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Jatoo
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« on: April 16, 2009, 04:23:36 AM »

History was made – very first African-Chinese was selected to represent China at national level.   

http://sg.news.yahoo.com/ap/20090414/tsp-vol-china-race-6e81073.html

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Jatoo
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« Reply #1 on: April 16, 2009, 04:24:12 AM »

African-Chinese in China volleyball team

AP - Tuesday, April 14

BEIJING - China has named a player of mixed African and Chinese heritage to the national men's volleyball team in a noteworthy selection in one of the country's most popular sports.
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Ding Hui, 20, was announced as a member of the 18-member squad on Monday.

The native of the eastern city of Hangzhou was raised by his Chinese mother and began playing competitive volleyball in his mid-teens, according to the official Xinhua News Agency and other reports. Ding's father is believed to be South African, although reports did not indicate whether he is in touch with his son.

China's coach Zhou Jianan praised Ding's instincts and passing, placing him among the country's top five players on both defense and offense. Zhou said Ding, who plays the libero position, had been a natural for national selection, but the move raised eyebrows with some.

"Countless numbers of people have called me about this issue today, but I just tell them that his ethnic background and family situation are his own private matter about which I have no opinion," Zhou was quoted as saying by Xinhua.

While Ding's national selection was unusual, dark-skinned athletes are not rare in China. Exchange students from Africa and elsewhere have featured on university teams and amateur squads, while there are many black players in the professional football and basketball leagues.
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Jatoo
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« Reply #2 on: April 16, 2009, 04:41:47 AM »

A poll in China shows,

Surprised:      8.6%     9349.0 votes
Support:        81.75%  88844.0 votes
Against:         4.58%   4982. votes
Wait and See: 5.06%   5501.0 votes

http://vote.sports.163.com/vote/vote-no.jsp?voteid=36185
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NINJA ASSASSIN
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ONLY A NINJA CAN STOP A NINJA

« Reply #3 on: April 16, 2009, 04:50:32 PM »

he is chinese...same as obama is american...not an issue! china!
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"MWOYOH TI KAYFARDAY "....john demethew...
Jatoo
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« Reply #4 on: April 18, 2009, 07:17:40 AM »

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/5157717/China-calls-up-its-first-black-athlete.html

China calls up its first black athlete

A 19-year-old volleyball player from the eastern city of Hangzhou has become the first black athlete to be called up to represent China, triggering fierce curiosity among his compatriots.

By Malcolm Moore in Shanghai
Last Updated: 2:05PM BST 15 Apr 2009

Ding is expected to play a key role in China's push for gold at the London Olympics in 2012.

Ding Hui, who is affectionately nicknamed Xiao Hei, or Little Black, by his team mates, was included in the national team's new 18-man training squad.

The son of a South African father and a Chinese mother, Ding is expected to play a key role in China's push for gold at the London Olympics in 2012.   

However, despite the fact that he was born in China and only speaks Mandarin and his city's local dialect, his elevation has stirred up some racial prejudices among his countrymen.

Commentators have noted that he has a "pleasant and perky nature" and is talented at "singing and dancing". On Chinese internet forums, he has been lauded for the "whiteness" of his teeth and the "athleticism of his genes".

China's black population is tiny, and attitudes remain relatively unsophisticated. One predominately African suburb in the southern city of Guangzhou is cheerfully referred to as "Chocolate City".

In the run-up to last year's Olympic Games in Beijing, large numbers of blacks were rounded up by police on suspicion of being drug dealers.

However, the black population is growing rapidly. Since 2003, when China started pouring investments into Africa, there has been a significant movement of Africans in the opposite direction. Guangzhou authorities believe there are now 100,000 Africans from Nigeria, Guinea, Cameroon, Liberia and Mali in the city, and the flow is growing by 30 to 40 per cent annually.

Mr Ding told the Shanghai Wenhui newspaper that "people seem to care more about my heritage and appearance, but all I want to do is to play good volleyball". Referring to China's policy of drafting foreigners to boost its teams, he added: "I am not a foreign aid. I want to be included."

Li Shiping, the captain of the volleyball team, said the players had been irritated by the gawping of the Chinese media. "I had hoped the press would not dig out the boy's African heritage or his family details but instead focus on his skills and performance," he said, adding that there would be no chance to see Ding until a press conference next week.
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Jatoo
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« Reply #5 on: April 18, 2009, 07:26:17 AM »

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article6094170.ece

From The Times

April 15, 2009

Young, gifted and black: China unveils Ding Hui, its new Olympic hope

Ding Hui who will compete in China's 2012 olympics volleyball team

(Tencent)

Ding Hui, 19, from Hangzhou, has a South African father and Chinese mother
Leo Lewis, Asia Business Correspondent

Sports magazines have breathlessly hailed his “special characteristics”; learned analysts have spoken in awed tones about the “athleticism of his genes” and some have praised the “whiteness and size” of his teeth.

At its core, though, the source of all the excitement is simple: Ding Hui, the latest addition to China’s fiercely competitive national volleyball squad, is black.

His father is South African and his mother Chinese and he was brought up in the east coast industrial city of Hangzhou. The 19-year-old may be mixed-race but is still, according to participants in an online sports chat room yesterday, “exactly as black” as President Obama.

The prodigiously talented defender is expected to be at the heart of China’s quest for gold at the London Olympics in 2012. He is already a central figure in the provincial team of Zhejiang and represented China in the youth squad five years ago.

However, Ding’s prominence presents a challenge to many in a country where the word “foreigner” tends to conjure the image of a Caucasian and where “black” can be greeted with suspicion.

“Chinese views towards black people are not sophisticated, partly because it is not very common to see any in the cities and even less in the country,” a group of Beijing residents told The Times. “A lot of people will be very curious about Ding, and will be positive towards this decision to have him on the team. On the other hand, there are still plenty of Chinese who, unfortunately, think of black people as somewhat barbarous or automatically assume they are involved in crime.” The Government insists that racism does not exist in China but some commentators remain sceptical. Beijing’s energetic investments in Africa — many centred on the supply of oil from Angola and other big regional producers — is the culmination of many decades of strong Sino-African relations. China was never involved in the black slave trade, which has eased its dealings on the continent and allowed it to talk, during the Cold War, of a “Third World coalition”.

However, the treatment of black students has not been without controversy and African and Chinese students clashed violently in the 1980s. There are suggestions, too, that black people living in Beijing were the target of a pre-Olympic police crackdown last summer.

Attempts to herald the arrival of Ding in the national squad have revealed a definite gaucheness. One of China’s biggest internet portals described him thus: “Black skin, thick lips and big white teeth are his main characteristics,” it read, adding that “due to the special characteristics of his bloodline Ding Hui is blessed with pliability, toughness and agility”.

   
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Next thing, China will have lots of Jamaicans on their athletics teams. Why not? Britain does, Canada does, and as a result win a lot of Olympics & World gold medals. Now even Croatia has Jamaican sprinters! Here is a little known fact. About 6% of Jamaica's population from the mid-1800 is Chinese

C. Alexander Brown, Rockcliffe Park, Canada
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MingHei
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« Reply #6 on: April 18, 2009, 08:53:30 AM »

Just goes to show that the Black athlete still dominates every professional sport.
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khabzela
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« Reply #7 on: April 18, 2009, 10:51:47 AM »

Honestly i think people should just leave this kid alone! All he wants is to be a volleyball player, there's really no story here.

Some of the articles i've come across are treating him like some species from another planet,..they are talking about "bloodlines, genes, white teeth..."it's quite scary.

They should just leave him alone! >:( >:(
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Mmualebe o bua la gagwe
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« Reply #8 on: April 23, 2009, 12:09:55 PM »

Honestly i think people should just leave this kid alone! All he wants is to be a volleyball player, there's really no story here.

Some of the articles i've come across are treating him like some species from another planet,..they are talking about "bloodlines, genes, white teeth..."it's quite scary.

They should just leave him alone! >:( >:(

Exactly, totally agreed.
But this kind of issue is still new to China actually, since it's just officially opened its gate for about 30 years,
it's been a single race nation for thousands year, so some over-exposed problem to this "news" is kind of understandable,
plus, Ding Hui is a localized / Foreign looking one.
But I believe that he must has used to his difference, and he will do great job in his career.
God bless him!
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