Belgians doing charity in China

Quite a number of foreigners living in China are involved in charity work. Even Belgians!
Since over a year I am now an active member of the Beijing Rotary Club – we have nearly 60 members, as a result of local regulations we can have only foreigners as members. The Club is involved in many charities. Further information: see the website www.rotaryclub-beijing.org.
On 9 May we had as guest speakers Koen Sevenants and Pierre Schavey from the Morning Tears Charity, based in Belgium, introduced by myself. They explained their program to help children in China whose parents are in jail or have been executed. The charity supports a children’s village in Xian with 49 children. It especially helps with counseling for children suffering from trauma. Eventually, the organizers hope that the government will take charge of the problem. A benefit event will be held at the Belgian embassy on June 10. Further details can be found at their website www.morningtears.com.

click to enlarge

From the left: Pierre and Koen receiving the Beijing Club banner from our president Carl-Ludwig Doerwald, on the right.

A Belgian Prince in Beijing

On 27 April the ambassador Bernard Pierre and Mrs. Karin Pierre graciously organized a reception in the Belgian embassy to welcome Prince Laurent and Princess Claire.
Being exiled for so long in far away China has its perks – chatting with people one normally never meets. I had the pleasure to have a vivid conversation with the Prince and Princess who were both very relaxed. It was the second time I met the Prince, exactly in the same room not so long time ago.
Our discussion was of course absolutely confidential but Helene’s partner was recording it all.

click to open click to open

Gilbert, the Belgian Ambassador, the Prince and Princess – Gilbert & Helene

 

Expensive brands: worth the money?

Maybe I am unlucky with big brands or I am too much of an engineer.
I just saw an ad that TAG Heuer has a new watch – “Yao Ming” (probably the most famous sportsman here, now playing basketball for the Houston Rockets – 2m26 tall). Looks cute but…
A couple of years ago I bought a cool TAG Heuer watch (model: WE2111 serial ED2513, automatic, sports watch, 200 meters, Swiss made). I thought, no more battery changes, good quality for life, I can use it anywhere (swimming, diving, running, sauna). What I did not expect: those watches are more for showing off but not to get the TIME, at least correctly. Unless you give it like every year for a very expensive maintenance. From the start accuracy was lousy, I gave it several times to an “authorized shop” to adjust the time but it continues to show differences of one minute per week. After some time it got all worse, like 5 minutes difference per week. After lots of calls, e-mails and efforts finally somebody really authorized took it from Beijing to Hong Kong for “maintenance”. Cost: well over RMB 500. Oops. Explanation: it is a precision watch and needs regular maintenance, don’t you understand”? Sorry, I just wanted to know the time….
Less than two years later, there we go again. Every week I had to adjust the time.
I like watches and clocks and have quite some of them. But I wanted to see the TIME.
After due consideration, the TAG is back in the box, in all of its original packing and I bought a SEIKO (model Premier, Kinetic, auto really, 100m). Quite nice, more discreet than the flashy TAG. At least it runs well and normally I can live with it for a long time without maintenance and battery replacement.
I just wonder what are all those people doing with their expensive watches (Rolex etc.). Maybe they just pretend they use them?
So, if anybody is interested, the TAG is for sale for the highest bidder, as good as new, starting price RMB 4,000.
I received as a gift a very nice Waterman pen, “Ideal” MAN 200 fountain pen, Made in France. Problem: even with the official ink cartridges, good cleaning and care it refuses to draw a line longer than 1 or 2 cm – the ink runs dry. After some time, the U-fill convertor gave up. I cannot even complain: it was a gift and I don’t have the data to fill out the guarantee…
Of course, one can wonder why I complain: maybe those fountain pens are to show off only, nobody writes by hand anymore anyway. Those old and whining Flemish people, such an annoyance.

Cinco de Mayo in Beijing – revisiting the past

Attending a meeting in the US Embassy in Beijing on 5 May I was also invited to the Marine House, the private club of the Marine detachment, a nice setting within the high-security compound that the Embassy has become recently. All a bit sad because the embassy area has a special charm and was nice to walk and jog. With all those North Koreans jumping walls, terrorist threats and (not-so-spontaneous) protests, the Sanlitun embassy has become very uninviting area with guards, barbed wire, fences all over. With the detours to get to the compound – imposed by the road blocks – it was a bit confusing to remember at first the spot where I came so many times in the early eighties. Indeed, the US Embassy was one of the four embassies who in turn opened their doors every Friday evening for “TGIF” (Thank God It’s Friday). All foreigners could attend and the ambiance was great, anyway there was nothing else to go to, so for all poor expats like me it was the most important event of the week. And we sure had lot of fun and booze.
I did not find back the room where it was held that time, the compound has changed quite a bit since then. The US is currently building a new embassy close to the Hilton Hotel, to be ready by 2008.
Enjoying the chili con carne with a beer I met an old acquaintance of those old times, a bit of a (happy) shock. He did not recognize me at first – I had the advantage seeing him regularly on CNN and CCTV when he is doing his job. He then introduced his wife and it was like – wait a moment – we know each other – and then the door to memory lane went wide open. We quickly pieced it all together, talking in our secret language. Many memories of the tumultuous times of the eighties, of jobs, love stories, marriages, separations and the hardships of the time (like waiting in the bitter cold at the door of the embassy, trying in vain to call for a taxi that maybe would come).
I walked back through the road blocks to Ritan Nan Lu, lifted an arm and in 5 seconds had a taxi. Beijing 2006. The taxi driver was of the super social type and rattled on till I got home, testing the very limits of my bu-hao Chinese. Pity I cannot talk more with them – they are sometimes real funny and full of interesting small talk about the city…

The rock group SIOEN from Ghent, in Beijing

8 May 2006
The Belgian Embassy has gone through many activities during the 25 years I go there, most in the large historical room. Having a rock concert there is certainly something new. The performance on 4 November by the Belgian group “Sioen” – from my hometown Ghent – was a successful event attended by closer to 90 people, not too bad considering the May 1 holidays with so many people out of town.
Sioen came to China for the first time but gave 4 concerts in Beijing this week, including the one in the embassy. They will be back in September for a grand tour in China to several cities.
I admit I did not know Sioen but it seems they are a big hit in Belgium, quite understandable when you here them play. As our friend David commented – the band should be called “The Deng Xiaoping Band” – small but full of energy… Their website: www.sioen.net.
sioen_cecinestpasunfilm.gif
I could not resist buying their DVD/CD “Ceci n’est pas un film”, even the price was ten times what we usually pay in the back streets of Beijing. Even got a nice poster.
The public seemed to be very pleased and the food served by our friend Renaat Morel could only make it even better.
Thanks again to our ambassador Bernard Pierre – cool to see so many different activities for the Belgian community in Beijing.

click to enlarge click to enlarge click to enlarge

Sioen / the public / Valerie and Mrs. Karin Pierre
I don’t know if it is a coincidence – import from Ghent? – but we also had our first rain that day, so Sun had to look for her “heating”… and watching her holding the dangerous glass of beer…

click to enlarge click to enlarge click to enlarge