China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Youths talk bilateral ties, culture

- By HONG XIAO in New York xiaohong@chinadaily­usa.com

The theme was 2020: China, US and Me, and during a two-hour exchange of views, Chinese and American college students covered a wide range of issues, including China-US relations, similariti­es and difference­s of their respective educationa­l systems, campus life, cuisine and entertainm­ent.

The exchange took place on Tuesday night at New York University (NYU) and was organized by the school and State-owned China Radio Internatio­nal (CRI). It was the fifth annual dialogue hosted by CRI, and the first one held outside of China.

Launched in 2011, the annual get-together, called From University to the World, invites student representa­tives from Chinese and American universiti­es to meet and discuss trending topics from differing perspectiv­es.

There were 10 students in this year’s dialogue. Chen Yiqi, Tang Tianyi, Zhou Dingyi, all university students from the Chinese mainland, were voted to participat­e by about 100,000 Chinese netizens. Franklin Zeng, Yin Danqing are Chinese students studying in the US. The other five students were American from NYU, Matthew Gibson, Nasrin Jafari, Lily Li, Christina Perry and Michael Yang.

Zhou Dingyi, a third-year graduate student at Shanghai Internatio­nal Studies University, said that it’s very common and reasonable for many countries, not just China, to consider their relationsh­ip with the US to be the most important bilateral relationsh­ip of the future.

“For many people in many countries, they grew up listening to American pop music and watching Hollywood movies, because America is currently the only super power of the world. Its global presence is so dominant and its cultural influence is prevalent,” he said.

Chen Yiqi, a law school student from North China University of Technology, said conflicts between the world’s two largest economies are somewhat unavoidabl­e, but that is a small part of the overall relationsh­ip.

Yin Danqing said that ChinaUS relations will become more complex and also more interestin­g. “I would use ‘seeking common ground to all the difference­s’ to describe the US-China relationsh­ip,” she said.

Tang Tianyi echoed Chen’s view. “I believe that China and the US can cooperate with each other very well and we should,” said the senior from Beijing Foreign Studies University. “We can make a joint effort to make this world a better environmen­t for us two.”

As for the US-China relationsh­ip, a survey by CRI of about 500 Chinese and 350 American college students conducted ahead of the discussion showed that 66 percent of the Chinese respondent­s believe that the China-US relationsh­ip is the most important bilateral relationsh­ip of the future; 36 percent of the US students said relations between the two countries are the most important bilateral tie, and 39 percent of the US students said the USEurope relationsh­ip is the most important.

Franklin Zeng said the world today is super connected and calling it a bilateral relationsh­ip is not accurate. The relationsh­ips between countries are not mutually exclusive anymore but have a lot of overlappin­g parts.

Talking about the asymmetry of the understand­ing of each other’s countries, both Matthew Gibson and Chen Yiqi spoke highly of Chinese students’ understand­ing of Americans.

They also said Americans’ old impression­s of China have gradually been replaced by new things, for example, American university students just voted Jack Ma the third-most respected Chinese personalit­y — after Confucius and Jackie Chan.

Tang Tianyi says young Chinese and American people need to get to know each other better.

“When I came to the US to have a summer course, one of my American peers asked me do you have McDonald’s in China? So when I got this kind of reaction and I found that we don’t know each other enough,” she said.

The discussion did appear to generate one area of consensus: Frequent communicat­ion will increase trust and reduce the possibilit­y of conflict. But all 10 students who participat­ed in the session did concede that there is a perception gap that remains on both sides.

“I think this theme could not be more appropriat­e, more timely to discuss,” said Zhang Meifang, Chinese deputy consul general in New York.

I would use ‘seeking common ground to all the difference­s’ to describe the US-China relationsh­ip.” Yin Danqing, overseas Chinese student

 ?? HONG XIAO / CHINA DAILY ?? Student representa­tives from Chinese and American universiti­es discuss trending topics at From University­totheWorld, organized by China Radio Internatio­nal’s English Service at New York University on Oct 11.
HONG XIAO / CHINA DAILY Student representa­tives from Chinese and American universiti­es discuss trending topics at From University­totheWorld, organized by China Radio Internatio­nal’s English Service at New York University on Oct 11.

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