The Denver Post

CCD campus center celebrates China link

Program promotes country’s language and culture

- By Monte Whaley

Adopted as a baby from China, Christian Gaither had long wondered about her heritage. It turns out a key to the Community College of Denver student’s cultural roots was hiding in plain sight on the Auraria campus.

The Confucius Institute is part of an internatio­nal network of 500 centers that promote the culture and language of China. It is the only center in the world on a community college campus.

Gaither, in her second year at the school, made her discovery accidental­ly last year. “I needed a work-study program,” she said, “and I went down the list of places (to work) and I saw this place and I said, ‘What’s this doing here?'”

She immediatel­y applied, mostly out of an urge to find her cultural roots. Gaither was born in mainland China and adopted by a Denver couple when she was a year old.

“I was probably looking for a real connection to my past,” she said, “and I found it here.”

She helps host events and classes at the institute, which recently celebrated its 10th anniversar­y on campus with a program of music, dancing, singing and martial arts. A delegation from China, including officials from the University of Ji Nan, which jointly runs the institute, flew to Denver to join the festivitie­s.

Despite active programmin­g, the institute operates in relative obscurity, director Jane Lim said.

“As much as we try and promote it, lots of people don’t realize we are here,” Lim said. “We always go to campus events, like health fairs, and have a table with all sorts of informatio­n about us.”

Students and community members learn Chinese and the nation’s culture, as well as tai chi, at the institute, which has a library of more than 3,000 books about China and hosts a Chinese movie night on the second Wednesday of each month. People frequently stop by the center simply to learn about a country whose influence is growing around the world.

“Many, many people are curious,” Lim said. “And we welcome all here.”

“It’s nice here, and the people are very accommodat­ing,” University of Colorado Denver student Vanessa Pan said as she practiced Chinese calligraph­y at the institute. “It’s fascinatin­g

stuff. But the center is so completely hidden, I didn’t know it was here until a couple of days ago.”

CCD professor Jiansheng Guatney applied to Chinese Language Council Internatio­nal to establish a Confucius Institute at CCD more than 10 years ago. It was a bid to educate Americans about China and to establish cross-cultural ties, Lim said.

Guatney, Lim said, “wanted to give a more multicultu­ral feel to the campus and downtown. And to spread some understand­ing between the two cultures, the United States and China.”

Confucius was China’s most famous teacher, philosophe­r and political theorist, and his ideas influenced East Asia.

In its decade at CCD, the institute has worked with local schools and organizati­ons to bridge the cultural gap between the two largest economic powers of the world, said Ji Nan president Shiquang Zhang, who spoke at the 10th anniversar­y celebratio­n.

“During the 10 years, the Confucius Institute at CCD has bridged minds through language and cultural interactio­n, become a window for the people in Denver and the surroundin­g areas to know and learn more about China,” Zhang said.

More than 6,500 students have studied Chinese and the culture at the institute, which has sent more than 20 students to study in China, sponsored more than 100 students’ summer trips to educationa­l camps in China, and offered Chinese language skills tests to more than 900 students.

More than 63,000 college and public school students have attended the institute’s cultural events, and it has recruited more than 60 Chinese language instructor­s from China to teach Chinese at Colorado schools.

The institute has held more than 30 teacher-training workshops, which are becoming increasing­ly popular, Lim said.

“China has grown politicall­y and economical­ly recently,” she said. “People are finding it even more important to learn its languages.”

China can also learn from the United States, said Gang Xu, co-director of the institute and deputy director of Ji Nan’s Internatio­nal Affairs Office.

“China can learn much from America on how to include other cultures and background­s in your country,” Xu said. “The American culture is able to assimilate so many different people. It’s something the Chinese can learn from.”

 ?? Photos by RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post ?? Confucius Institute director Jane Lim, standing, leads a brush-painting class Tuesday at the school on the Community College of Denver campus.
Photos by RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post Confucius Institute director Jane Lim, standing, leads a brush-painting class Tuesday at the school on the Community College of Denver campus.
 ??  ?? Confucius Institute teaches students and community members the Chinese language and the nation’s culture.
Confucius Institute teaches students and community members the Chinese language and the nation’s culture.
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 ??  ?? Students at the Community College of Denver take part in a Chinese brush-painting class at the Confucius Institute.
Students at the Community College of Denver take part in a Chinese brush-painting class at the Confucius Institute.

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