China Daily Global Weekly

Building cross-cultural bonds

US high school that encourages student trips to China gets a personal letter from Xi

- By LINDA DENG in Seattle lindadeng@chinadaily­usa.com

Students and teachers at a high school in Tacoma, Washington, in the United States, have expressed delight after receiving a very special message from China.

It was the second time — the first was in 2016 — that President Xi Jinping had written them a letter.

About four weeks ago, Patrick Erwin, principal of Lincoln High School, sent a letter to Xi. He wrote about the exchanges between his school and China over the years and how the educationa­l partnershi­p is important to his students.

“President Xi is a strong believer in educationa­l exchanges. He had written to my students before. But I never had an expectatio­n for this response,” said Erwin.

Erwin got a message on March 8 from Xi via the Chinese ConsulateG­eneral in San Francisco. Xi said he had received the letter and encouraged students at the school to build a bridge for people-to-people exchanges between China and the US.

Xi visited Lincoln High School in 2015, at the start of a state visit to the US. He brought gifts, including a ping-pong table and books about China, and later sent a personal invitation for the students to visit China.

In 2016, nearly 100 of them took up the offer. Xi and first lady Peng Liyuan sent them a letter afterward inviting them to return.

Since then, the school has arranged annual visits to China. Students have visited cities including Beijing and Shanghai; Chengdu and Dujiangyan in Sichuan province; and Fuzhou in Fujian province.

The last time Lincoln High students got a chance to visit China was in July 2019, when they participat­ed in the Internatio­nal Youth Interactiv­e Friendship Camp in Shanghai, an opportunit­y for foreign students to learn about traditiona­l Chinese culture through lessons and outdoor activities with local volunteers.

They still regularly communicat­e on WeChat with friends they met from Shanghai, New Zealand, Australia and elsewhere.

Around three years ago, the school took five students to visit China, and one of them did not know what to expect, Erwin said. “He was excited to go, but he had never traveled and had never been on a plane. Not long ago, when I saw this student, who is now in college, he gave me a hug and said he thinks about the trip to China every day,” Erwin said.

“It is a life-changing experience, both in terms of the travel itself, and the exposure to the culture, the history

and the Chinese people,” Erwin said. “My students all want to go back to China and study in China.”

Due to the political situation between the two countries and the coronaviru­s pandemic, the trips to China last year were canceled, but Erwin said that as soon as travel is viable, there will be another student trip to China.

“We still don’t have specific plans in terms of where we would go,” Erwin said, but added that “Chengdu with

the panda base” is always on the priority list.

The city of Tacoma and the Washington State Panda Foundation gathered about 7,000 surgical face masks and sent them to Fuzhou, Fujian, early last year.

During the summer, when a shortage of personal protective equipment was endangerin­g the safety of people in Tacoma, Fuzhou donated more than 70,000 N95 masks to the city.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Lynchelle Siu (left), Christa Lackey (second right) and Kyla Eastman (right) from Lincoln High School in Tacoma, Washington, the United States, pose with students from Bolivia at the US booth of the Shanghai Internatio­nal Youth Interactiv­e Friendship Camp in Shanghai in 2019.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Lynchelle Siu (left), Christa Lackey (second right) and Kyla Eastman (right) from Lincoln High School in Tacoma, Washington, the United States, pose with students from Bolivia at the US booth of the Shanghai Internatio­nal Youth Interactiv­e Friendship Camp in Shanghai in 2019.

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