Archive for April 5th, 2009

China Travel – Site of Xifeng Concentration Camp

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

The site of the Xifeng Concentration Camp is located in Xifeng County of Guizhou Province.

The camp was built on the eve of the Lugouqiao Incident (July 7th Incident) in 1937, on a small scale in the beginning. With the Japanese invasion, the Xifeng Concentration Camp soon became the largest prison in the Kuomintang ruling area. Since there were too many communists captured from Shanghai, Nanjing, Beiping, Wuhan and Sichuan to fit into the small concentration camp, Dai Li, the commander of the KMT spy agency, ordered to move it to Yanglangba — about six kilometers south of Xifeng County. Dai Li appointed his henchman as head officer and transferred a large number of secret agents to form a series of giant organizations to supervise, inquest, torture and watch over the prisoners.

The site of the Xifeng Concentration Camp comprises two locations: at the Yanglangba Cave, six kilometers south of Xifeng County, and at the Xuantian Cave in Nanwang Mountain, 8.5 kilometers east of the county. The Yanglangba Cave is a natural water-eroded cave with a mouth 4.3 meters high and 15 meters wide. Inquest rooms occupy over 40 square meters in the cave. About 27 meters is occupied by an underground river that was once used as a water dungeon. There are altogether 34 cells in eight buildings built 30 meters to the right of the cave. The concentration camp was originally surrounded by a wall two meters high and 1,100 meters long with 4 blockhouses located outside the wall. But these constructions no longer exist. The Xuantian Cave is divided into an old and new cave. The old cave is about 30 meters high, 54 meters wide and 137 meters deep, and spreads across some 3,500 square meters. About 300 meters south is the new cave — a small and deep structure with underground rivers. The present cave is surrounded by walls with watchtowers built on the southern and northern ends. Between the autumn of 1938 and 1946, General Yang Hucheng, the renowned patriot general who participated in the planning of the Xi’an Incident, was imprisoned there with his wife and youngest son.

The Xifeng Concentration Camp, which operated for nine years, held over 3,200 prisoners; among them over 600 were killed or tortured to death. Victims included communists, high-ranking military officers who resisted Japanese invaders, and patriots.

(Source: chinaculture.org)

Beijing Olympic – Archery Day 7 Preview: ROK trio seeks solo gold in Men’s Individual

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

The Republic of Korea trio of Im Dong-hyun, Park Kyung-mo and Lee Chang-hwan advanced in the Individual Elimination Rounds on Wednesday, and each hopes to become their country’s first Men’s Individual Olympic gold medalist.

Lee, the No. 10 seed, broke the 12-arrow Olympic record when he shot 117 out of 120 points on Wednesday morning, the first day of Men’s Individual Elimination matches.

Park also demonstrated impressive accuracy, shooting 116 on Wednesday afternoon. He is the No. 4 seed.

Im, the No. 8 seed, will look to improve on his sixth-place finish in Athens in 2004. Im is the reigning world champion.

Other top contenders include Jacek Proc of Poland who was the first archer to break the Olympic record at these games, shooting a 116 in his first Elimination match on Wednesday.

Juan Rene Serrano of Mexico also surprised the field by placing first in the Ranking Round. Serrano was the other archer to shoot 116 in the qualification rounds on Wednesday and aims to win Mexico’s first archery Olympic medal.

Also to note is Russia’s Baljinima Tsyrempilov, the No. 6 seed, who moved through to the top 16 as expected. Tsyrempilov is the 2007 World Cup Final Champion and the 2008 European Champion.

Victor Wunderle of the United States, the Individual silver medalist at the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games, will look to get back on to the podium after finishing eight in the Athens Games.

The competition will be held at 10:30 a.m. on Friday, August 15 at the Olympic Green Archery Field.

(Source: en.beijing2008.cn)

Chinese Culture – Chinese Characters and Riddles

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

Chinese riddles are closely connected with the shape, pronunciation or meaning of Chinese characters. A line in the fifth-century work of literary criticism Wenxin Diaolong (The Literary Mind and the Carving of Dragons) by Liu Xie of the Northern Dynasties Period (386-581) says, “Riddles, by mixing up words, create puzzlement.” Riddles based on the structure of Chinese characters appear first in a work of the fifth century.

The practice of rewarding a prize to the person who guesses a riddle correctly goes back at least as far as the Emperor Gaozu of the Northern Wei Dynasty (386-534). He once raised his cup and said:

Three, three across;

Three, three up;

Whoever guesses

Gets a gold cup.

The cup went to a minister who correctly guessed the Chinese character the emperor was describing.

Since the Song Dynasty (960-1279), guessing game of riddles has been popular and begun to take various forms. Because in the Lantern Festival, riddles were put on lanterns for people to guess the answers, riddles were also called lantern riddles. Nowadays, this custom is still practiced in many places across China.

The relations between riddles and their answers have many varieties. Some riddles are created according to grapheme or meaning of a character and some, according to illusion of a character. Some riddles make use of characters to guess proverbs, Xiehouyu (a two-part allegorical saying) and so on.

Source: chinaculture.org