Global Times

Achieving harmony

▶ Roberto Vargas Lee, a dedicated keeper of Chinese culture in Cuba

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Every morning, Roberto Vargas Lee walks through the streets of Havana’s Chinatown to the Cuban School of Wushu and Qigong which he founded over 20 years ago.

The 53-year-old master of wushu (Chinese martial arts) never imagined that he would get this far since he founded the school with an aim to develop Chinese martial arts and qigong, a traditiona­l Chinese exercise that aims at exploiting the human body’s inner energy to achieve both physical and mental harmony.

When he was a child, his mother used to take him to her Cantonese Opera performanc­es at the Chung Wah Home, an organizati­on made up of Chinese immigrants and their descendant­s.

“She learned [Cantonese Opera] from my grandfathe­r, who was a Chinese immigrant from Zhongshan, in the province of Guangdong,” Vargas Lee told the Xinhua News Agency at the end of a training session.

The master, as his students respectful­ly call him, has long been particular­ly attracted by Chinese culture.

He has become the country’s leading promoter of wushu which currently has over 6,000 practition­ers in Cuba.

As a fan of Bruce Lee’s films during his youth, Vargas Lee became the first Cuban to be sent to study wushu at the Beijing Institute of Physical Education (now the Beijing Sport University) in 1994.

“I really fell in love with Chinese culture while I was studying in Beijing, and it went well beyond sports. I also had the good fortune to meet my wife there, who is from Shanghai,” he said. The couple married in Havana in 1996.

Upon his return to Cuba, he was determined to share what he had learned, especially how the activity can be a competitiv­e sport and also be used to stay in good health.

His students have won multiple internatio­nal competitio­ns since 2001.

Vargas Lee, who speaks perfect Chinese, cherishes many memories from his career, such as meeting Fidel and Raul Castro, as well as current Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel.

The wushu master splits his daily activities in two: teaching wushu and also managing the Tientan Restaurant, credited with having the best Chinese food in Havana.

The school is housed in an old cinema, and it has become a center for the disseminat­ion of Chinese culture in Havana.

On Tuesdays and Thursdays, instructor­s of all ages meet with Vargas Lee to keep up with the latest techniques and then go to teach classes across Havana and surroundin­g areas.

Every day, the class begins with the Cuban and Chinese national anthems, followed by the school anthem which speaks about the virtues of practicing

wushu and having

Chinese heritage in Cuban culture.

“I always thank my students for embracing Chinese culture,” Vargas Lee said.

Vargas Lee is at Level Six in the duan system in wushu and also has a fifth degree black belt in Jyoshinmon Karate-Do, among others.

But all these sport titles have not changed his humbleness.

Vargas Lee’s older disciples, such as Domingo Antonio de la Pena, 75, have only words of praise for him.

“The most remarkable thing about him is his teaching method. He knows how to make people feel good and give them confidence,” said Pena, a practition­er of wushu for 12 years.

Margaret Espinosa, a young teacher, highlighte­d the way in which Vargas Lee helps people stay in harmony with themselves and with nature, using Chinese culture as a guide.

“We have learned from him to have discipline based on harmony, on peace, on relating more to nature, and moving our vital qi,” Espinosa said.

In Friday’s class, Vargas Lee praised Eusebia Garcia, a former elementary school teacher and a practition­er, who has just turned 79.

The students applauded their classmate, and for a moment the class turned into a party where the cultures of Cuba and China mixed under the watchful eye of Vargas Lee, the Cuban keeper of Chinese heritage.

Colombian superstar Shakira says temporaril­y losing her voice two years ago was “the darkest moment” of her life, and which affected her “deeply.” In November 2017 the three-time Grammy winner was forced to postpone her hip-shaking El Dorado World Tour for seven months after suffering a hemorrhage on her right vocal cord.

“It affected me deeply, there is a before and after,” the 42-year-old said during an interview with AFP late on Monday in Barcelona, where she lives with Spanish soccer player Gerard Pique and their two young sons.

“You take many things for granted when you have them... In the case of my voice, it is something that is so inherent in my nature, it is my identity,” she added in the interview at a Barcelona hotel.

“I always thought that one day I would lose many things, one day you lose your youth, you lose your beauty, you even lose friends, there are people who come and go... but I never thought my voice was something that could disappear.

“When that doubt arose, when I did not know if I could sing again, it was the darkest moment of my life,” she added.

In what she describes as “a miracle,” Shakira recovered her voice naturally, without needing to undergo surgery as recommende­d by doctors and was finally able to carry out her tour in 2018.

A documentar­y about the tour, which encompasse­d over two decades of hits and was based on two shows she gave in Los Angeles, will open in around 60 countries from November 13.

“It is one of the most important tours of my life for what it means, for the different obstacles that I had to overcome,” Shakira said.

With her mix of Latin and Arabic rhythms and rock influence, Shakira is one of the biggest stars from Latin America, scoring major global hits with songs such as “Hips don’t Lie” and “Whenever, Whenever.”

She was picked to perform alongside pop star Jennifer Lopez at the halftime show of the Super Bowl at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami on February 2, 2020 – which happens to be Shakira’s birthday.

“We have a lot of ideas, it is hard to do them all in the short amount of time which we have. But we will try to take advantage of it as much as possible, especially the opportunit­y to represent

Latinos,”

Shakira said.

The National Football League’s Super Bowl championsh­ip final is the biggest annual event on US television.

The halftime show typically features some of the world’s bestknown performers.

Last year’s show drew 98.2 million viewers.

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 ?? Photo: IC ?? People practice martial arts in a Chinatown park in Havana, Cuba, on December 17, 2016.
Photo: IC People practice martial arts in a Chinatown park in Havana, Cuba, on December 17, 2016.
 ?? Photo: IC ?? Shakira
Photo: IC Shakira

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