Posts Tagged ‘Beijing’

SQR Jingcheng 500 KM Charity Cycle Challenge: 8th to 9th August 2009

Friday, July 10th, 2009

The Confederation of British Industry’s Chief Representative in Beijing is raising money for a key SQR project, the Guangji Kindergarten & Community Centre.

Many Beijing residents will have travelled along some part of the Jingcheng (Beijing to Chengde) highway enroute perhaps to the Great Wall at either Mutianyu or Jinshanling.

Guy Dru Drury, the CBI's Chief Representative in Beijing, prepares to take on the gruelling 500km 2009 JCCR

Guy Dru Drury, the CBI's Chief Representative in Beijing, prepares to take on the gruelling 500km 2009 JCCR

However, have you ever considered continuing along its entirety, past Beijing’s principal reservoir at Miyun and on into the mountains that lead, after 200 KM, to the imperial resort of Chengde? Well, if you do then you’ll be visiting the summer hideaway of successive Chinese Emperors who created their very own “summer palace” nestled in the mountains that overlook the Mongolian steppes. It is home to China’s largest palace garden and, incidentally, the world’s shortest river, the Rehe. At a mere 9 miles in length it feeds the bucolic Rehe springs and is largely contained within the vast expanse of the royal palace grounds.  In August, and tentatively scheduled to coincide with the one year anniversary of the Olympic opening ceremony, the CBI’s Chief Representative, Guy Dru Drury, will be embarking on his own journey from Beijing to Chengde following the route of the Jingcheng highway.  Travelling by a mixture of road and mountain bike he aims to cover the mountainous 500km roundtrip route in 20 hours over the weekend of the 8 August.

It is all in the name of a good cause, namely raising money for the reconstruction of the Guangji Kindergarten destroyed in last year’s devastating earthquake.

Downloadable information

If you would like to support Guy’s efforts then please give generously to SQR directly.  By the way, if you do want to visit Chengde you can of course travel there in air‐conditioned comfort either by car or rail if a 20 hour cycle ride is not your preferred means of transport!

Guy Dru Drury (guydd@cbi.org.uk and gdrudrury@gmail.com)

Beijing 01.07.09

20090408: Xinhua: Seeking art to help Sichuan kids, build schools

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Seeking art to help Sichuan kids, build schools
www.chinaview.cn  2009-04-08 09:16:22

BEIJING, April. 8 — It’s been nearly a year, but the horrible Sichuan earthquake still haunts like nightmare, especially for the children who lost their families.
A major charity art auction, including masterpieces by Xu Beihong and Zhu Ming, will run from May 30 to 31 to raise money to “build nine schools and help child survivors of the Sichuan earthquake,” according to Chongyuan Art Auction House, the local co-organizer.
The sale will offer at least 170 works, including traditional ink-wash paintings, sculptures and canvases from many artists and collectors both in Shanghai and Taiwan, says Ji Chongjian, owner of the local auction house.
More works are welcome and the support of businesses, collectors and individuals is encouraged.
“Besides the money raised from this charity auction, we will also donate our commission to aid those children,” says Ji.
Works received to date include a scroll jointly painted by famed local artists Chen Jialing, Xie Chunyan and others.
The auction is organized by the Tzu Chi Foundation, a nonprofit organization founded in 1966 by Dharma Master Cheng Yen in Hualien, Taiwan.

The charity art auction will be the first major exposure of the Tzu Chi Foundation Shanghai.
In May last year, Tzu Chi donated 500 million yuan (73.53 million U.S. dollars) in financial assistance to Wenchuan, the earthquake epicenter.
In the immediate aftermath, Tzu Chi provided support, including hot food, for survivors and rescue workers.
“Most important, we try to comfort people and help them heal from the trauma,” says Master Cheng Yen.
Volunteers took frightened children to tents and soothed them through talking and massage.
At hospitals volunteers served as “good listeners for the exhausted medical staff and rescue workers who were in great need of a shoulder to cry on,” says the master.

Tzu Chi volunteers went worldwide to help survivors of the Sichuan quake. They went to 1,900 locations in 23 countries, going out onto the streets with donation boxes.
“Whether they received a large bill or just a single coin, the volunteers bowed in gratitude,” says Master Cheng Yen. “They worked with a humble heart and showed sincere respect to all who made donations.
“This is the power of love,” the master says.
Tzu Chi is an international, volunteer-led, charitable organization providing humanitarian aid, spiritual care and medical services to families and communities locally and internationally. It focuses on charitable services, medical services, education and cultural services.
Tzu Chi claims more than 13 million volunteers around the globe.
Volunteers have worked in disaster relief on the Chinese mainland since 1991 when devastating floods hit central and eastern China. The organization was officially recognized and registered as a charitable body in March 2008.
Master Cheng Yen calls relief work on the Chinese mainland as “building a bridge of love.”
Tzu Chi has worked in charity, medicine, education, environmental protection, promotion of humane values and community volunteer work.
“Of course, we need many collectors and entrepreneurs to join in. Without them, the goodwill can’t be realized,” she says.
Chongyuan Art Auction House maintains all art donations.
In Shanghai’s Putuo District, the Tzu Chi group is helping elderly and widowed people by giving them a regular living allowance, says one volunteer, declining to be identified.
“Love is the sole driving force in our mission,” she says. “Only through an open loving heart can we truly change the world into a better place for all, alleviate the suffering of mankind, and reverse the trend of violence and destruction.”

Date: May 30-31
Venue: Westin hotel, 88 Henan Rd M.
Call 5403-8051 for more information
Master Cheng Yen and Tzu Chi Foundation
Born Wang Jinyun in 1937 in Taichung County, Taiwan, Master Cheng Yen’s first contact with Buddhist Dharma came when she was 23 and searching for a burial place for her father, who has died of a stroke suddenly.
She founded the Buddhist Compassion Relief Tzu-Chi Foundation, commonly known as Tzu Chi, in 1966. Its motto: “Instructing the rich and saving the poor.”
Tzu Chi means “serving with compassion.”
Later, Cheng Yen’s charity, medical, education and culture missions developed. Today the Tzu Chi Foundation takes part in international disaster relief, bone marrow donation campaigns, environmental protection and community volunteering of many kinds.

20090222: Preferential policy for college graduates from quake-hit regions

Friday, February 27th, 2009

2009-02-22  来源:成都日报

Central Department of Education has released a series of preferential policy for this year’s college graduates. And students from quake-hit regions will also receive additional allowance (if needed) from colleges they study in when applying jobs such as travel expenses and commumication costs.

应届毕业生记者昨日获悉,为了促进大学毕业生就业工作,教育部等近期出台了一系列优惠政策,以进一步推动大学毕业生就业工作。据悉,汶川大地震灾区生源毕业生今年求职,若家庭经济困难,还可获得高校给予的路费、通讯费等求职补贴。

北京援建什邡:毕业生可优先办进京就业手续

来源:四川在线/北京晚报

In line with a support program revealed by Beijing City government, job applications of Shifang students who have been studying in Beijing and intend to stay and work are privileged to be processed first. Moreover, a minimum yearly supply of employment position is promised to job applicants from Shifang.

北京市政府公布“北京市对口支援什邡市灾后恢复重建智力援助方案”,在京就读的什邡灾区生源毕业生意愿在京就业,可优先办理进京就业手续。此外,今后每年将至少有1000名什邡灾区劳动力在京实现就业。

Educational training, psychological counseling, technology support and constructional assistance are also planned to be provided to related realms in the next 3 years.

根据灾区恢复重建对重建规划、建设施工、教育、卫生、科技、旅游、交通、农业等领域的重点需求,北京市将采取专家服务团、留学人才服务团或选派高层次人才等形式为灾区提供咨询指导、技术援助、人才培养等智力服务。三年合计派服务团4至5批,每批10至15人。

同时,每年组织由30人组成的北京知名教育专家和优秀教师支教团赴什邡开展为期一个月的支教活动,就地培训什邡市小学、初中、高中校长、管理人员和各学科教师,计划3年培训各类管理人员和教师3000人次。

Beijing municipality to invest 7 billion yuan in Sichuan

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

Beijing is expected to invest at least 7 billion yuan (1.02 billion U.S. dollars) in the quake-hit Sichuan Province in the coming two years, according to Mayor Guo Jinlong on October 8, Xinhua reported.

Beijing municipality has been tasked with Shifang. The money will be used on construction, intellectual support and industry cooperation. The focus this year is 39 programs, including construction of residential buildings, schools and hospitals, Guo said. In total, 86 energy-saving houses provided by Beijing had been delivered to Shifang Municipal Welfare Centre. In addition, the city had provided 11,696 jobs to Shifang City residents and received 1,579 students from one of the worst-hit areas in the May 12 quake. The conference proposed 685 post-quake programs with a total investment of 601.7 billion yuan. These included industries of hi-tech, resources, equipment manufacturing, agriculture, service trade, culture, tourism and infrastructure. Beijing and Sichuan companies signed 54 agreements here on Wednesday involving a total investment of 66.6 billion yuan.

“Sichuan Foreigners Rally to Help Locals”, People’s Daily Online

Monday, May 19th, 2008

From the People’s Daily:

The Chengdu expat community is rallying to support locals in relief and recovery efforts to overcome this disaster. Foreigners want to give and want to personally help the victims of this natural disaster in anyway they can. Under the auspices of local expat businesses, appeals have begun for donations.

Peter Goff, in partnership with Chengdu residents and through the cooperation of The Bookworm, is leading one of these appeals. The Bookworm is a bustling expat online community on book and culture-related activity and has branches in Beijing, Chengdu, and in Suzhou of East China’s Jiangsu province.

The Bookworm Chengdu has become a focal point in assisting expat support for quake victims. Smaller groups, such as Heart to Heart and Morning Tears, are also providing food, water, shelter and medicines.

Expat music acts, including the Bossma Band, Mark on the Piano, Proximity Butterfly and Red Water performed to raise funds at a Bookworm event last Thursday. Heart to Heart also gave a short presentation on their current operations in the affected areas. From the successful one night, more than 33,000 yuan ($4,700) was raised in funds from about 100 members of the local expat community to be directly used by local groups in the relief effort.

Further donations, especially cash, are still welcomed by the groups. Much needed items include: non-perishable food, basic medicines, tents, blankets, sleeping bags, stretchers, small power-generators, small water sanitation equipment, and simple housing materials. The local expat community is also committed to helping fellow residents in the medium to longer-term community recovery efforts. This community recovery process is held together by communication of information which enables people to know what is needed, co-ordinate their activities and avoid creating additional problems.

Sichuan expats centered on the activities of The Bookworm are moving forward to helping interpret the information on all current relief operations and exactly where and when people can help to make a difference to those affected by the disastrous earthquake. For more information regarding donations and recovery efforts, contact the Bookworm on (+86) 028 8552-0177.

The author is Australian Youth Ambassador for Development with the Chengdu Urban Rivers Association.