A Passage to China


A Passage to China is a free, annual outreach event instituted by our Foundation in 2008. Taking place at a shopping mall and consisting of numerous interactive activities and cultural performances, the goal of this event is to advance mutual courtesy and understanding among all peoples in Minnesota and around the world.  This is best expressed by the commissioned couplet that hangs at our entrance gates:

ChCouplet

 

In the midst of the beauty of mutual understanding we will succeed and thrive together.

In a world in which we extend each other mutual courtesy we will shine in blessed splendor together.

 

dragonfly-bullet-right2011 A Passage to China

dragonfly-bullet-right2010 A Passage to China

dragonfly-bullet-right2009 A Passage to China

dragonfly-bullet-right2008 A Passage to China

 

08APTC2

08APTC7

09APTC4

09APTCLanterns

 

 



Genesis - A Passage to China owes its genesis to Greg Hugh, publisher of China Insight. In late winter 2008 Greg inquired if CHF would be planning any activity in celebration of Asian Pacific Heritage Month in May. Our Advisory Committee thought it would be a good idea and began brainstorming. We arrived at the concept of a fair consisting of interactive booths at which fair goers would be introduced to different aspects of Chinese culture, e.g. paper folding, using chopsticks, Chinese painting and calligraphy, meeting historical figures, learning to use an abacus, making Chinese lanterns and masks, etc. Manning these booths would be by the cultural organizations in our community.


To encourage participation each fair goer would be issued a "passport." On completing an activity, the attendee would receive a stamp on the map of China in APTCPassporthis/her passport. The province/city that would be stamped would be associated with the activity just completed. Upon obtaining a requisite number of stamps the attendee may come to the CHF table and claim a prize: a hong bao with a brand new Chinese coin in it.


To complement all the interactive activities there would be continuous cultural performances and entertainment, and, of course, Chinese food!


The primary target audience for our event would be the greater Twin Cities community. We wished to attract people who don't usually attend Chinese events and to invite them to get to know us. The best venue for our outreach events therefore would be a shopping mall.


This concept received prompt and enthusiastic endorsement from numerous organizations in our community. It became a reality rapidly.


Inspiration for Title - the inspiration came from the 1924 novel by E. M. Foster: A Passage to India. This novel centers around a young Indian physician who aspired to all things English, an English colonial officer, a young English woman and her chaperone. Through a series of complex, enigmatic, and highly charged events all 4 of them came to a better, though at times unsettling, understanding of themselves. The young Indian physician, after being falsely accused of raping the young English woman, rediscovered his Indian heritage and returned to his home village. The young English woman found personal growth and maturity through honesty and returned to England. In presenting the different perspectives of its four principals, the book explores inter-racial relationships against the backdrop of the sometimes-brutal English rule in India.


In presenting A Passage to China at an international shopping mall, we offer everyone an opportunity to take an inner journey into a better understanding of ourselves and, at the same time, to seek our own place in an increasingly multicultural world.