Gymnast Zou Kai snatched a gold medal in men's horizontal bar yesterday to
become the first, and most likely the only triple-crowned Chinese Olympian at
the Beijing Games, and the glory came exactly 100 days after an 8.0-magnitude
earthquake devastated his home province of Sichuan.
"I was here to fight for the gold today," said Zou, 20, after winning the
final on Tuesday afternoon. "I was very nervous, but I had already won two gold
medals at these Games, so my psychological state was better than my
competitors."
Zou won a team gold on Aug. 12 and an individual gold in men's floor exercise
on Sunday.
Since he won his first gold last week, Zou has hoped to share the honor with
the folks in Sichuan. "It was their solidarity and unyielding spirit in the face
of crisis that inspired me to perform well in the competition," Zou wrote in his
blog on China's leading portal website sina.com.cn.
Tuesday is the 100th day since the May 12 quake that claimed nearly 70,000
lives, left 17,923 others missing and destroyed the homes of more than 10
million people. It is a date to mourn the deceased, burn them "paper money" or
offer sacrifices as the Chinese tradition goes.
Zou's home city of Luzhou was not in the quake epicenter, but he was
extremely worried when the strong tremor cut off communication and made it
impossible for him to get through to his family on the phone.
Later, his parents managed to get in touch with him, telling him they were
fine, and asking him to concentrate on his training for the Olympics.
"Everyone in the team gave me a lot of care after the quake," said Zou.
"Their love and concern have been extremely touching and encouraging to me."
Fighting for glory at the world's biggest sports rally has been a tradition
for athletes from Sichuan, who are reputed for their readiness to endure
hardships and ability to overcome all difficulties.
Sichuan athletes have won gold medals for China at almost all the previous
summer Olympics the country took part in.
Despite widespread grief and the demanding job of reconstruction, the
southwestern province, one of the most populous in China, sent a record number
of 34 athletes to compete at the Beijing Games. All the athletes vowed that they
would fight to honor their home province, and reward the kind assistance from
other parts of the country with "best possible performance."
"I'll do my best on behalf of my folks, so that the whole world will remember
the people from Sichuan as unyielding fighters," said tennis player Zheng Jie
prior to the Olympics.
Faced with overwhelming opponents like the Williams sisters of the United
States and the Russian duo Kuznetsova Svetlana and Safina Dinara, Zheng and her
teammate Yan Zi, also a Sichuan native, fought valiantly to take a bronze in
women's tennis doubles on Sunday.
While the Sichuan athletes were trying their best to deliver on the home
field, their provincial folks, as part of the nearly 1 billion Chinese viewers
glued to their TVs for the Games, were watching them with zeal and anticipation.
"Quiet please, Zou Kai will be competing soon," an old man interrupted the
loud women sitting next to him at a teahouse in downtown Chengdu, the provincial
capital, on Tuesday. The place instantly became silent until everyone roared
again at Zou's perfect performance.
"The Olympic competitions are just like the post-quake rebuilding," said a
Chengdu taxi driver, who rested his car to watch Zou play on TV in a teahouse.
"There's no difficulty that we cannot get over with, as long as we try with all
our hearts."
But it will certainly take some time, as aftershocks are still felt from time
to time even in Chengdu, some 200 kilometers from the epicenter of Wenchuan.
On Aug. 12, the Sichuan provincial government announced the full resettlement
of the over 10 million displaced people, who had all moved into temporary houses
provided by the government or built by themselves with government subsidies.
Vice Provincial Governor Huang Yanrong said on Tuesday that the government
would try its best to provide safe, permanent housing for all quake-affected
people by the end of 2010.
And many people in the areas worst hit by the earthquake missed Zou's Olympic
victory on Tuesday, as they concentrated their attention on the mourning of
their lost families or friends.
Beichuan, a county that perished in the quake with more than 15,000 dead and
several thousand missing, and has since been closed for epidemic prevention, was
reopened to some 20,000 mourners on Tuesday.
"We decided to reopen the county for just one day, because we understand how
these people feel," said Beichuan deputy mayor Qu Yong'an. "They have to mourn
their dead family members on this particular day."
A downpour and subsequent mudflows in the day failed to disturb the
grief-laden survivors of Beichuan, who tried hard to find the final resting
places of their beloved ones, in the rubble of toppled homes and school
buildings.
"Didn't you tell me you wanted a little brother or sister? Mom and dad
promise to get you one -- someone as good and pretty as you were," a father
choked in the ruins of Beichuan Middle School as he lit firecrackers and offered
snacks to mourn his deceased daughter.
A boy stood nearby holding a group photo of his classmates, many of whom died
in the quake. "Next year I'll take the college entrance exam," he said. "I'll do
my best and try to enter a top university. And I promise I'll come back to share
with you everything about my new life."
Exactly three months ago, on May 19, the whole nation had stood in silent
tribute to mourn the quake dead, from top leaders in the central government
compound of Zhongnanhai to ordinary people on the street.