Fijian student relishes real China
University programs help dispel Western media myths, prepare for challenges of job market
China showed Fijian Katriena Wong that seeing is believing.
“The real China that I saw with my own eyes was so different from what the Western media had been portraying for years,” said Wong, who had previously studied in China.
The Chinese government awarded her a scholarship in 2013.
Wong studied the Chinese language at Central China Normal University in Wuhan, Hubei province, for a year, and then went to Shijiazhuang in Hebei province and completed her bachelor’s in law at the Hebei University of Economics and
Business in 2018.
“China was so vibrant and full of energy,” Wong recalled. “What really struck me was the sheer scale of its infrastructure: glitzy skyscrapers, airports, malls, super-efficient transportation, and convenient mobile payments.”
Most of what she had heard about China beforehand came from mainstream English-language media, which portrayed China as “rural”, she said.
She visited several destinations, including Beijing and Shanghai and the Xinjiang Uygur and Inner Mongolia
autonomous regions. She said she was impressed by the culture, people, and landscapes.
“I really have wonderful memories of my visits. I always feel nostalgic about them,” Wong said.
She said that she especially appreciated how safe China is, “even at 2 am”, and its clean streets and urban parks.
“We (Fijians) can learn a lot more from China,” she said.
“We also hope to bring the good things we have learned back to Fiji and implement them in our society to modernize our own country.”
Wong now works as a manager at Dingjin Real Estate Development Co and oversees Nausori Plaza, which is one of the firm’s largest investments in Fiji. It is the Nausori region’s largest mall and will serve three bordering provinces in Fiji.
She said that she believes the challenging but high-quality education she received in China prepared her for the job market.
China’s ambassador to Fiji, Zhou Jian, said around 300 Fijian students like Wong have studied in China through Chinese government scholarship programs since 1996.
Zhou said Fijians are becoming more interested in learning about China. Recently, many of the archipelagic nation’s cabinet ministers, members of the parliament, government officials, entrepreneurs, young people, and students have traveled to China.
Many of them told the ambassador that these trips changed their perceptions.
“If you’ve never been to China, you should visit,” Wong said. “It’s the only way you will know what China truly is.”