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First Days in Shenyang
Wednesday 30 August 2000
Arrival

After such a long trip, I was tired and irritated: Xiao was plain grumpy. Fortunately the mood lightened significantly upon meeting Xiao's parents, who were quick to swoop upon us complete with several family members. It was a relief to have our baggage removed from our shoulders and there was little need to understand any Mandarin at all to comprehend the emotions of Xiao's family in meeting us. We were handed flowers and ushered into a minivan, whereupon we were driven from the airport.

Shenyang is a dirty, dusty city and is almost uniformly the ochre colour of Chinese skin. It persists under a permanent haze of dust from the constant reconstruction of almost every bulding in sight. I wondered how the inhabitants could still determinedly profess the glory of their culture from within a grotto the size of a state: however, the answer came very quickly. The people who live here are persistently improving the city without thought of stopping - what at first seemed a metropolis of neglect turned out to be merely an unthinkable amount of work to be done. Expansion is needed to cushion the growing population, as well as the removal of old clay brick blocks and their rebuilding anew.

We enjoyed a brief stop at Xiao's grandmother's where we were treated to a traditional welcome-back noodle dinner. I reflected that I have spent at least $2000 on Chinese food in the past two years: I now regard that money as entirely wasted, mere gruel in comparison with the genuine product.

Finally we arrived at the apartment block. It is another reflection on the practical local character that the building was drab and unwashed on the outside, and yet the apartment inside was stylish and extremely well-kept.
 

Xiao and her Father before the apartment
Xiao and her father in front of the apartment
Michael at apartment door
Myself at apartment door
Xiao's mother's family inside
Xiao's mother's family visiting in our apartment
My new bedroom
My new bedroom

Shenyang at Night

A dinner with the whole family welcomed us to the city and gave me an opportunity to see the locale at night. The streets were warm and lantern-lit, swimming with locals unsatisfied with staying indoors. We walked to a local restaurant past carts of watermelons, which were sliced into portions for the buyers who squatted on the sidewalk over drains to eat and spit the seeds. From top storey windows karaoke enthusiasts sang unashamedly out of key in heavy reverb, their tuneless vibrato spilling out into the evening heat. The sidewalks seemed to extend a lane or two onto the road, which itself was divided by an ambiguous centre line. Pedestrians distractedly dodged bikes and vehicles honking happily as an announcement moreso than a warning.

I met Xiao's family and was treated to numerous exotic dishes - the best of which was a generous heap of taro pieces drenched in thick golden syrup. The pieces were dipped in cold water to freeze the caramel, forming a crust of hokey-pokey. The recipe apparently dates to the Qing dynasty, which arose from the Manchurian kingdom based in Shenyang. Curiously, the locals seem to be more informed about the Qing period of Shenyang's history than they are of more recent matters - Noone at the dinner table could tell me the location of the city of Mukden, the name by which Shenyang was known worldwide until merely 50 years ago, when the Chinese wrested control of the region from the then-occupying Japanese forces.

The Inner City

In the first couple of days, I had several opportunities to explore central Shenyang with Xiao and her parents. Shenyang is almost impossible to photograph - there are so many discrete scenes of character that no single shot seemed to capture the feeling of the place. It is busy and dusty, teeming with bicyclists, chubby shirtless mahjong players and heavily made-up young women grimly ignoring the dirt. On every doorstep is a wizened old woman or a smoking, stubbly youth - there seemed no point in photographing any of them owing to their weary regularity.

We visited the huge statue of Chairman Mao Zedong, one of the remaining memorials of this now hesitantly criticised leader. Mao was worshipped in his life; now the red book of thoughts is no longer read before meals as a grace, and the fervent, muscled men and women carved in the base of the statue have been relieved of their copies by disillusioned vandals. Opposite is a huge photograph of the pop star Ekin, overshadowing the statue - his arm is extended presenting not a red book of thoughts, but a mobile phone. Mao appears to be reaching for it greedily.
 

Chairman Mao
Mao
Xiao before Ekin and the Cellphone
Xiao before Ekin
Statue of Mao


Government Hall
Government Hall
Government Square
Government Square

Streets of Shenyang

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