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Many Russian students are
coming to China to sharpen their Chinese language skills for better jobs
back home |
A notebook in hand, Mary
Lepneva wrote down all the Chinese phrases that were new to her, while working
as a volunteer for the Fourth China-Russia Women's Cultural Week.
The student of the Moscow State Institute of International Relations will
come to Beijing this August for the Chinese-speaking contest to be held by the
Chinese Language Council of the Ministry of Education. She has a good chance of
winning with her perfect pronunciation, which she has achieved by making a lot
of Chinese friends in Moscow.
Learning Chinese is becoming popular in Russia owing to a growing need for
people with the language skills and offers of good salaries, says a student of
Moscow University who was also a volunteer and prefers to be known by his
Chinese name, Mo Andong.
Graduates who can speak Chinese find jobs easily at Russian companies,
government departments and also at subsidiaries of multi-nationals in Russia,
and receive a much higher than average payment. "The Chinese language is a very
good major, indeed," he says.
Many young people in Russia are going in for a short study stint in China to
polish their language skills, he says. Mo himself stayed in Beijing for one
year, and Lepneva is going to study at the Beijing Foreign Language University
in 2009. She is also applying to be a volunteer at the 2008 Olympic Games in
Beijing.
Anna and her boyfriend, both college students and volunteers at the Culture
Week, also plan to study the language in China and have been admitted to
Guangzhou University. "China is being talked about all the time here and people
want to know more about China. So do we," she says.
The theme of the Cultural Week, and also the Year of China in Russia, is to
give Russians a better knowledge and understanding of their neighbor.
During the week from July 2 to 8, Gu Xiulian, vice-chairwoman of the Standing
Committee of the National People's Congress and president of the All-China
Women's Federation (ACWF), led a Chinese delegation to Moscow and St Petersburg
and met senior Russian officials such as Boris Gryzlov, chairman of the state
Duma, lower house of Russia's parliament and First Deputy Prime Minister Dmitri
Medvedev, as well as her Russian counterpart Svetlana Orlova.
One of the highlights of the celebrations was a song-and-dance show by
typical families from both China and Russia. Other events included a forum
involving Chinese and Russian women, the second of its kind, and an exhibition
of folk handicrafts.
At the forum, women of the two countries exchanged views on topics such as
marriage, family, education of the youth and life of the elderly. "Both sides
highly value the actions of Chinese and Russian women's non-governmental
organizations in the strengthening of families, promotion of sexual equality and
social security," says an agreement reached at the forum, which was read at the
Culture Week's closing ceremony by Orlova and ACWF's vice-president Zhao
Shaohua.
The agreement also condemns all violence targeting children and women as well
as sexual discrimination, and calls for even better communication between the
two countries' parliaments, youth, women and non-governmental organizations.
Editor: Cindy