Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Sisterly bond gives priority to education

- — LIU YINMENG

Katherine Whitman had just started her teaching career at Mount Saint Mary’s University in Los Angeles when an offer from the school’s president caught her attention.

It was a proposal from Guangzhou’s incumbent vicemayor to send professors to the city to teach Chinese business profession­als and government officials about the business system in the United States. As part of the program, Whitman lectured for three weeks at a science and technology institute in Guangzhou.

Whitman, a fledgling professor at the time, was “very honored to be chosen”, she said.

It was 1987, eight years after the U.S. and China normalized relations and the two countries had resumed student exchanges after a 30-year hiatus. It was also a time when U.S.-China teachere-xchange programs were few and far between.

Little did Whitman know that she would embark on more than 100 trips to China in the more than three decades following that first journey, making her, an economics and internatio­nal business professor, a witness to one of the world’s most important bilateral national relationsh­ips.

Whitman recalls how she was concerned that communicat­ion was going to be difficult after landing in China for the first time, but that issue was quickly solved.

“I knew that I had a very difficult problem, because I did not speak Chinese, but we had two interprete­rs with us. We found that the people we would meet, especially those at the Foreign Affairs Office and other colleagues, were very friendly and very eager for us to learn about them. We in turn were glad to share with them things about our home, our businesses and our universiti­es.”

After her teaching in Guangzhou concluded, officials from the Foreign Affairs Office took Whitman and two other professors from the U.S. on a trip to the city of Guilin, in Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region.

Fascinated by the country, Whitman then traveled by herself to Beijing and Shanghai, “to see China”. She fell in love with Chinese food during that trip, and the many that followed.

Whitman counts Peking duck, hotpot, dim sum and the fresh shrimp in Guangzhou, which “is the combinatio­n of freshwater and seawater”, among her most beloved Chinese dishes.

“To this day they are among my favorite things to eat,” she said.

Shortly after her trip, Whitman joined the Los Angeles-Guangzhou Sister City Associatio­n, an organizati­on establishe­d in 1981 as part of Sister Cities Internatio­nal. For her efforts in promoting the economic developmen­t of Guangzhou, she was given the status of “honorary resident” in November 2019.

As an educator, Whitman was responsibl­e for conducting training programs for a delegation of Chinese government officials, who traveled to the U.S. and studied at Mount Saint Mary’s University for a month or two, before receiving a certificat­e from the university. That initiative continued for almost 10 years.

As part of the MBA program requiremen­t at Mount Saint Mary’s, all students were required to travel to China for a nine-day trip. During the visit they would meet government officials and entreprene­urs and attend university lectures. They also got to see cities such as Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Xi’an.

Thanks to those programs, Whitman still travels to China frequently. Before the pandemic she took students to China on average about three times a year, she said.

“I found it a wonderful opportunit­y to actually see a country growing rapidly and changing quickly. Every time I go I see something new and I learn more about China and how it has changed to become a modern, open country. That is what I think is very intriguing, and it encourages me to learn more.”

Whitman recalls witnessing an encounter that took place between one of her students and a Chinese friend, and regularly tells the anecdote to her graduate students.

Her friend, a Chinese teacher, sat next to Whitman’s student at a large banquet for about 25 people. It took a while for the two women to begin conversing, and when they eventually did they talked about their families. They discussed the difficulti­es of raising children, and how each was concerned about their children’s education. They even laughed a little bit about the pretty clothes that they had seen.

Whitman, now vice-chair of the Los Angeles-Guangzhou Sister City Associatio­n, repeated the same message at a recent event celebratin­g 40 years of the sister-city relationsh­ip.

“We had times together when we celebrated, when we worked hard and had some fun,” Whitman told attendees.

“The future of our relationsh­ip will be built on a commitment to people-to-people cooperatio­n and friendship.”

“The future of our relationsh­ip will be built on a commitment to people-to-people cooperatio­n and friendship.”

KATHERINE

WHITMAN

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Katherine Whitman at Yu Garden in Shanghai during a trip to China. As an educator, she has made more than 100 trips to China over the past three decades.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Katherine Whitman at Yu Garden in Shanghai during a trip to China. As an educator, she has made more than 100 trips to China over the past three decades.

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