China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tacoma-Fuzhou ties continue to deepen

- By LINDA DENG in Tacoma lindadeng@chinadaily­usa.com

“Many people here in Tacoma and many people in Fuzhou value our friendship very strongly,” said Greg Youtz, former chair of the TacomaFuzh­ou Sister City Committee. “It is very important for individual people, both in the US and China, to remain positive and remain interested in each other. Sister city is a way that individual people and schools and teachers can become involved in these exchanges between the two important cultures.”

Youtz is a professor of music at Pacific Lutheran University, and on his first visit to China in 1991, he fell in love with the place. Since becoming chair of the committee in 2008, Youtz has done extensive research on Fuzhou and Fujian province, helping people understand why Tacoma and Fuzhou make such good sisters.

“They have many things in common: they have some geography in common like rivers and ports; they are both on the coast of the Pacific Ocean; they both have a lot of mountains and forests, and minority groups living in their provinces,” Youtz said.

In addition to hosting more than 40 delegation­s from Fuzhou over the years, Youtz and the committee’s efforts to promote the sister-cities program included getting more Americans interested in China and taking them there, teaching students about China and helping friends in China come to the US.

He also worked on the sister-cities film festival, helping pick a film that was either made in Fuzhou or had something to do with Fuzhou.

“The point is to make people meet and exchange, and all those peopleto-people connection­s are very good for the future of US-China relations,” Youtz said.

To Youtz, the most remarkable moment during his past years with the sister-cities program was Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to the city in 2015.

Instrument­al in creating connection­s between Chinese and Tacoma schools, Youtz joined the welcoming committee at Tacoma Lincoln High School and shook hands and spoke with Xi.

“President Xi’s visit to Tacoma made the city very famous in the United States, as well as in China. It was a very memorable moment not just for me, but for our whole city,” Youtz said.

In fact this successful presidenti­al visit was the result of the strong bond and friendship between Fuzhou and Tacoma since 1994. There are many memories and stories behind it.

Twenty-five years ago, President Xi Jinping, then chairman of the standing committee of the Fuzhou Municipal People’s Congress, signed the sister-cities protocol with Harold Moss, then mayor of Tacoma, in Fuzhou. Since then, both Fuzhou and Tacoma have been promoting and fostering educationa­l exchanges and cultural exchanges, and the partnershi­p has deepened with an emphasis on trade in recent years.

Today China is the largest trade partner of the Port of Tacoma. Industrial machinery, computers and electronic­s from China are imported through Tacoma while agricultur­al products and other machinery is sent back to the Asian nation.

Lincoln High was selected as a venue in Xi’s visit in part because of the sister-cities agreement as well as an exchange agreement signed in 2008 between teachers at Lincoln High and their counterpar­ts in Fuzhou.

When Xi invited 100 students from Lincoln High to visit China in 2016, the students at their sister school in Fuzhou, the Affiliated High School of Fuzhou Education, welcomed them to classes and made friends. PThe two cities had also worked on a school partnershi­p between Stadium High School in Tacoma and the No 1 high school in Fuzhou. At the university level, the University of Puget Sound has historical ties to Hwa Nan Women’s College in Fuzhou.

The city of Tacoma is also known for one of its most famous landmarks — a Chinese park with a pavilion called Fuzhou Ting. It was the gift of Fuzhou, which is also the ancestral home of many Chinese Americans who settled in the Pacific Northwest in the 19th century.

The constructi­on, completed in 2011, is in support of the city’s Chinese reconcilia­tion efforts.

Beyond that, the two cities have created a port exchange program. With technical assistance from the Port of Tacoma, Fuzhou is building five deepwater port facilities.

“Fuzhou, the name of the Chinese city, always reminds us that across the world we have a sister, someone who is connected to us. We want to treat our friends like a family,” said Tacoma Mayor Victoria Woodards.

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