Dec 27 2008
Chinese Volunteerism
Chinese people love to volunteer, or so it seems from recent events in the country. I would say volunteerism reached its peak in China during the Beijing Olympics — 100,000 volunteers — including a good number of the best and brightest from Beijing’s most prestigious universities, participated with the aim of making 60,000 foreign guests feel warm and fuzzy in the communist state.
In a trip to the Yiwu Small Commodities International Fair, we were greeted by yet another volunteer, Jin Linyun, a young man teaching English in a secondary school in a nearby town in Yiwu.
Jin said he was the only volunteer from his school to participate in the fair and had to switch classes with his colleagues just to nanny us all day.
He told me he wanted to take a break from the confines of the classroom to experience something different.
He donned on a full suit and with an earnestness to make our filming trip a smooth one, never mind that it was 30 deg C outside.
Jin is but one of the 700 volunteers proficient in various foreign languages for the annual fair, which sees thousands of international visitors from all over the world.
Aside from a travel visa or the Internet, international events and expositions are perhaps the most coveted avenues in which the young minds of China can get up close and personal with the world beyond China’s shores.
The number of Chinese students studying overseas has been increasing in recent years. In 2008, more than 81,000 enrolled in US universities. This is 20 percent up from 2007.
But there are many more students who could only hope for a travel visa, or grab any opportunity that allows them to hone their skills, whether it is in a language or international practice.
I still remember seeing students “ambushing” tourists for a chat just so they can practice English in the run-up to the Beijing Olympics.
As an English teacher, I suppose Jin was hoping to practice the language, too, by hosting foreign media. Unfortunately for him, though, we could speak Mandarin.
I’m not sure what he got out of the drudgery of watching our long filming sessions, but thanks to him, Yiwu is now more than just a wholesale centre to us.



