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Veteran US diplomat
Joseph J. Borich has two tales to tell about Shanghai, with
more than 20 years between them. Borich first came to Shanghai in 1978, when the
city had no expressway or international airport. The few
dozen foreigners living there could fit in any one of the
banquet halls in the city's grand hotels today, he
recalled.
"The tallest
building back then was the 24-storey International
Hotel," he said.
Borich, 58,
is executive director of the Washington State -- China
Relations Council. He served as consul general at the US
Consulate in Shanghai from 1994 to 1997.
What impressed Borich most during his first China
visit was his embarrassment at being the center of local
people's attention wherever he went.
"Shanghai did not have many entertainment
facilities back then -- in fact, we foreigners were
"entertainment" enough for the local
citizens," he joked.
As few
Shanghaiers had met a foreigner before, most people -- no
matter what they were doing -- would simply stop to stare at
him curiously whenever he came into view, he
recalled.
Borich once went to the
Shanghai Zoo with three American colleagues. "There
were about 5,000 visitors there that day," he said,
"You can't imagine it: we outshone all the animals! All
these people were watching as we passed by. Even the animals
were staring at us as if we were ETs."
Borich is unsure exactly how many times he has
been to Shanghai since.
"I
have been here two or three times a year since 1978,"
he said. He is now on his third Shanghai tour for this year
as advisor to the American team for the second Sino-US chess
contest.
The veteran diplomat said
he saw changes in this oriental metropolis each time he
came. "No other city in the world has undergone so many
changes in so short a time," he said.
The most profound changes, however, lay in
people's attitudes and way of life, he added.
Today, crowds of foreigners lived in every corner
of the city and were on good terms with the
locals.
"Instead of being
stared at like ETs, foreigners have actually become a part
of Shanghai," he said.
Over
the years, Borich has made a number of Chinese friends and
learned to speak excellent Chinese.
He has also got a Chinese name -- "Bo
Ruiqi" -- which sounds very much like
"Borich" and which he has proudly printed on his
business card.
"I'll come
here whenever I have the chance, because I consider Shanghai
my second hometown," he said.
((based
upon a July 23 story by Xinhua from Shanghai)
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