Tuesday May 13, 2008
Earthquake in China II
Lets get this out of the way first: I live and work in China, I love
China, and there's a good chance that the following will not be
impartial. You have been warned.
Two natural disasters have hit Asia in recent weeks. A major Cyclone
has hit Myanmar, and an extremely powerful earthquake has hit China
yesterday, May 12. Lets try and look at how the two countries are
dealing with the disasters inflicted on them.
Myanmar can't assist the survivors. The country is poor, poorly ruled,
and simply can't provide the aid necessary for the survivors of the
storm to stay alive. The government, aware of its shortcomings, isn't
allowing foreign aid to enter the country and help the situation.
Worse. The government is actually putting its hand on the aid, keeping
the best to itself. The government in Myanmar is responsible to the
deaths of thousands of its own people, maybe more. In fact, the
government of Myanmar is killing its own people, denying them the
assistance they need to survive.
China had mobilized help quickly. Against the elements, against time.
The Chinese are obviously doing the best they can to reach the area, to
conduct a search and rescue operation. In Beijing people are donating
money, clothes, food and blood. From where I am it's obvious. China,
the government, as well as the people, feels the pain, and is
mobilizing to help.
I have been in China for over two years. I've visited the Great Wall
of China, the Forbidden City and the Terracotta Warriors. I've been
eating Chinese food, watching Chinese movies, and drinking Chinese
beer. Always, though, feeling as a foreigner. Yesterday, in less than
a minute, I became Chinese. As I was sitting in my office, feeling the
earth shaking, fearing the worst, I became part of this great people.
Out in the hallways, and later downstairs we were all standing together
with our cellphones, trying to reach our loved ones, trying to
understand the magnitude of the disaster.
Today, as I follow the news, as we all realize that this disaster is only beginning to unfold, I am not a foreigner anymore.
As is the nature of disasters like this one, it will take weeks before
the gruesome tally is finalized. I fear that we have only started to
understand the severity of the earthquake. It took a few minutes, and
thousands of people lost their lives, their loved ones, their homes.
And I was pretty close. I am grateful, I am worried, I sympathize.
There are a lot of feelings going on these days.
We, at Sun China are going to organize a fund raiser for the victims of
the earthquake. It's the least we can do. From Beijing, let me send
my condolences to all who lost their loved ones, a get well wishes to
all the injured ones, and most importantly, that all who are still
alive and under the rubble, are found quickly and survive their
ordeal. If I was a believer, I would start praying for them now.
To the Burmese government I will say: shame on you. Open your doors,
allow foreign help in. We don't really care what we find there, but
let us help your dying people.
Posted at 09:51PM May 13, 2008 by Amiram Hayardeny in Personal | Comments[4]
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Good piece.
Posted by Sin-Yaw Wang on May 14, 2008 at 03:22 AM CST #
Glad to hear that Sun China will be doing a drive in response to the disaster. Just to let you know, Sun has an online disaster relief drive in place year round. We try to make giving easy. Check it out: http://vad.aidmatrix.org/vadxml.cfm?driveid=1203
Posted by Julie on May 14, 2008 at 11:36 PM CST #
You are Chinese Best frends!
Posted by 官明霖 on May 16, 2008 at 07:51 PM CST #
thanks ,You are Chinese Best frends!
Posted by Eric liu on May 19, 2008 at 05:26 PM CST #