China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Needles set the course for fulfilling a dream

- By FANG AIQING

It was needles that brought Anaelle Regniel to China. She was intrigued by the “tiny silver needles that could sooth the pain of a patient” used in acupunctur­e.

Following her curiosity, the then high school student in France who was learning Chinese about a decade ago, was prompted to find out more about traditiona­l Chinese medicine.

She majored in both Chinese language and TCM at college. Then, considerin­g TCM to be more developed in Britain than France, where there are a few private Chinese hospitals, she did an internship at a TCM clinic in Leeds, Britain.

That was where she heard about the scholarshi­p of the first Confucius Institute for Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine, which is located in Leeds.

In 2013, she studied Chinese at the Confucius Institute in Leeds for three months, passed the third level of the Chinese proficienc­y test and won a scholarshi­p.

She then commenced a one-year internship in the acupunctur­e department of Heilongjia­ng University of Chinese Medicine in Harbin.

“I thought at the beginning that with the knowledge and techniques of acupunctur­e, cupping therapy and Chinese massage that I had learned before, it would not be so difficult. After all, acupunctur­e should be the same everywhere, right?” recalls the 27-year-old.

Before long, she found with dismay that she was wrong.

“What I learned here in China was totally different from what I had learned before. Actually, I barely knew anything about it.”

Later on, she moved to the internal medicine department, where she learned about filling prescripti­ons. Learning the properties, compositio­n and curative effects of TCM was difficult but productive.

“Those familiar Chinese characters just turned strange in names of herbs. I recited, forgot, then recited again and I’m still reciting them. Now I’m glad that I can follow my teachers’ logic when filling prescripti­ons at the outpatient clinic.”

She started her third year of graduate studies in September, as she won a scholarshi­p granted by the local government in Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng province to take the postgradua­te program at the university there.

As she shared in a speech at the 2017 Confucius Institute Open Day in Beijing in September: “I will go back to France as an inheritor and communicat­or of traditiona­l Chinese culture and help those in need with my knowledge and skills.”

Regniel was one of the speakers at the Story Collection, an experience-sharing session of the event, in which directors of the Confucius Institute branches, Chinese language teachers, volunteers and students were invited to share their stories in Beijing.

David Kolosov, a Russian student at Tsinghua University, who hosted the session, says: “Traditiona­l Chinese medicine is not only about curing diseases and conditioni­ng the body but also about Chinese philosophy.”

 ??  ??
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY FU XINCHUN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Left: French student Anaelle Regniel sings a Chinese song after sharing a story of her interest in traditiona­l Chinese medicine at a recent Confucius Institute event in Beijing. Right: Students from Zimbabwe and Bangladesh of a vocational college in...
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY FU XINCHUN / FOR CHINA DAILY Left: French student Anaelle Regniel sings a Chinese song after sharing a story of her interest in traditiona­l Chinese medicine at a recent Confucius Institute event in Beijing. Right: Students from Zimbabwe and Bangladesh of a vocational college in...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States