Effective diplomacy in black and white


Bear-y tasty: Xiang Xiang enjoying a snack at Ueno Zoological Gardens in Tokyo, Japan. — Xinhua

TOKYO: Xiang Xiang, a five-year-old female panda born in Tokyo’s Ueno Zoological Gardens, finally departed for China earlier this week. Its parents were loaned to Tokyo for breeding research under a deal that the offspring would belong to China.

Fans had queued up for hours on Jan 20 to win a lottery enabling them to bid farewell to Xiang Xiang.

Similar was the craze in the United States where some 70,000 people lined up to welcome the first two pandas there in 1972.

The euphoria had not died down one bit when the Washington-based Smithsonian’s National Zoo marked the 50th anniversary of the pandas’ arrival last year.

It is fair to say that the giant panda is the best four-legged diplomat from China. Wherever it goes, it receives a warm welcome and spreads friendship.

A popular joke on social networking sites goes that the panda best represents cross-cultural harmony and inclusiveness because it is “black, white and Asian”.

For thousands of years, the Chinese people have encountered all kinds of cultures, some peacefully, some not so. They have all been met with the same open, inclusive nature.

Some biologists joke that the giant panda is as strong as any bear, but chose bamboo as its staple food although it can hunt for meat like other predators. That’s why it is seen as cute, though that certainly isn’t a sign of weakness.

The panda is representative of Chinese culture. Like the cute animal, China too is inclusive and extends a warm welcome to all friends, but anyone that dare invade it is bound to fail. It is the only civilisation that has, uninterruptedly, evolved for 5,000 years.

We hope like the panda, China continues to enhance friendships with everyone. — China Daily/ANN

Xiang Xiang , panda , Tokyo , China

   

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