Thursday, May 22, 2008

Thinking about our trip to Chengdu

It is hard for us to think about our trip to Chengdu.

We had such a magical time there but when I go to bed at night, I keep thinking about the kind monks who took us in at the monastery at the top of the mountain. The monastery was/is right between the epicenter of the earthquake and Chengdu.... We cannot imagine that the monastery made it but we have yet to hear anything.

It will take weeks if not longer for people to make the four hour trek up the mountain. I know that I would never return now...

The monks were young and old and they celebrated Hana's 11th birthday with us. We were the only people staying there and it was such an incredible experience.

A couple of seconds can change everything....

The girls are back to school. Parents still linger in front wondering if they are doing the right thing. What if another aftershock hits and it is closer to Xi'an. We've had over 160 aftershocks that register more than 4. We haven't felt them but wonder when this will all be over.

The governments now worries and admits that a harder phase awaits the country: rebuilding and developing the region. Within a week, they expect to have temporary housing for between 50,000-100,000 people. Given that 5 million are homeless, this is certainly not enough but it is a start. Factories and people are working round the clock (not that new or surprising for China) and people/students are descending on the area to volunteer and help out. They are looking for foster parents to take care of the thousands of children who are stranded and possibly orphaned by the experience.

We are looking forward to less eventful weeks in China.

Our recent trip to Beijing




Some pictures from Beijing. This is Julia and the boys in front of the Forbidden Palace.

The day after the earthquake we took a train to Beijing. We had read that on any given day there are 2,000 cranes working on Beijing. It seemed like many more.

Although the city is modern, it is massive and many parts of the city are in rubble as new facades are constructed and the city prepares for the Olympics in August.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Earthquakes

The first real earthquake was on the May 12th at 2:28, as you know at my school, their are two halves of the school day, at 12:00 there is a lunch break till 2:30, and so school had not yet even started for the second half when my desk started to shake. I had my chinese book out and was copying a character when the desk started shaking, I looked over at my desk mate Luyan, to see why she was shaking the desk but as I glared at her I realized she too was glaring at me!Then suddenly we both realized that we weren't shaking the desk, and so we started looking around,and I noticed that not only was my desk shaking but also the TV, walls and windows all were shaking as well, for a moment my whole class stared in stunned silence, then my teacher yelled, "DI JIAN!" Earthquake. Then everyone started screaming and yelling and running for the door, of course I didn't know what they were talking about, I had never learned the word for earthquake, I had never needed to, so as everyone screamed around me I calmly put away my chinese book and contemplated whether or not to bring a book. Finally I decided against and went with the crowds. We reached the playground and I found it was hard for me to stand strait, I kept falling forward or backward, and I thought that I was just dizzy. We stayed there for an hour and a half then parents came to pick up their children, it had given us all quiet the scare.
Hana

Monday, May 19, 2008

Chaos continues

Yesterday we returned from Beijing...we were tired by the time we got to bed. At 12 am we got a phone call saying that they expected another aftershock and that we should be ready to leave our building at any time. After an hour and a half we went back to bed. In the morning,we heard that the aftershock came and was a 5.4...but we felt nothing.

I walked the girls to school (Jeff is with his brother traveling around the southeast)...when we got to school there was a crowd and some kids were going in and others were returning with their parents...I let the girls go in to check.

As I turned around, I saw hundreds of eyes upon me; parents outside waiting to see what the official word was from the school authorities: would they cancel school or not?

I wish I had a camera. Knowing how much people love children here, having only one child and knowing what has happened just hours from here...the thousands of children who were trapped and killed from the devastation. All I saw were empty, sad faces looking at me, wondering -- I am sure --- what I was doing there and why had I dropped my children off?

The girls returned and told me that school was optional today..again...as there was another aftershock at 5.4..not far from here.

Today they are expecting/predicting yet another afterschock....oh well, life remains interesting...esp when there is a huge construction project behind our apartment and in front of it...hard to know where the shaking is coming from!!