China Daily Global Weekly

China envoy builds on Iowa legacy

Following in Xi’s footsteps on visit to US state, ambassador urges joint efforts for ties

- By XU YIFAN in Washington yifanxu@chinadaily­usa.com

The Chinese ambassador to the United States said the city of Muscatine in Iowa, along with the state’s long history of friendship and cooperatio­n with China, is to be cherished.

Ambassador Qin Gang and his team stopped by the Sino-American Friendship House in the city on April 20. The house originally belonged to Tom and Eleanor Dvorchak, and President Xi Jinping stayed there during his visit to Iowa in 1985, when he was Party secretary of Zhengding county, Hebei province.

The house later became the first US-China friendship-themed memorial in the US.

Qin was warmly welcomed by Luca

Berrone, who has known President Xi for many years, and Dan Stein, chairman of the Muscatine Commission on Cooperatio­n with China. Berrone led Qin on a tour of the house, where the news images and documentar­ies of Xi’s two visits played on the large screen.

The envoy wrote in the visitors’ book: “37 years ago, President Xi planted in Iowa the seed of friendship between Chinese and Americans. Today, that seed has taken root, sprouted, blossomed, and born fruits. Let’s work together to plant more seeds of friendship between the two nations.”

After visiting the house, the envoy met with Xi’s old friends Sarah Lande, Joni Axel, Dan Stein, Tony Joseph and Amy Barker at the Merrill Hotel in Muscatine.

Qin conveyed the cordial greetings and good wishes of Xi and his wife, Professor Peng Liyuan, to their old friends in Iowa.

The ambassador noted that the more challengin­g the Sino-US relationsh­ip is, the more both sides must cultivate trust. He said that with a joint effort, a move to deepen and strengthen understand­ing, friendship and cooperatio­n would be “unstoppabl­e”.

Qin also said that Iowa has closely engaged with China, especially with Hebei province. He expressed the hope of promoting educationa­l and people-to-people exchanges between the two countries, especially among the younger generation.

Lande, Berrone and other “old friends” recalled the story of their acquaintan­ce with Xi and expressed how they cherish the sincere friendship with him, the first lady and the Chinese people.

They hope that if Sino-US ties remain stable, more Chinese people will visit Iowa for tourism and more Chinese companies will invest after the pandemic.

Lande presented her memoir Old Friends: The Story of Xi Jinping and Iowa, published in 2017, and a letter to Xi.

Qin expressed his gratitude to Lande, saying that people should keep renewing a new chapter of friendship between the peoples to make this book of friendship “thicker and thicker”.

Qin and the “old friends” then met with reporters. Friendship is the best vaccine against the current “political virus”, Qin said during a news conference.

“This is a trip paying tribute to friendship. As ambassador, one of my jobs is to protect this friendship and to pass the torch from generation to generation,” he said. “Let’s work together to spread more friendship­s from Muscatine to other places because only through friendship can we get to know each other and see how the other side really is.”

Stein, chairman of the Muscatine-China Initiative­s Committee, announced that Pin Ni, chairman of the Chicago-based Wanxiang America Corp, had pledged a combined $500,000 in monetary and in-kind donations to the Sarah and Roger Lande Scholars Program.

The grant will help fund two trips to Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, for students from Muscatine High School and Muscatine Community College over two years.

 ?? CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? Chinese Ambassador Qin Gang greets people at a ranch in the town of Anamosa on April 20 during an Iowa trip.
CHINA NEWS SERVICE Chinese Ambassador Qin Gang greets people at a ranch in the town of Anamosa on April 20 during an Iowa trip.

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