China's icy Harbin rediscovers its Russian roots
HARBIN, Feb 6 (Reuters) Russian swimmer Lyudmila Smolyakova strips down to a bathing suit and flip-flops and prances in front of Chinese tourists bundled up against below-freezing weather before diving into a pool cut into an iced-covered river.
The tourists, who have paid 30 yuan (3.87 dollars) for tickets to see Smolyakova's ice swimming troupe perform, scatter as she emerges and threatens to splash them.
It may be cold in Harbin, which is nearer to Siberia than to Beijing, but warming ties between Russia and China mean the city is rediscovering its Russian roots.
That's a blessing for Zena Zhao. She works as a Chinese translator for the Russians in the troupe who visit Harbin every January to perform with Chinese swimmers at the Sino-Russian Friendship Winter Swimming Sports Amusement Park.
Russian was the language of Zhao's mother, who moved to Harbin as the young bride of Zhao's Chinese father in 1926. Zhao stayed behind when her mother and sisters left for the then-Soviet Union in 1962 during the Sino-Soviet split.
''When the swimmers first came in 1986, they helped me find my mother. Although she had already passed away, they helped me find her grave and the old age home where she had stayed,'' Zhao said.
Across China, Harbin is famous for its winter, when the city puts on a festival of ice and snow sculptures.
At night, parks glow with lamps encased in elaborate ice castles, pagodas and bridges. By day, visitors saunter along the frozen Songhua river, where make-shift amusement parks offer ice slides, skating and swimming shows.
Children and adults shriek with laughter as they zoom down ice slides at Stalin Park. Visitors ride horse-drawn carriages across the frozen Songhua to see snow carvings on the other side.
Harbin was a Manchurian fishing village until Tsarist Russia created a cosmopolitan city to administer a new railway to the Pacific.
The Russians who moved to Harbin outlasted the Japanese occupation and warlord rule, but left in the 1960s when Chinese leader Mao Zedong's relations with Nikita Khrushchev soured.
''I didn't want my mother to leave, but she said 'just like China is your fatherland, Russia is my motherland','' Zhao recalled. ''At the time I was already married and had a job in the telephone bureau, so I stayed.'' MORE REUTERS KP0907


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