China Daily

Drawing hope from Wuhan’s success

- By LI YINGXUE liyingxue@chinadaily.com.cn

Max Horne

Max Horne, 19, is a first year student at Harvard College planning to concentrat­e on East Asian languages and civilizati­ons, with a focus on Mandarin and Chinese society. Horne began studying Chinese at age 12 and has engaged deeply with China since then. He took first place in the Chinese Bridge Speech Competitio­n in the United States and second in the internatio­nal version. He has been recognized by the Chinese embassy in the US for his involvemen­t in people-to-people exchanges between the two nations.

The need for close communicat­ion, collaborat­ion and coordinati­on between the world’s nations is more important than ever, said Max Horne from the United States, who considers China his second home.

“Continued creation of open, accessible informatio­n regarding the epidemic worldwide is paramount, as is keeping the public well-informed,” he told the Vision China event, while speaking online from New York.

Horne, a first-year Harvard College student studying East Asian languages and civilizati­ons, had to leave campus and has been studying online from home due to the novel coronaviru­s pneumonia pandemic.

He said while efforts of front-line medical workers in New York are showing results, better days for the city at the epicenter of the US outbreak remain far-off.

Seeing Wuhan’s lockdown end and daily life return to normal gives Horne hope. “The restoratio­n of vibrancy and vitality in China gives us optimism,” he said.

“My city is sick, but my love for it is unchanged; my second home was sick, but my affinity for it remained.”

Shortly after Wuhan was hit hard by the outbreak, he filmed several videos showing his support for those fighting on the front lines against the virus. He also hopes to show through his videos a down-to-earth picture of Harvard and the keen interest in China that many in US academia continue to have.

He said the Harvard Associatio­n of US-China Relations, of which he is a member, has also begun to create Jiayou Wuhan (Stay strong, Wuhan) videos.

“Filming short, lightheart­ed videos is dwarfed in comparison to the work of medical profession­als,” he said.

“But I wanted to show, at a time of growing tension in US-China relations, that countless members of the US public wish to deepen engagement with China through people-to-people exchanges and an eye to globalism.”

Since beginning his Chinese studies in middle school, Horne has made numerous trips to China, forming close relationsh­ips and gaining a more nuanced understand­ing of the complexiti­es of modern China.

Through a student exchange program to Suzhou, Jiangsu province, Horne developed a strong relationsh­ip with his homestay sister and remains in close contact with her. Having been through weeks of quarantine and emerging stronger, she has been a great support to Horne during his self-isolation.

Horne said when he gathered on Harvard’s campus with other students and professors for the second semester, the virus seemed like a distant threat. But the virus respects no borders. On March 10, all classes were moved online, and two weeks later the university’s president, Larry Bacow, tested positive for novel coronaviru­s. He has since recovered.

Horne thinks the challenge educators face is not how to continue high-quality education, but how to encourage students and professors to form the interperso­nal bonds that make education meaningful. He also said Harvard has emphasized the need to treat all students, including those of Chinese descent, with respect at this difficult time.

The Harvard China Forum for this year, which promotes constructi­ve dialogue between the two countries, has been canceled. As a member of the forum, Horne said it hopes to facilitate online dialogue to strengthen the US-China relationsh­ip.

Horne said it is currently exploring creative ways to bring together experts on the medical, financial, and social impacts of the epidemic.

“These are unpreceden­ted times, and innovative, unorthodox channels for promoting muchneeded, cross-cultural exchange is ever more important,” he said. “We are apart physically, but together in spirit.”

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