Global Times

Cherished friendship

▶ American Gen-Zers embrace, promote friendship with Chinese counterpar­ts

- By Lin Xiaoyi

“I believe that by making the connection­s we made with youth around our age and around the world, we are going to be able to communicat­e better as the next generation, building the world up,” Anna Colbaugh, an 11th-grade student at the Lin coln High School in Washington State, US, told the Global Times.

This 16-year-old student recently returned to the US with a firm belief in the betterment of China-US people-to-people friendship, after embarking on a trip to China as part of a cultural exchange program.

In March, Colbaugh, along with 23 other students from Lincoln High School and Steilacoom High School in Washington State, US, embarked on an 11-day visit to China. They were part of the group of Gen-Z “friendly ambassador­s” invited by China under a program announced by Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2023. The program aims to invite 50,000 young Americans to China over a period of five years for exchanges and study.

Growing up in an era of rapid media developmen­t, young people, both in China and the US, face a flood of informatio­n at their fingertips. The opportunit­y to see the world with their own eyes is therefore even more precious. After gaining a more authentic, comprehens­ive, and multidimen­sional view of China, they appreciate­d, communicat­ed, and built friendship­s with the young people of this country. They are also eager to inject the power of youth into the broad communicat­ion between the two peoples and the long-term developmen­t of the relationsh­ip between the two countries.

Desire to understand real China

“I chose to go on this trip to China because I wanted to learn more about the culture, and I knew that this trip would expand my knowledge of China,” Colbaugh explained. Colbaugh said she did not know much about China before going on the trip other than the existing stereotype­s.

“I visited a lot of places like Beijing, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen, but one of the most memorable places I went to was the Wudang Mountains. I loved learning tai chi because I have always seen people do it and I was very interested and excited to learn it.”

In the past, influenced by biased media coverage and politician­s, many Americans saw a China that was not real. Now, young Americans who are actually coming to China are hoping to change that.

“Coming out of this trip I know a lot more about China and I now know that the things that people might say could be wrong. I can now share my experience­s with people,” Colbaugh said.

Similarly, Luke Kelly, a 17-year-old student from Steilacoom High School, shared his enthusiasm for the trip to China and the valuable lessons he learned from the experience. “Once I returned to the US, the first thing I did was tell all my family and friends; just called them, texted them, met up with them, and told them how great my trip was, how amazing China was, and how much I want to go back and bring them with me,” he said. In Kelly’s opinion, China is a very progressiv­e and flourishin­g country. “It is a very welcoming, diverse place that is very economical­ly stable and friendly to foreigners.” Currently, Kelly is taking a Chinese early civilizati­on class at his school. “So I can learn more and gain more knowledge and education about the place that I have visited and love so much,” he said.

Friendship lasts forever

On March 18, at the first stop of their tour

in Beijing, Tsinghua University High School, the American high school students carefully prepared to sing a Chinese song “On the Field of Hope,” in which Colbaugh also participat­ed.

Back in September 2015, during President Xi’s visit to the US, he appreciate­d the Chinese song “On the Fields of Hope” and the English song “What a Wonderful World” jointly performed by the choir at Lincoln High School and the students of Affiliated High School of Fuzhou College of Education.

Nearly a decade on, the students who once sang “On the Field of Hope” have grown up. However, for students at Lincoln High School, this song remains familiar. As the melody of this song continues to be passed on, new chapters in the story of China-US friendship are constantly being written.

On March 25, students from both countries gathered in Shenzhen for the “Youth Friendship Forest” to mark the 45th anniversar­y of diplomatic relations between China and the US. The students planted 45 trees, symbolizin­g “happiness and tranquilit­y.”

Colbaugh noted her expectatio­n is for the young people to continue exchanges between China and the US, and create lifelong friendship­s.

“I hope we can bring back the relations and... carry on and encourage other people to go and do the same,” Kelly said. “I believe that it will only go up from here,” Kelly said.

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