Sep
30
2009
3

Mr. Zhang

Mr. Zhang and Wife

Mr. Zhang and Wife by Andy

You’ll have trouble finding our Mr. Zhang by name, as 90% of his fellow villagers are also surnamed Zhang (张). A grandfather in his early fifties, Mr. Zhang has spent most of his life in his hometown, the Hui (Muslim) minority village of Zhangguan (长官), Shandong province.

We met Mr. Zhang by coincidence. We had arrived in Zhangguan a day before and had already visited the 600-year-old Mosque twice. On our third run through the compact town, we were greeted by a man in his forties carrying a baby and two women in front of their doorway, who after a brief conversation graciously agreed to my request to see their house. Once inside, the stocky, lush-black-haired Mr. Zhang emerged from his nook of the complex and most dutifully — as preeminent male of the family — showed us to the central dwelling of their courtyard mini-complex.

Tea already served to us on the sofa and formal introductions aside, Mr. Zhang began immediately by describing how much better life is now than before. “Before we could never get full. Now we always have plenty to eat,” he said as he picked up some flatcakes and an uneaten chicken wing from the previous night’s meal. “This is a new house, built only 5 years ago. Everything is better since reform and opening.”

Mr. Zhang’s business, that is to say the family’s business, like most of the town, is the slaughter of sheep and cattle. Now that he’s a grandfather, his son and nephew handle most of the business. Nowadays he prefers to spend most of his time watching over the children of the extended family or helping out at the Mosque, where he goes to pray five times a day. That’s saying a lot since most of the other Hui we talked to in the town were religious equivalents of what my family calls “Christmas and Easter Catholics.” In a way he reminded me of a Hui version of my uncle Jack, minus the Knights of Columbus.

His family had moved to Zhangguan from Nanjing several generations prior, though the town had been Hui for much longer than that. The second of four brothers, Zhang was the only one who stayed during the “bad years.” The rest of his siblings took their families to the predominantly Muslim province of Ningxia, where the family visits every year.
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Sep
30
2009
0

Shandong, Going Strong

I left off in Zhangguan, Shandong, a little Hui (Muslim Chinese) village just across the border from Hebei. The old town was like something out of a movie, people everywhere moving through tight streets and bunched gorgeous courtyard houses, except with Arabic signs intermingled with the Chinese. The old city is laid out on a simple grid of two interescting streets with alleys running between the houses to other houses deeper inside. There are main roads off the Western and Northern branches full of bigger, far uglier businesses and restaurants. The rivers that run in and around the city are black as tar and smell like last month’s fish left out in black oil cans in the sun.

As we walked into the old town in the morning we witnessed what Alexis called ‘Chicken Auschwitz’, a Muslim meathouse where the patrons slit hundreds of chicken necks in rapid succession before tossing them into a pen to bleed to death, the blood streaming out into the street in big thick streams. Only later did we find out  that the town’s main industry is the processing of animals, purchased from Han Chinese farmers, slaughtered in Halal fashion. The meat is sold to other Muslims all over the region, as far away as Beijing, and the skins sold to leather manufacturers. Of course, most of the slaughter of larger animals happens away from the old town.

My overall view of Zhangguan was similar to what’s developing into a pattern: newly developed sections bad (as in I wouldn’t make my childhood bullies live there); old and traditional good (as in I see them as places suited for humans to live in). The difference here is that the inhabitants of this town stick together more cohesively than most places since their bonds are religious as well as regional. How well do they stick together? Over 90% of the city is surnamed Zhang (张). There were also a lot of 40-something grandparents running around carrying babies for their hardworking 20-something kids as most here tend to get married at 20 (still haven’t figured out how that works in light of the new PRC marriage age minimums of 22 for women and 24 for men). Moreover, they were by far the warmest and kindest to us of any group of peopple we’ve encountered so far on this trip. Almost every smile and “nihao” was returned warmly, and one family even took us into their house. The hotelier family we stayed with gave us free breakfast and tried to let us stay for free. Of course, the breakfast included a huge plate of goat liver (local specialty), but nothing worthwhile is easy…

After the myriad obligatory photos with our hotel family, we tardily headed Southeast through some soul-rending industrial sectors and after a relatively short ride of 88 km arrived just shy of a place called Madian (麻店), where we decided to try a new strategy for lodgings. We cut off the highway into some farmland covered by corn, cotton, paper trees, and dates and started trying to ask the locals where we could camp for the night. The general concensus (at least we think it was – we could understand maybe 20% of what was being said) was that nobody gave a shit about us camping in the fields, although everybody tried to persuade us that there were hotels to be found. So with the most stealth we super colorfully dressed white boys on giant bikes full of luggage, we lit off the dirt trail and headed into a paper tree grove right up against a bunch of cotton plants and waited until dark while drinking the last of the Scotch that was given to us in Hebei (thanks again to Victor). Once safe, we threw up the tents in a line behind Andy’s (the most camo), and crashed nervously, not knowing if anybody would actually care.

Thankfully at 5:30 when we got up, we were surrounded by a dense fog that blocked vision past 20 feet and had gotten no bothers from the cops or locals, and after our morning situp/pushup routine were on the road a little after 6:30.

For the route yesterday, I picked a road from the map that ran a long ways along a big river. Once we got to the river, we found only long dusty dirt roads on top of a long levee winding through probably the prettiest farmland we had seen so far. After 10 km or so we arrived at a huge sluice gate upon which was printed “Control the Yellow River Sluice Gate of Lanjia.” Aha! So that’s the big river! Two old men with decent Mandarin explained how the gate is used for flood control (amazing since during the 90’s the Yellow was so tapped for industry that it made it to the ocean only 9 of 10 years) and told us about the pear orchard next door.

Curious and desiring pears, we wandered into the facility adjacent to the orchard and asked if we could buy 3 pears. At first we were met with skepticism as to our desires (frequently the first response), but once we got to a group of men moving boxes and munching pears, the “leader” presented himself and tried to give us more pears than we could fit in our bags. Now when I say that these are Asian pears, freshly picked the day before and just pulled from the fridge facility, understand I mean this was the best pear experience I have ever had. After receiving the pears, we got into lively conversation with the group of middle aged men, and – surprise of surprises – posed for about twenty cell phone pictures. Interestingly one man, after trying to pry median American and French salaries for workers (still haven’t thought of a good ready answer to this yet) also told us they were taking down 3000 yuan a month, which would be great for Beijing, let alone the stix of Shandong.

At lunch we had a feast of Shandong food (good hearty stuff) in a small restaurant next to some chickens (though they told Andy and Alexis there was no chicken on the menu) where I played with a 3 month old rabbit hunting dog (to be trained soon) and we were force treated (they don’t take no lightly) to 2 cigarettes each (smoked a puff and thew out once the coast was clear), and a particularly wasted ex military man picked up our tab on the premise that we always tell our foreign friends that “Binzhou people” are hospitable. So here I go: everybody, people from Binzhou are hospitable! We’re also spending less and less money due to camping and freebies. This may become our new fiscal tactic.

Finally we crossed the Yellow River (after making it a little bit yellower from the top of the bridge). Interestingly, apparently the Yellow River is not navigable. It’s full of pontoon bridges for local roads to cross – not even a toy sailboat could go more than 10 km. From there we headed south to a crappy highway boomtown recently rapid-developed (read: I’d rather stick needles in my eyes than spend another day here) after the discovery of oil in the area called Chunliang (纯梁), where we bedded down. On a comical note, this morning when we tried to buy mooncakes, the saleswoman told us, “a little over 1 yuan each. By the way, I’ve never seen foreigners before.” After we put 9 in a bag, she asked us for 45 yuan. I guess I’d try the old “foreigners don’t know math” trick too if I lived here.

The last few days have been great, but hopfully we can find more villages and less terrible industry on the way to Qingdao. We have heard and witnessed from the side of the highway that central Shandong is China’s biggest steel producing area in addition to being a general industrial hub. To say that the air contains some particulate is like saying Everclear is mildly alcoholic.

Alright, that’s it for now. Wish us luck.

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Sep
30
2009
0

Jours 4~7

Jour 4 (26/09/09)

Liugezhuang(留各庄)

Province du Hebei(河北省)

Aujourd’hui, étant donné les douleurs d’Andy au genou, nous avons décidé de faire une pause d’un jour dans ce petit village. Malheureusement, une cérémonie de mariage matinale à lieu, et des pétards perturbent notre sommeil vers 7 heures du matin. Ce qui ne nous empêche pas de nous rendormir et de faire la grâce matinée. Vers midi, nous quittons notre auberge à la recherche d’un boui-boui, dont le propriétaire nous apprend renseigne sur quelques caractéristiques du village: exportation de panneaux isothermes, culture du maïs et de la datte (comme dans tout le reste de la région), ainsi que viande d’âne (également très répandu dans l’ensemble de la province). Puis nous allons flâner, nous perdre dans les rues et les chemins de terre. Un lbx local nous montre la machine qui lui sert à extraire l’huile des graines de tournesol et du maïs. Plus loin, nous découvrons un petit vieux sur une charrette-tricycle qui nous emmène dans un temple bouddhique du nom de Bixiagong (碧霞宫), dont le gardien, très sympathique, nous raconte qu’il a été construit il y a seulement 3 ans et qu’il existe un autre temple quasi-homonyme (Bixiasi, 碧霞寺) sur le Mont Taishan (une des 4 montagnes sacrées de Chine). Anecdote marrante: à la question « Est-ce que ceux qui viennent ici sont tous bouddhistes? »(“来这里的人都是信佛的吗?”), il répond « Certains le sont, d’autres viennent ici pour régler leurs problèmes »(“有的是信佛的,有的是来这儿处理问题。”). A part cela, malgré l’aspect très kitch de la peinture et des statues, un huaishu (acacia japonais?) vieux de 400 ans trône au milieu de la petite cour. 1

En dehors du temple, dans les petits chemins comme dans les plus grandes rues, les paysans sont dehors en trains d’éplucher les épis de maïs fraîchement récoltés. Autre anecdote marrante: au bord du cours d’eau ultra pollué à la surface duquel flotte toutes sortes d’ordures, un panneau indique « Baignade interdite en raison de la profondeur de l’eau. Les contrevenants seront eux-mêmes responsables de leurs actes. » (“水深禁止洗澡。后果自负。”). Lorsque nous rentrons à l’hôtel, un jeune chinois un petit peu maniéré et avec un fort accent du sud vient nous saluer. Il nous dit qu’il est ici pour business et nous offre une bouteille de whisky toute neuve qui lui a été offerte (il ne boit pas d’alcool). Le soir, nous l’invitons à dîner. Il nous emmène au boui-boui qu’il fréquente régulièrement. Je décide de franchir le pas et de gouter des sortes de sandwiches à la viande d’âne, et je suis -il faut bien l’avouer, malgré mes premières réticences- agréablement surpris. Certains morceaux sont un peu gras, mais dans l’ensemble c’est plutôt très bon. Au cours du repas, nous apprenons que notre invité vient de Wenzhou, et qu’il est dans ce village depuis déjà un mois pour les besoin de la société pour laquelle il travaille. Sa mission: superviser la fabrication des matériaux isothermes. Puis, nous discutons religion, et nous dit que la sienne est… le marxisme! Un Chinois du sud intéressé par le communisme, c’est rare. Nous l’interrogeons donc sur la motivation de sa croyance et essayons de lui expliquer que la Chine est le pays le plus capitaliste du monde. Nous resterons dans une impasse, mais la soirée se termine en très bons termes avec notre ami gay marxiste. Rentrés à l’auberge, Evan et moi retournons errer dans la ville à la recherche d’un massage. Nous revenons sans avoir rien trouver et essayons de nous coucher tôt afin d’être en forme pour le lendemain. Objectif: rattraper le temps perdu!

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Written by Alexis in: Alexis, All |
Sep
27
2009
0

Photo: Beef Dumplings

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We stopped for our second lunch at small restaurant on the side of the road before our exit from Hebei province. The town was probably the most miserable place we've seen so far, with a "truck-stop" atmosphere and an an acrid smelling chemical plant spewing who-knows-what into the air. Despite the poor surroundings and the unhealthy look of the little restaurant, we had an excellent meal of delicious steamed beef buns (baozi) for a dollar. The owner, Mr. Zhang, told us that his type of baozi was famous in Beijing, although none of us had ever had them.

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Sep
27
2009
1

Greener Pastures

What a difference 39 km can make! After the police hijinks in Wen’an we made southward into deep Hebei determined to stay on the country side of things. The dirty hotel room we found in Liugezhuang (留各庄) for 30 yuan (~$4) was across a dirty courtyard from the hotel’s banquet facility / restaurant (mind you, the best restaurant / banquet facility in town, which isn’t saying much), where during our dinner a terribly drunk middle aged LBX man (they don’t need an excuse to be drunk, but on this particular night there was a wedding party going on) barged in to drink with us. In between strange nonsensical outbursts, he repeatedly told us, “I’m a policeman!; I go for training to Beijing all the time!; My family has connections and are in power!; This is my son! (as his son burst in); My son is in power with the government! This is my son! (he was afraid we might forget)” and so on. Basically you should imagine being in backwoods, Massachusetts and being told by a flamboyant drunken asshole, “I’m a Kennedy! I got put in power because of my family! My son has political pull and a hefty paycheck because of our family connections!”  After his son dragged him away embarrassed, and we left the restaurant, we were again forced into drunken conversation with two more elder male members of the family, primarily surnamed Gao, one the head of a local insulation enterprise (more on that later) and the other a government official. They both regaled us with stories of how successful or powerful the other was (a favorite face-giving game) before insisting we meet them at noon for lunch the next day in the courtyard. My point is that in Wen’an the police are terrorizing unsuspecting locals because of connections to us, and in the other they’re sitting us down over beers letting us know how great they are. (more…)

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Sep
26
2009
0

Photo: Back Alleys of Liugezhuang

backalleys_500

We walked around the town of Liugezhuang today, which could be a beautiful place if it were well taken care of. Unfortunately, many places are covered in trash, the new part of town is a dump, and like everywhere else in Hebei that we've encountered, it is covered in dust. Nevertheless, we came across a number of charming back alleys and even a buddhist temple where we chatted with the caretaker and learned a bit about the town's history and present fiberglass manufacturing situation, which has been a boon since Australia passed environmental legislation requiring higher building efficiency standards.

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Sep
26
2009
0

Jours 1~3

Jour 1 (23/09/09)

Enfin… nous pouvons partir! Après des jours de report (achat de mon vélo, passeport d’Andy, …), nous quittons Pékin! Avec des difficultés tout de même. Car après avoir pris un petit déjeuner copieux chez l’amie d’Evan (d’où nous sommes parti vers 8h), et après avoir pris une photo souvenir devant la porte principale du Palais Impérial, sur laquelle demeure la photo du saint sauveur du peuple chinois, nous nous apercevons que nous avons oublié certaines choses: moi, mon klaxon, Evan, ses gants (jusqu’ici, rien de grave), et Andy, le chargeur de son i-Phone (plus embêtant, car c’est grâce à son i-Phone que nous pouvons nous connecter sur Internet). Andy doit donc retourner chercher son chargeur, pendant qu’Evan et moi attendons tranquillement à l’extérieur d’un boui-boui de Xidan (quartier de Pékin).Une dernière pose avant le départ

C’est vers 10h30 que nous partons donc définitivement. Encore faut-il sortir de cette maudite ville. 2ème périph’, 3ème périph’, 4ème périph’, 5ème périph’, 6ème périph’, et encore un petit bout de chemin pour la forme, et nous avons enfin pu sortir du territoire sous administration pékinoise, pour entrer dans la province du Hebei, sur l’autoroute Pékin-Kaifeng(京开高速公路). Après 75km de route, nous arrivons dans une de ces villes moyennes biens pourries, Gu’an (固安), où nous n’avons pas trop de difficultés à trouver un hôtel bon marché (30 yuans la chambre pour trois). L’accueil est chaleureux et nous montons nos vélo dans notre chambre sans aucun problème. Une journée bien crevante. Le sommeil n’est pas difficile à trouver.

Jour 2 (24/09/09)

Au réveil vers 9h-9h30, tout le monde a encore des crampes dans les jambes. Mais c’est pas grave. Nous savons que cela passera au fil de notre périple. Les élongations nous permettront de rester en forme. Les pompes et les abdos sont également indispensables pour que le haut du corps ne tombe pas, étant donné qu’à vélo, seul le haut du corps est sollicité. Après ce que l’on pourrait appelé un brunch dans un petit boui-boui (le mot ‘boui-boui’ risque de revenir assez fréquemment dans mon récit), où un vieux attaque déjà comme tous les matins à la baijiu (alcool de riz souvent très très bon marché et dont une seule goutte suffirait à faire tomber dans le coma un poivrot polonais), nous descendons nos vélo, faisons notre échauffement quotidien devant nos amis lbx et repartons sur la route. (more…)

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Written by Alexis in: Alexis, All |
Sep
26
2009
3

Dr. Indifference or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Party

After attempting in vain to resolve the situation between the hotelier and police in Wen’an, we begrudgingly set off on the road south out of town for another late start. Power and politics in China has a way of making you feel completely helpless, and it cultivates a natural instinct for self preservation and nourishes it until it becomes a way of life. This often means that a car accident victim will lie on the ground, bleeding from the head, while a crowds will simply look on. It is tempting to identify the phenomenon as part of Chinese culture, but after observing it for some time, I now feel that it is much shallower than that. Rule of law is secondary to the power of people here, and the legal system is not developed enough in most places in China to ensure your own protection if you choose to help an injured person. If the police are involved and the injured is someone of means, you could be arbitrarily punished because they are looking for someone to blame quickly. If the injured is a commoner, a laobaixing, he likely doesn’t have the medical insurance to pay for his rehabilitation and is looking for someone to blame for the accident (the guilty party has probably already fled the scene), and I have heard of numerous cases of someone stepping in to take someone in dire need to the hospital only to be blamed for the accident later. “I was just trying to help!” is met with the response of “What business is it of yours to help this person? You don’t even know him!” by the authorities.

So it is with this background that I recommended from the beginning of our incident at the hotel to try to stay uninvolved. Morally, it is difficult to watch an innocent person suffer, but in the context of power and law in China, it is much safer to let events simply unfold around you.

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Sep
25
2009
0

Photo: Harvesting Dates

Beating Dates

We tried our hand with some back-country roads today and came across a nice family harvesting their dates. Who knew those things grew on trees? They sell the harvest to various companies but were happy to let us enjoy as many as we wanted while we sat and chatted. Today reaffirmed our original assumption that the best thing we could do for this trip would be to avoid any semblance of a city and stay to the countryside where those without many of the strange concerns of modern life in China still reside.

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Written by Andy in: All | Tags: , , , , , , , ,
Sep
25
2009
5

Hebei Blues

Today was quite the day, as Hebei is quite the place. After last night’s hour and a half local police fiasco at our cheap little hotel, we assumed the whole affair done and laughed it off as just another example of why we should avoid third-tier, middling cities. As we left the hotel this morning, and I got my deposit money back, the laobanniang (boss lady) gave us three apples for the road and said she admired both the courage it takes to be on such a journey and the way we talked to the police as it displayed how much we know about China and that we got out of the situation much better than any laobaixing could have. When I asked her name, she said, “please don’t put my name into anything you might write about your trip. We laobaixing have enough trouble.” (more…)

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