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The two women in the circle of the flame

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LA Times-Washington Post Posted: Apr 30, 2008 at 0001 hrs IST
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BEIJING, April 29 : As the Olympic flame continues its tumultuous journey around the world, the lives of two young Chinese women whose brief gestures during the torch relay were captured on video have emerged center stage in the black-and-white world of Chinese public opinion.

One is Jin Jing, a one-legged former fencer who defended the torch with her tiny body while in a wheelchair when pro-Tibet protesters tried to snatch it from her on the streets of Paris. Since the images of her action were disseminated on the Internet, she has been elevated to national hero status and dubbed an “angel in a wheelchair”. The other is Wang Qianyuan, a newly arrived student from China at Duke University in North Carolina who turned up in the middle of a videotaped shouting match during a pro-Tibet campus rally on the day the torch passed through San Francisco. She is now viewed as a traitor. The tales of the two women, who have become well-known beyond their imagination, illustrate the wide sweep of cyberspace and the deep emotions here over issues of national pride.

“Chinese people all over the country salute you and thank you Jin Jing! Those who want to split our country will never succeed,” reads one Internet chat-room message. “This traitor hurt the feelings of the entire Chinese nation. She deserves the death penalty!” another chatter wrote, referring to Wang. In the case of Wang, the flaring tempers facilitated by the ease of communication among an Internet-savvy generation have elicited a sort of mob mentality. Even the Communist Party is now trying to curb the outrage for fear it could spiral out of control. But Beijing should not be surprised by what is happening, some observers say. “This just shows that Chinese people have lived too long in a world with unbalanced information,” said Zhou Xiaozheng, a sociologist at People’s University in Beijing. “After listening too long to only one side of the story, we have developed zero tolerance for a difference of opinion. “In this mind-set, you are either on our side or you deserve to be stepped on forever.” For Wang, 20, it has proved a rude awakening. When she moved to North Carolina for her freshman year, she thought she had escaped limits on speech and actions. “I never expected something like this would happen to me in the States,” Wang said in a phone interview.

According to Wang, she...


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