Monday, October 2, 2006

The China Pagoda


Why did I call my blog View from The China Pagoda?

Pagoda’s are a typically Chinese construction. Well, you also find them in Japan, but they probably borrowed the idea from China.

China still has thousands of pagoda’s. They are elegant, beautiful constructions. You can climb to the top of many of them along a rickety staircase. Sometimes it is so narrow you have to be pretty slim to make it to the top. One such pagoda is the one on the hilltop in Yan’an, the old revolutionary base area where Mao ended up after the Long March. I didn’t make it to the top of that one. It was really too narrow and claustrophobic.

The Big and Small Wild Goose Pagoda in Xian are also quite famous. If you do make it to the top of those structures you have a nice bird-eye view of the surroundings. When I climbed to the top of a pagoda in Yinchuan, capital of the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, I could see a church building which was completely invisible from the street. I dropped by and learned that the church had been founded by Flemish missionaries in 1920s!

Pagoda’s are no ivory towers. You don’t lock yourself up in them to escape from the world. On the contrary, from the top storey, they give you a general view. Once back down, you have a better idea how to explore the surroundings.

So the pagoda is a metaphor for my blog: keep an eye on the overall picture, get down to earth and fill in the blanks.

In tomorrow’s post we’ll have a look at another famous pagoda, the Longhua Pagoda in Shanghai, which has been opened for the first time since 1949 for just three days from October 1 to October 3. 

No comments: