Documentary on Wuhans COVID-19 fight premieres in Beijing

(Xinhua)09:18, January 18, 2021

BEIJING, Jan. 17 (Xinhua) — Days and Nights in Wuhan, a documentary reflecting the lives of ordinary people in Wuhan, central Chinas Hubei Province during the COVID-19 epidemic, premiered in Beijing on Saturday.

The documentary is the collective work of 30 cinematographers, and consists of footage filmed on the COVID-19 front line, including the intensive care wards of hospitals. It recounts the touching stories of how people in Wuhan helped each other in the face of the epidemic.

By capturing moments from ordinary peoples lives during the citys unforgettable period, the film lauds the humanitarian spirit of those who contributed to the fight against COVID-19, said Cao Yin, the films presenter.

The film will hit the big screen on Jan. 22.

China publishes photocopies of Dunhuangs ancient Tibetan literature

(Xinhua)09:36, January 15, 2021

LANZHOU, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) — China has for the first time published photocopies of ancient Tibetan literature taken to France from the famed Mogao Grottoes a century ago.

The Dunhuang manuscripts were first discovered in 1900 in the Mogao Grottos, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in northwest Chinas Gansu Province. There are more than 60,000 of them, featuring history, politics, religion and folk customs. Dating from the 4th to 11th centuries, the majority of the manuscripts are in Chinese, but some are represented in other ethnic languages including Tibetan.

In the early 20th century, a large number of Dunhuang Tibetan manuscripts were taken to countries such as France and Britain. The Tibetan literature compiled and published this time is now preserved in the National Library of France.

Northwest Minzu University and Shanghai Chinese Classics Publishing House, together with editors from the National Library of France, compiled the photocopies, which have been published in 35 volumes as a set, with more than 28,000 high-definition pictures displayed in numerical sequence.

The series includes Tibetan literature in the 7th to 10th centuries covering Buddhist scriptures, historical works, contracts, legal texts and letters. The publications are expected to throw light on the socioeconomic activities and cultural exchanges between ethnic groups during the reign of Tubo in Dunhuang.

It took the editorial team about 15 years to arrange and compile the documents in Chinese and Tibetan languages. It is the first time that the entire Tibetan literature preserved in France has been published in the form of photocopies, said Tsering, editor-in-chief of the series.

China also plans to compile and publish in 2021 the ancient Tibetan manuscripts preserved in Britain. Chinese researchers are digitalizing the ancient literature amid the countrys efforts to study and preserve distinctive Tibetan culture. A database built upon the Tibetan manuscripts is projected to enable full-text retrieval in the future, according to Tsering.

A glimpse at Spring Festival Chinese film releases

(Xinhua)10:08, January 14, 2021

BEIJING, Jan. 13 (Xinhua) — The week-long Spring Festival holiday starting on Feb. 11 is usually a busy, lucrative movie screening season in China. It will see the release of eight titles, all domestic productions, according to the schedule already disclosed by film data platforms.

Detective Chinatown 3, the newest installment in Chinas well-received Detective Chinatown film franchise, topped the list of most-anticipated holiday films compiled by movie-ticketing platform Maoyan.

A sequel to the 2018 comedy hit Detective Chinatown 2 that grossed 3.4 billion yuan (526 million U.S. dollars), Detective Chinatown 3 is set for release on the Spring Festival that falls on Feb. 12. As of Wednesday, it joins six other titles. More than 3.7 million Maoyan users have expressed interest in seeing this film, according to data.

The other six films to be released on the same day are the time travel comedy Hi, Mom starring popular comedians Jia Ling and Shen Teng; the mobile game-turned fantasy film The Yinyang Master that stars Chen Kun and Zhou Xun; Boonie Bears: The Wild Life, the new installment in the domestic animated comedy franchise; Assassin in Red, a fantasy thriller film based on a novel co-starring popular actress Yang Mi; New Gods: Nezha Reborn, a new animated film from Light Chaser Animation (the same production company behind the 2019 animated movie White Snake); Ren Chao Xiong Yong, a comedy-drama co-starring singer and actor Andy Lau.

My First Love is Eighteen Years Old, a romance movie, is set to hit theaters on Feb. 14.

Chinas box office continued robust growth into 2021 after scoring a record high for New Years Day earnings. The total box office revenue in the first ten days of 2021 exceeded 2 billion yuan, up by more than 730 million yuan year on year.

The markets total earnings in 2020 were 20.4 billion yuan. Of these, the top 10 earners were all domestic productions, according to official figures.

3,000-yr-old copper workshop found in central China

(Xinhua)16:57, January 14, 2021

WUHAN, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) — Archaeologists have discovered a large copper workshop dating back to the Shang Dynasty (1600-1046 BC) in central Chinas Hubei Province.

The Guoyuanzui relic site in Huangpi District, the city of Wuhan, has offered a glimpse into the complete process of bronze making, from crafting molds to melting alloy, some 3,000 years ago in China, said researchers from the provincial institute of cultural relics and archaeology and Peking University.

Archaeologists started unearthing the site in 2019 and have so far revealed a 1,100-square-meter platform on which various steps in the bronze making process were carried out.

Hu Gang, an archaeologist with the institute, said they had found 15 stove foundations, over 200 pieces of crucibles and pottery molds, and 105 stone and copper tools.

One mold was designed for making a bronze container with a diameter of 25 cm at its mouth, suggesting that the site was once used to produce large bronze wares, said Fang Qin, director of the institute.

Analyses on copper slag indicated that copper-tin alloy was cast at the workshop, Fang said.

The site sheds light on how the Shang Dynasty ruled the Yangtze River region around 1226 BC and provides precious insight for major Bronze Age academic studies, including on bronze casting activities and transportation routes of raw materials, he said.

Pandemic leaves older people poorer, sicker and lonelier study

(Xinhua)09:40, January 14, 2021

GENEVA, Jan. 13 (Xinhua) — The COVID-19 pandemic leaves older people poorer, sicker and more isolated, according to a study conducted by the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) and published on Wednesday.

Focusing on Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, the research involving 2,200 elderly persons, health care workers and volunteer aged-care workers found that the pandemic has had dramatic impacts on the health and the social and financial situation of older people.

The consequences of COVID-19 are being borne disproportionately by poor and older people who have become poorer, sicker and more isolated, the study said.

The study found that older peoples ability to cover basic expenses has dropped significantly; their mental and physical health has deteriorated; their access to health care services has become significantly more difficult; their social contacts have decreased; and many of them have become subject to various forms of physical and financial abuses.

People aged over 65 represent a growing proportion of society in these countries. In Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, they made up, respectively, 15 percent, 11 percent and six percent of the total population in 2019, according to the World DataBank.

Nurses worldwide facing mass trauma amid COVID-19 pandemic report

(Xinhua)09:53, January 14, 2021

GENEVA, Jan. 13 (Xinhua) — COVID-19 is causing mass trauma among the worlds nurses, and the global number of confirmed nurse deaths now exceeds 2,200, the International Council of Nurses (ICN) said Wednesday in a report.

With high levels of infections in the nursing workforce continuing, overstretched staff are experiencing increasing psychological distress in the face of ever-increasing workloads, continued abuse and protests by anti-vaccinators, the council said.

Preliminary findings from the councils new survey of its 130-plus national nurses associations (NNAs), coupled with studies by its NNAs and other sources, suggest that the COVID-19 effect is a unique and complex form of trauma, with potentially devastating consequences in both the short- and long-term for individual nurses and healthcare systems they work in, it said.

The councils data showed that, since the first wave of the pandemic, the proportion of nurses reporting mental health distress has risen from 60 percent to 80 percent in many countries.

The pandemic risks damaging the nursing profession for generations to come unless governments take action now to address the COVID-19 effect, it said.

The world is already short of six million nurses, with another four million due to reach retirement age in the next ten years. With the COVID-19 effect potentially leading to even more nurses leaving the profession, governments must act now to protect the nursing profession, it said.

According to the council, the Japanese Nursing Association says 15 percent of hospitals across Japan had nurses resigning their jobs, and some 20 percent of nurses reported that they had experienced discrimination or prejudice amid the spread of the first wave of the pandemic.

The American Nurses Association reports 51 percent overwhelmed. Other reports from the U.S. show 93 percent of healthcare workers were experiencing stress, 76 percent reported exhaustion and burnout, and nurse-to-patient ratios increased three-fold.

Howard Catton, CEO of the council, explained that not only nurses are dealing with relentless, unprecedented demands from their patients, resulting in physical exhaustion, they also have to deal with rising death numbers, distress from patients relatives, concern about lack of equipment and abuse from various communities.

We are witnessing a unique and complex occupational trauma that is affecting the global nursing workforce, he said.

COVID-19 has exposed the fault lines in our healthcare systems, but if nations do not take immediate action to shore them up unbreachable chasms will be created with potentially devastating effects, Catton said.

Traditional ink paintings reflect changes in southern Chinese village

(Xinhua)13:29, January 12, 2021

NANNING, Jan. 12 (Xinhua) — As China bids farewell to absolute poverty, many traditional ink paintings focusing on the theme of poverty alleviation have demonstrated the changes in southern Chinese villages.

Shang Xinzhou, a painter from the Guangxi Arts University, has been creating traditional ink paintings depicting poverty-stricken areas for over five years.

Thanks to my experience in Duomai Village, I can make the paintings more vivid, said the 36-year-old painter, who has spent two and a half years as head of Duomais poverty alleviation team in Baise City, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.

Shangs paintings changed alongside the progress made in the fight against poverty. The focus of his works shifted from unfavorable local conditions and peoples hard time to better infrastructure and happy lives.

In his paintings, rocky paths and shabby houses were replaced by wide concrete roads and buildings made of bricks and steel, and the poultry and silkworm industries are highlighted.

I like drawing peoples real lives and impressive moments, and paintings became a bridge for communication between me and the local people, said Shang.

During his stay, he used his paintings to help villagers sell their products.

Shang has helped us promote local agricultural products by posting works depicting pigs and chickens on social media to attract buyers, said Zhou Jiahu, a 37-year-old local farmer.

To enrich the local nightlife, he sold paintings to buy street lamps so people could enjoy square dancing in the evenings.

Shangs delicate works enjoyed wide popularity in the village. I love his paintings and they reflect the earth-shaking changes in our village, said Zhou.

In recent years, more artists have traveled to impoverished mountain villages to record the development of Chinas rural areas, presenting stories of the countrys battle against poverty.

Ive been a witness to the local poverty alleviation efforts. I want to record the changes of this era with my brush and create more works about people, said Shang.

A foreigners search for kung fu

(Xinhua)14:56, January 12, 2021

BEIJING, Jan. 12 (Xinhua) — What comes to mind when you think of kung fu? If your mind is filled with images of Shaolin monks, Bruce Lee, jaw-dropping stunts or Kung Fu Panda, you wouldnt be wrong. But for Laurence J. Brahm, an American documentary filmmaker, the first thing that springs to mind is the concept of non-violence.

Wushu, the official Chinese name for kung fu, has been translated into martial arts in English. Martial means military, Brahm told a roomful of people attending the premiere of his latest work, Searching for Kung Fu.

As Brahm explained, if you break down the character wu, it consists of two characters: one is ge, meaning dagger-axe; the other is zhi, meaning to stop. So, the meaning of martial arts in Chinese is not the art of fighting, a notion that many people take for granted. On the contrary, he said, kung fu is the art of stopping fighting, the art of non-violence.

In the movie, Brahm takes the audience on a kind of pilgrimage, inviting them to accompany him as he travels to a host of historically important locations in search for the origins of kung fu.

Beyond that, Brahm delves into the principles and values embedded in this Chinese cultural legacy, which dates back thousands of years but retains its enormous influence and attraction to this day.

After the premiere in Beijing, Brahm sat down for an exclusive interview with Xinhua.

GET TO THE ROOT

The decision to produce Searching for Kung Fu was not impulsive. Brahm has a fourth-degree black belt in karate and has been practicing various Chinese kung fu styles for more than 40 years. The movie is the culmination of his passion, insight and discoveries.

Brahms relationship with kung fu dates back to the 1970s when he was a karate student in Hawaii.

My master always told me that if you want to fully understand karate, you have to go to Shaolin in China. Thats where the origin is, Brahm said. Karate was developed in Okinawa under the influence of both northern and southern Shaolin. I wanted to get to the root of it.

This intention, to go to Shaolin and learn about martial arts, saw Brahm travel across the Pacific Ocean to China.

In 1981, two years after China and the United States established diplomatic relations, Brahm landed in Tianjin, north China, becoming a student at Nankai University. Later the same year, he managed to visit the Shaolin Temple for the very first time.

Todays Shaolin, situated at the foot of the Songshan Mountain in central China, is somewhat of a shrine to kung fu. Hundreds of thousands of martial-arts practitioners, fans and other adventurers visit every year.

But at that time, very few people were there training in martial arts. I discovered that there were many masters out there, but they were quiet. People were learning, but it was very hidden. People were just beginning to reawaken to their own culture and the martial arts, Brahm reminisced.

He retreated from the mountain, a little disappointed at not finding the martial-arts paradise he expected. But his passion for kung fu and his desire to find out more were stronger than ever before.

Over the following decades, he spent time as a lawyer, government advisor, explorer and film director, actively participating in and recording Chinas development.

Throughout the years, there remained one constant: his commitment as an avid student of kung fu, spanning tai chi, Wing Chun, Jeet Kune Do, among a host of other forms, learning under some of the best kung fu masters in China.

I trained in many different styles over the years to understand all of them, Brahm said.

The thought of making a documentary about kung fu had been in the back of Brahms mind for years. In 2018, he found a producer, and the dream became a reality.

Filming started in May 2019, with Brahm and his team travelling to several locations: Shaolin Temple, the origin of a large variety of forms of kung fu; Chenjiagou Village, the ancestral home of Chen-style tai chi; and Jingwu Town, the hometown of kung fu legend Huo Yuanjia. He also took in several other locations around China that have some significance in the story of martial arts.

I think, to me, whats really important was going back to Shaolin, Brahm said. There was almost a reason for not wanting to go back. I had to wait for the right time.

This time, he said he was really happy to see Shaolin rebuilt and martial arts thriving. He spent time with Shi Deyang, the 31st lineage holder of Shaolin kung fu.

You know, to be with him over those days in Shaolin, to be able to train with him, work with him, talk with him, and look at the origins — we went up to the Bodhidharma Cave and practiced up there — this is a really important moment in my life, Brahm said.

We found out that taekwondo, karate and many many different styles all recognize that Shaolin is the source, and it goes back at least to the Yuan Dynasty, Brahm said, citing written records in the Pagoda Forest at Shaolin Temple showing that people came from other countries to visit hundreds of years ago.

VALUES OF KUNG FU

Daily kung fu practice has long been routine for Brahm; it is the way he greets the day.

He recalled how he could not use one of his legs for about two years around 2010, and had to walk with crutches and a cane. However, by practicing martial arts, very, very slowly at the beginning, he was able to recover step by step.

Martial arts can help us connect our body, connect our neural system, connect our blood flow, and also help connect us into our environment to increase our awareness. Martial arts is moving meditation, Brahm said, his eyes bright and piercing.

But to him, Kung fus charm and values are far more than that.

In making his film, Brahm has looked into a dozen different forms of kung fu, interviewing many masters and scholars in the process. He has combined this knowledge with his own experience as a practitioner and tutor to extract 12 key principles and values of the martial arts: perseverance, roots, loyalty, respect, harmony, change, balance, centering, emptiness, flow, pragmatism and non-violence.

Kung fu movies have a massive fanbase around the world, not just because of the fight scenes, but also because of the wisdom, philosophy, morality and strategy within the movies, according to Brahm.

Id like to share these values and wisdom with the whole world, because I believe that they are universal and can be used to handle the challenges people face today, he said.

Brahm hopes his movie can help build bridges and understanding across nations and among people.

He makes use of vivid examples to illustrate the values that he has identified. Of all the martial arts Ive learned, all styles, we always start with a defensive move, never to strike. And I think thats the essence of it. Its not about hurting someone. Its about preventing violence, he said.

Kung fu practitioners salute with baoquan, literally meaning fist wrapping. The common etiquette shows two things at least. One is you have a fist, but youre also not using it. And then youre showing I have no concealed weapons. I have nothing to hide. Its trust.

Whenever a person goes to a martial-arts dojo, they must abide by the values — respecting teachers, classmates and heritage. The martial arts community has this concept of loyalty and respect. Its a very high standard, said Brahm.

All of the martial artists, the ones that are really, really good, are very peaceful people. They will not pick a fight. They will avoid a fight at all costs. When you know how to use force, you are the last one to use force, because you know the outcome of this thing.

MIRROR OF CHINESE CULTURE

Kung fu, in my eyes, is a mirror of Chinese culture, Brahm said. The traditional values of kung fu, actually, are in the minds of all Chinese people.

China adopts a policy of not wanting to have conflict with other countries. Why does China want to be in harmony with other nations? Its part of the psychology of the Chinese people. Its also national psychology.

Brahm also believes that todays world urgently needs to restart equal exchanges between countries without stereotypes, and that culture and sports, such as kung fu, can serve as a great channel and platform.

In the same way, ping pong as a cultural and sports exchange opened relations for China with the west in the 1970s, kung fu can become the new cultural diplomacy of our time, bringing people together in mutual sharing of skills and culture, and furthering respect and understanding.

Earliest Chu relics in Chinas Hunan discovered

(Xinhua)15:54, January 12, 2021

CHANGSHA, Jan. 12 (Xinhua) — Archaeologists in central Chinas Hunan Province have excavated a batch of cultural relics that boast distinctive Chu culture characteristics and are the earliest of their kind ever found in Hunan.

The unearthed stoneware, pottery and ruins of workshops, pits and wells date back to the mid-Spring and Autumn Period (770 B.C.-476 B.C.), said experts with the Hunan provincial institute of cultural relics and archaeology, which led the excavation work.

Spanning an area of 2,500 square meters, the excavation was conducted last year at the Luocheng ruins site in the city of Yueyang. The site was widely regarded by archaeologists as a county established by the Chu State in its heyday to expand its territory southward.

The discoveries provide evidence that the Chu culture entered the region of todays Hunan through migration of the Chu people, and the Luocheng site could be one of their earliest settlements.

Chu, a powerful state during the Spring and Autumn Period and the ensuing Warring States Period (475 B.C.-221 B.C.), was largely situated in the area of todays Hubei Province, which borders Hunan to the south.

Cicada-shaped jade unearthed from 3,000-yr-old tomb in central China

(Xinhua)10:05, January 13, 2021

ZHENGZHOU, Jan. 12 (Xinhua) — Archaeologists in central China have uncovered a jade item carved to resemble a cicada from a tomb dating back to the Xia Dynasty (2070-1600 BC).

Researchers from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) said the 4-cm-long jade item was found in a tomb in the Erlitou relics site in the city of Yanshi, Henan Province.

Experts speculate that the jade cicada may have been inspired by imaginations stemming from insect molting, including deeming it a new life after death and a way to communicate with the gods.

Zhao Haitao, a researcher with the CASS, said the jade was among the first group of artifacts unearthed from the tomb, which is likely to have the largest collection of burial objects at the site.

As we continue cleaning the tomb (to identify objects), it is highly likely that well have more important discoveries, Zhao said, adding that the discovery of numerous kallaite pieces in the tomb indicated the existence of a large kallaite artifact yet to be revealed.

Previously, a rare dragon-shaped artifact consisting of over 2,000 kallaite stones was discovered at another tomb at the site.