Chinese students pay artistic tribute to medical heroes

Yang Jian
Overseas students are expressing their gratitude to China's coronavirus prevention measures as well as the country's front-line medics.
Yang Jian
Subtitles by Wang Xinzhou and Andy Boreham.
Chinese students pay artistic tribute to medical heroes
Ti Gong

Overseas students in Canada send their gratitude to China and Chinese medical workers in a video.

Overseas Chinese students in Canada are paying respect to medical workers in China amid the coronavirus pandemic through short videos, paintings and poems.

After returning to Shanghai from Canada and finishing 14-day quarantine at a local hotel, Xu Wenxin, 23, a senior at University of Toronto, could not help expressing her gratitude and respect.

The city's strict prevention measures, quarantine management and COVID-19 testing made her finally feel relieved after an anxious 20-hour journey.

"It makes a sharp contrast with the few prevention measure abroad and many negative news reports about China's epidemic situation," said Xu. "I was shocked and moved after returning home," she added.

After finishing quarantine in early April, the 23-year-old senior in physics and mathematics created a digital painting of a doctor wearing protective gear, representing Chinese medical workers who have been fighting against COVID-19 since January.

Chinese students pay artistic tribute to medical heroes
Ti Gong

Xu Wenxin (center), 23, a senior at University of Toronto.

She posted the painting on her social media account and wrote: "thanks to all those who risk their own safety to save others' lives."

She also wrote a poem to go with the painting. One of the lines reads: "you stand in front of the evil of disease with the light of hope behind you and shouted to the city that 'no life shall be abandoned casually.'"

The painting and poem were made also for her mother, Qiang Weimin, a disease prevention and control official with the Yangpu District Health Commission, who has been working continuously since the beginning of the outbreak.

Even after Xu returned home after quarantine, she could hardly meet her mother. Qiang made a meal to welcome her daughter but soon returned to the city's COVID-19 prevention campaign.

The posts on Xu's WeChat account strike a chord among her friends and schoolmates, many of whom remain in Toronto. They also hoped to share their best wishes and gratitude to China.

Initiated by Xu, about 10 Chinese students in Toronto worked together to make a video. They thanked the prompt help from the Chinese embassy, shared their quarantine life in Canada and paid respect to the Chinese doctors and nurses.

The video was finished within a day and has been widely circulated among the overseas Chinese students.

Chinese students pay artistic tribute to medical heroes
Ti Gong

A digital painting created by Xu Wenxin represents Chinese medical workers who have been fighting against COVID-19 since January.

Health Package

"I'd like to thank the doctors, nurses, police officials and volunteers who helped China get through the COVID-19 epidemic," a sophomore from the university said in the video.

Another Chinese student said since there had been over 20,000 infection cases in Canada, they had to self-quarantine at home for three weeks. "I am jealous of my classmates in China who have been able to go out mainly thanks to the contributions of the medical workers."

Another sophomore with the university said the Chinese embassy sent a health package to each of the Chinese students to get protection supplies for them in time.

The health packs for Chinese students in Canada, which differ by universities, included several KN95 masks along with a dozen disposable facial masks, disinfection napkins, a box of traditional Chinese medicine Lianhua Qingwen Capsule and a handbook of prevention knowledge about COVID-19.

Though the students are busy preparing their exams, most of them made quick responses to Xu's proposal and sent her the video they recorded at home or dormitory.

Chinese students pay artistic tribute to medical heroes
Ti Gong

Protection supplies from the Chinese embassy in Canada for Chinese students.

"We overseas students witness the development of the global pandemic, so can better feel the effectiveness of the prevention and control measures of the Chinese government," Xu said.

Despite the pandemic, many pedestrians were seen not wearing masks in Canada before Xu returned home. She and other Chinese students boarded the aircraft back home wearing masks, goggles and hazmat suits.

She decided to fly back in mid-March when she felt uncomfortable due to the tension and fear amid the growing number of infected cases in Canada.

"I was worried I might also be infected, but there was nowhere for me to be tested," Xu said. The Toronto government only released a guideline for residents to check whether they were infected by themselves, she added.

She took a regional flight from Toronto to Vancouver and then boarded a China Eastern Airlines' flight to Shanghai on March 27.

Chinese students pay artistic tribute to medical heroes
Ti Gong

Xu Wenxin (center), 23, a senior student with University of Toronto and her schoolmates.

Prevention measures became stricter after boarding the China Eastern flight. All crew members were wearing hazmat suit and masks. They also checked the temperature of each passenger frequently.

Due to anxiety and fear, Xu's temperature was 37.3 degrees Celsius at the beginning, a critical point for the screening of COVID-19. The flight attendant asked her to calm down and came to check repeatedly until her temperature returned to normal.

After landing at the Pudong airport, passengers were asked to get off the plane in batches. The customs officials asked the traveling history and other information in detail for each passenger.

"Everyone wears hazmat suit at the airport which made me feel safe and reliable," she recalled.

After temperature check and quarantine inspections, she was taken to the gathering site of Yangpu District. Officials there took her onto a bus to the designated hotel near the Wujiaochang commercial hub.

Chinese students pay artistic tribute to medical heroes
Ti Gong

A selfie photo of Xu Wenxin on her way from Canada to Shanghai.

Feeling safe at home

Since March 28, all inbound passengers arriving in Shanghai have been required to undergo a 14-day quarantine for medical observation at designated sites as part of the city's COVID-19 prevention measures. They are also required to undergo nucleic acid tests.

"I felt safe and relaxed after checking in at the hotel," Xu said. A district official later called to ask Xu to receive the nucleic acid test and she got a negative result several hours later.

Xu said the whole process after returning to Shanghai boosted her patriotism, especially on April 4 when she observed the three-minute silence at 10am to mourn martyrs in the epidemic fight and others who died during the coronavirus outbreak.

"I stood in front of the window at the quarantine hotel to witness everyone on the street standing still and all vehicles sounding their horns," she said. "I was shocked again and felt the heart of every Chinese are connected together at that moment," she added.

Chinese students pay artistic tribute to medical heroes
Ti Gong

Qiang Weimin (right), Xu Wenxin's mother and a disease prevention and control official with the Yangpu District Health Commission, inspects disease prevention facilities in Yangpu.

She then determined to create the painting and poem as well as initiate the campaign to pay respect and gratitude.

"I'm always in awe and respect to doctors and nurses due to the career of my mum," Xu said. She remembered her mother often had to work overtime when she was young, especially during the SARS epidemic.

Her mother Qiang, a retired soldier, applied to join the fight against SARS in 2003 and asked to fight on the frontline against the COVID-19 early this year. After the beginning of the outbreak in Wuhan, Qiang led other officials to inspect six fever clinics and 12 community health centers in Yangpu to prepare for the possible epidemic.

"If I had the talent, I would definitely follow my mother to become a medical worker," Xu said.

After graduation, she has decided to return to Shanghai to work or study for postgraduate degree. "After experiencing the pandemic, I won't change my mind to return home," she said.


Chinese students pay artistic tribute to medical heroes
Ti Gong

A photo of Xu Wenxin's quarantine hotel room in Yangpu District.

Chinese students pay artistic tribute to medical heroes
Ti Gong

One of Xu Wenxin's meals at the quarantine hotel in Yangpu.


Special Reports

Top