China Daily

Rookie reporter finds preconcept­ions challenged on first trip for work

- By LI MENGHAN limenghan@chinadaily.com.cn

Two years ago, I went on a nineday trip to Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region as a graduate student where I met an indigenous folk band.

The leader of the band was Sun Chao, a worker at a State-owned enterprise in Shihezi, a city in the region’s north. Sun told me he had an impoverish­ed childhood, but in middle school he found a parttime job and earned enough money to buy his first guitar. As a native of Shihezi and a witness to its fighting spirit, he wanted to introduce and explain his home to other people.

During my one-hour conversati­on with Sun, he shared his experience­s and told me the story behind a signature song he wrote, which tells, in part, of the Xinjiang Production and Constructi­on Corps’ efforts to reclaim the land and the bravery and hope of its residents.

It was through this conversati­on that I learned about the residents’ hard work and perseveran­ce, which gave me a new perspectiv­e that went beyond the area’s stunning scenery, exotic fruit and the colorful people in their ethnic attire.

That trip was, more importantl­y, a lesson in the power of communicat­ion and how making a genuine connection allows for a deeper understand­ing of a person, city, culture or even a country. This understand­ing has become even clearer since I joined China Daily in late September, and started telling the true, multifacet­ed and vast story of China.

My first face-to-face interview was with two foreign exchange students from the United States. But finding two US students was a difficult task as their number had dropped after the pandemic.

I was surprised to learn from them that their relatives had visited China and had a positive attitude toward the nation, despite the China-US relationsh­ip being tense when they were here. The students also expressed their disagreeme­nt with the Western media’s depiction of China and the way things work here, saying it was totally backward.

One of the students now teaches business English at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics in Beijing.

We have stayed in touch, and he recently asked me for help on a personal matter, which is proof to me of foreigners’ real affection for China.

In October, I took my first work trip to Shanghai. I met a woman in her 80s who told me that she had lived in a 13-square-meter flat with her husband for 30 years.

Nowadays she has difficulty going up and down stairs due to heart disease. I was astonished to hear her story, and my impression of it as a modern metropolis changed.

But on that same trip I saw photovolta­ic panels in a park in Jiujiang, Jiangxi province, generating power for nearby streetligh­ts and a screen.

Once again, experience and talking with different people changed my preconcept­ions and better informed my judgment and report writing.

The first topic I chose to cover as a reporter was inspired by a trending hashtag on Weibo about a profession­al bridesmaid who booked eight jobs during the eight-day National Day holiday.

Qu Huan, an office clerk who markets herself as a bridesmaid on the weekend in Wafangdian, Liaoning province, said demand for profession­al bridesmaid­s emerged years ago, but had surged recently due to a lack of real-life socializin­g and people’s unwillingn­ess to burden others.

I’ve only been in journalism for just over four months, but the craft seems to be about the art of communicat­ion, keeping pace with society, and being willing to talk to people in person and get their stories. It’s a career I’m firmly devoted to now, and in the future.

 ?? ?? Li Menghan talks with elderly members of a Yueju Opera club in Shanghai’s Xujiahui subdistric­t.
Li Menghan talks with elderly members of a Yueju Opera club in Shanghai’s Xujiahui subdistric­t.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong