any person watching TV anywhere in the world
will have a sense of Chinese history and the power that China now has made from
its long history. It's wonderful," he said.
Raul Estrada, a Spanish native who works as general
manager of a shoe company in Nanchang, east China's Jiangxi Province, also
considered the whole ceremony was a success.
"I like the beginning part most. It's so impressive
and touching, I can feel power and beauty harmoniously connected," said
Estrada.
"The whole performance is almost like a brief
introduction of Chinese history," he said. "The performance is a good start for
those who are not familiar with Chinese culture."
Hooleys Bar, near the North Tianhe Road, Guangzhou,
was full of applause and shouting on Friday night.
Ajoy Sahu, a designer from London, said being in a
bar with so many others made him feel more "Olympicsy".
"I have been going back and forth between London and
Guangzhou during the past few years. I feel like I am already a part of China,"
he said.
"The Beijing Olympics is a once-in-a-lifetime
experience for me. I just want to watch the opening ceremony with the Chinese
people," he said.
PRAYER FOR SUCCESSFUL OLYMPICS
A huge screen was erected in front of the landmark
Potala Palace in central Lhasa, the capital of the Tibet Autonomous Region,
attracting hundreds of viewers who cheered and applauded.
"The performance [at the opening ceremony] was just
amazing. I could really feel the atmosphere [at the stadium] even though we are
far from Beijing," said local resident Soinam Cering.
Famed Chinese mountaineer Nyima Cering was among the
crowd. He said he was deeply impressed by the cauldron lighting at the finale of
the ceremony.
During the global relay of the Olympic torch, which
ended in Beijing earlier on Friday, Cering and his team successfully took the
torch onto the world's highest peak, Mount Qomolangma (Everest), on May 8, for
the first time in history.
"I feel so honored to see the flame being lit at the
Olympic Games' main venue tonight. This is an honor belonging to all
mountaineers," he said.
At Lhasa's Jokhang Temple, one of the most sacred
temples of Tibetan Buddhism, monks held a special prayer ceremony for the newly
opened Games, according to monk Ngawang Qoizha.
"We want to wish great success for the Olympics in
our own way," Qoizha said, adding that many young monks would watch the Games
since they are sports enthusiasts.
In Qingchuan County, Sichuan Province, hard-hit by
the devastating May 12 earthquake, 70-year-old villager Qing Chang'an had spent
260 yuan (38 U.S. dollars) to buy a TV signal receiver just the previous day so
that his family could watch the ceremony.
"The Olympics is a grand event to be enjoyed by
everyone across the country. We feel reassured about rebuilding our homes when
we see the country is able to host the Games, even after the devastating quake,"
he said.
In quake-hit Xujiaping Village in Shaanxi Province, a
29-inch color TV, delivered by the provincial government, took center stage on
Friday night. The villagers were thrilled to be able to watch the ceremony, even
though 32 households out of the total of 35 had lost their homes in the
quake.
At a relocation center for quake survivors in
Dujiangyan city, Sichuan Province, the keeper of a small grocery store, surnamed
Wu, said she had sold a lot of beer and other beverages on Friday night.
"People are celebrating the opening of the Olympics
just as if it was a holiday," she said.
More than 40 high school students gathered in
Beichuan, another area hard hit by the quake, for the ceremony.
"The opening ceremony performances are wonderful, and
they show the real China," said Liu Guanghui, a senior student at Beichuan High
School who made his way back to Beichuan to join his classmates for the
show.
"I sensed something from the opening -- the real rise
of China," he said.