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Just Leave the Dishes | “Granny's Notes” | My First 84 Years |
Sidewalk
capitalists abound in China By Sue Gerard First published in Columbia Daily Tribune on 1999-08-10 We were 16 American youth hostelers cycling in Communist
China, only the second group of foreigners permitted to bicycle
there after the bloody revolution of 1949. A bike mishap required
that I be examined, so the next morning one of our interpreters
walked with a Chinese man and me to a hospital. After an
examination, some white tablets and a lengthy report in Chinese
characters, our interpreter paid the 35-cent doctor bill. She
wrote the address of our hotel on the tag of my purse so I could
stay downtown and wander as I pleased. Thus began the most unique
experiences of my life! A foreigner should not have been
permitted this kind of freedom. Women laughed with us as a fellow selling raw sugar-cane
stalks taught me to chew the sweet out at one corner of my mouth
and let the fibrous part drop to the street from the other
corner. Hungry chickens raced up right there on Canton’s
sidewalk and ate the fiber. Onlookers laughed with us. A woman saw me preparing to photograph a hundred flies which
were feasting on her messy meat-chopping block. She cussed me out
and shooed the flies away as I lifted my camera. The flies were
gone, but I photographed the meat block and the lady and
quickly left. About 50 people came in off the street when I was trying to
buy acupuncture needles. I tried pantomime, but I’m not good
at that. A fellow in the crowd coached the pharmacist, and he
offered the wrong things. An elderly woman looked over my
shoulder and pronounced each letter as I wrote in big block
letters, but she didn’t know the word
"acupuncture." Finally, I sketched a hand and arm with
a needle sticking in it and pantomimed "ouch!" A man
understood it immediately and told the seller, who turned and
pulled out the drawer of acupuncture needles without moving out
of his tracks! The crowd clapped and cheered, a rare emotion for
these people. Workers are not charged for selling goods or services on the
sidewalks. A man was selling dried, smoked fish about eight
inches long. A man and boy were selling sticks for kindling fires
in small bundles. Several people offered onions, potatoes and
other dry vegetables from their tiny home gardens. I "chatted" with a woman who repaired old umbrellas
putting in new stays, mending torn covers, etc. She was all
smiles as we each spoke our own language. A crowd gathered.
People walk the streets a lot, lacking other entertainment. When
I asked permission to take her picture, she shook her head
"no," still smiling. People watching urged me to take
the photo anyway. She kept refusing and smiling, and I snapped
the shutter. It was another happy encounter. I visited with a man and his wife repairing bicycles and
selling old patched tubes and worn tires. She sat on a low wooden
stool, and he squatted as he worked with very few tools. They
both wore wrist watches. I had previously watched "capitalists" making extra
money at night, their only light being what spilled out from
store fronts. At 9 p.m. shops let down their flexible, rolled-up
front walls; suddenly everyone was gone and we were in total
darkness except for a dim bulb at street intersections. We picked
our way back to the hotel in strange, dark China. It’s now
18 years since I bicycled there. I sometimes read about
China’s increasing capitalism and remember the friends I met
on the street and that butcher-block woman in
another world. |
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