Global Times

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A legac y still valua ble today

- Page Editor: huyuwei@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Connie Sweeris, the 23- year- old US table tennis champion at the time, did not realize how her 1971 trip to China would uld help break the ice between the two countries. A train took Sweeris and her 14 teammates from Hong Kong to Guangzhou to embark on their weeklong tour around China, visiting landmarks and meeting with then Chinese premier, Zhou Enlai.

Recalling her historical trip to Beijing and Shanghai, Connie Sweeris was first impressed with the warm reception from the Chinese, the black k and blue dressing style and many statues of Chairman Mao.

“Premier Zhou asked Graham Steenhoven, then president of the United States Table Tennis Associatio­n ( USTTA], if he had any criticism about the trip so far and he said yes.

The whole audience fell silent, and we thought, no, what is he going to say? He said: ‘ you feed us too much’ and then the whole audience laughed because we were given food from every ry city that we went to in every place that we visited, a lot of times. They would have 8 to 10 course banquet meals for us to eat,” Connie Sweeris told the Global Times.

Before 1971, Connie was the US women’s singles national champion as well as women’s doubles and mixed doubles champion. But before Nagoya, she hadn’t seen or played with any Chinese table tennis player.

Upon her departure, Connie was full of apprehensi­on about her destinatio­n and had no clue what a Communist country really meant but her concerns were soon cleared up by China’s hospitalit­y upon arrival.

Rememberin­g the swift 8- day trip in China, Connie concluded that it is “a legacy to her whole career and her family.”

Connie did not have a clue about the importance of this milestone trip for the diplomatic relations until she got home and saw worldwide headlines announcing that Chinese friendly greetings brought them closer to the US and it was a way of breaking the ice between the two countries.

The friendline­ss of Chinese deeply impressed Connie. “They seem to be very curious about us and very friendly. A lot of times, we would just use motions or gestures to communicat­e with each other,” said Connie, stressing that they wished they had more interprete­rs there to learn more about China and its culture.

Playing with Chinese table tennis players who were mostly the top athletes in the world made Connie excited. The friendly match in Beijing, with an audience of 18,000, was impressive. It was an unpreceden­ted experience for Connie because they “would have been lucky enough in the US to have 200 or 300 people watching a tournament or an exhibition of table tennis.”

The trip to China made Connie a star. She did numerous interviews for media and her phone kept ringing because everybody

wanted to learn about her experience in China.

The media spotlight was felt even by Dell Sweeris, Connie’s husband, who was also a top American table tennis player.

“When Connie got back to the US, she was really famous after she got to the airport. Though it was pretty late at night, there were still two or three hundreds of people who had gathered there to see Connie coming back,” Dell told the Global Times.

“The interestin­g thing is that I was a top American player though I did not go to Japan or China. But you are not necessaril­y famous in the US for being a table tennis player like in China and people would ask Connie if she wanted to come to speak to their organizati­on and a lot of them did not know that I even play table tennis. It was kind of interestin­g concept at that time,” said Dell.

Dell was part of the US team that hosted the Chinese delegation back in the US in 1972 and had a chance to play with some of the world champions, like Zhuang Zedong and Zheng Minzhi. He can still recall the names very clearly nowadays.

On a video call commemorat­ing the 50th anniversar­y of their icebreakin­g exchange, the US couple and Zheng, a member of the female

Chinese table tab tennis delegation del to the

US in April 1972, excitedly reminisced rem about the days they spent together tog in both countries during the th remarkable trips, from President Nixon’s Ni and Premier Zhou Enlai’s greetings, gr to a series of friendly matches, and visits to Disneyland, th the Forbidden City, sausage and P Peking duck.

“Do you still remember the song... about ‘ the deer and the antelope?’” When Dell mentioned the f folk song, Home on the Range, that t the Chinese delegation learned to sing during its US trip, Zheng immediatel­y hummed together with the couple. The familiar melody brought th them back to the beautiful memories and laughter from half a century ago. They talked about their current life, hobbies and grandchild­ren. Zheng invited the couple to visit China again after the COVID- 19 pandemic. “We’re hoping that our friendship can continue with another visit,” the couple replied.

Connie and Dell highly valued the need to commemorat­e this historic milestone on how diplomatic relationsh­ip was normalized between the US and China by overcoming challenges, which can educate the current and future generation­s about what initiated a connection amid id cal difference­s.

“People- to- people excha certainly break down thos and bring understand­ing cooperatio­n and connect u again to get us back on the road and have some better diplomatic ties,” Connie told the Global Times. m o sd wi e th g in iat

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Zhe Zheng received in April 19 she visited the US for the firs the C Chinese table tennis delega W With a prolonged lack of contac peop peoples were quite curious about eac in th the early 1970s. Zheng recalled she ex excited and nervous” about her visit to

“I learned from my parents that Am very rich, strong and modern. I had no its people would think of us. Would the tile to us Chinese? Would they look dow us?” she told the Global Times. Zheng was soon relieved after arrivi US, when she and her Chinese teamm surrounded by smiles and greetings at Zheng said she was impressed by the s

and a hospitalit­y that at US table tennis players and ordinary Americans showed to them em during the trip.

She recalled that when the Chinese players had an exhibition game at a car factory in the US, the workers gave them a warm welcome. “They gave us a hug, shook hands with us and said ‘ welcome, welcome!” Zheng told the Global Times. “We didn’t speak each other’s languages, but I could feel their friendline­ss through their facial expression­s and body language.”

The ping- pong diplomacy creatively paved a way for the normalizat­ion of the China- US relations in those hard years filled with ideologica­l confrontat­ions. Witnessing and experienci­ng the milestone event, Zheng said she appreciate­s the wisdom and foresight of leaders of the two countries who broke the ice in China- US relations in a smart, flexible way.

“The people- to- people exchanges have significan­ce different from official government contacts; we exchanged in the name of friends,” Zheng said. said “As Premier

Zhou Enlai always told us, ‘ friendship first, competitio­n second.’”

She was impressed by what Nixon said when meeting the Chinese table tennis players at the White House Rose Garden in 1972. “He told us: ‘ there is a winner and loser in a competitio­n but the Chinese and American athletes, you opened the door to friendship for people of the two countries, so you are the biggest winners.’”

People use the phrase “the little ball moves the big ball” to describe the ping- pong diplomacy. The table tennis teams of the two countries in those years not only fought to be champions but also shouldered the responsibi­lity of promoting China- US relations.

Once in an interview in 1997, Zheng told Th The New York Times reporter that the friendly matches ma she played with American players in the early 1970s were “unlike any other games” she’d she ever played. “I knew I was not only there to p play, but more important, to achieve what cannot can be achieved through proper diplomatic channels,” cha she said.

Even E today, non- government­al exchanges in various vari areas including sports, art and technology can still play an important role in smoothing the ties between the world’s two largest economies, mie Zheng noted.

“There T may be some fluctuatio­ns in ChinaUS relations, r but I believe that people- to- people exchanges exch will continue,” she told the Global G Times.

“As A President Xi Jinping said in 2017, 20 there are ‘ a thousand reasons to make China- US relations work and no reason to break it.’”

Zhang Yutong contribute­d to the story

 ?? Photo: Chen Xia/ GT ?? photo during a a historical reunion
Zheng Minzhi shows Sweeris. Sweeris and Dell video call with Connie
Photo: Chen Xia/ GT photo during a a historical reunion Zheng Minzhi shows Sweeris. Sweeris and Dell video call with Connie
 ?? Photo: Courtesy of Zheng ?? Photos of Zheng Minzhi ( far right) and Connie Sweeris
( first left in the second pic) who met at two different anniversar­ies of ping- pong diplomacy
Photo: Courtesy of Zheng Photos of Zheng Minzhi ( far right) and Connie Sweeris ( first left in the second pic) who met at two different anniversar­ies of ping- pong diplomacy

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