China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Arctic Circle warms to Chinese culture with language lessons

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HELSINKI, Finland — At the beginning of every Chinese class, Meri Rokkonen and her Finnish classmates would rise to greet the teacher, an oriental courtesy unfamiliar to a Western classroom.

“It is beautiful and elegant,” said Meri, a Lapland University student in her 20s. She said the atmosphere would last until the end of the class and gave her an overwhelmi­ng sense of joy.

The teacher, Ma Yujing, wanted her students to perform the ritual to understand the Chinese tradition of honoring the teacher and respecting the truth.

Ma, from China’s Liaoning Normal University, arrived in Finnish Lapland, which lies right on the Arctic Circle, three months ago, when the patch of land was locked in polar night. Yet, teaching three courses, two onMandarin and another on Chinese culture, she was too busy to feel homesick.

Unlike universiti­es in other countries, Lapland University grants Ma the freedom to design her own courses.

“I would tell my students stories and origins of every Chinese character,” Ma said. “They reflect the ancient wisdom of the Chinese people.”

Lapland, a “mystical and magic” region with the Aurora Meri Rokkonen, Borealis and arctic wildness, has been experienci­ng a Chinese craze due to the arrival of an increasing number of Chinese tourists, said Tran Que Nhu, a Chinesebor­n Vietnamese and another student ofMa.

According to statistics from Lapland’s tourist bureau, Chinese is the most spoken language among tourists arriving in Rovaniemi, the capital of Lapland and also the hometown of Santa Claus.

Tourist boom

“I don’t know since when almost every restaurant and shop in Lapland has signs written in Chinese,” said Tran.

As a student majoring in tourism, she sawgreat career opportunit­ies in the boom of Chinese tourists and signed up forMa’s both courses.

Unlike Tran, Meri attended the course because she was attracted by the beauty of Chinese calligraph­y and was curious about the ancient civilizati­on. “The more I learn Chinese, the more I amfascinat­ed by its culture.”

Luckily forChina fans such as Meri, more and more Chinese music and movies have found an audience in Finland.

“My favorite Chinese character is Hua Mulan,” Meri said, referring to a legendary woman warrior from the Southern and Northern Dynasties in Chinese history.

Cultural and people-topeople exchanges have always been a bright spot in bilateral cooperatio­n since China and Finland establishe­d diplomatic relations in 1950.

The flourishin­g interactio­n between the Chinese and Finnish people is expected to receive a boost as Chinese President Xi Jinping pays a state visit to the Nordic country from Tuesday to Thursday. Finnish media hail it as the year’s most significan­t visit.

“On streets or in the gym, many strangers approached me to ask questions about Chinese language and culture,” said Ma. “It is rare for the Finnish people, who are known to be very reserved.”

The more I learn Chinese, the more I am fascinated by its culture.” a Lapland University student in her 20s

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