NANNING -- Here in southern China in the
provincial capital of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region there's
not a hint of concern about SARS, the Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome that has infected almost 2,000 people worldwide and
killed 70.
The streets are filled with thousands of
commuters riding to work on bicycles and motor scooters. No one
is wearing a mask. All appears to be business as usual.
One reason is that the media, controlled by
the government, is still largely silent about the epidemic after
hiding it from the world for three months.
But that has finally changed.
The headline on the March 29 South China
Morning Post, published in Hong Kong, stated: "China Agrees
To Give Daily Virus Updates." The press is relatively free in
Hong Kong and the newspaper was filled with stories on SARS,
beginning on the front page and continuing throughout the first
section.
In contrast, the April 1 issue of China
Daily, China's national English language newspaper, did not
publish a single major story on the outbreak.
The front page featured headlines about a new
government housing scheme aimed at providing more houses for the
poor; a mining accident in Liaoning Province that claimed 18
lives; a massacre of 19 Chinese nationals, robbed and then shot
on a bus in Kyrgyzstan; an effort to address environmental
concerns related to world-wide climate changes; and the first
clash of US troops and members of the Republican Guard in Najaf.
I asked our guide, Lin Don Quing, if he's
concerned. He smiled and said, "I don't think you have to worry
about SARS. Eat right, get enough rest, avoid stress — fight it
with your immune system."
He's too nice a guy for me to believe he's
blindly swallowing the party line. It is good advice for warding
off a virus for which there is as yet no cure. But eating right,
avoiding stress, and getting enough rest are tall orders for
parents trying to adjust to their newly adopted one-year old
daughter in a hotel room half a world away from home.
The Chinese appear to be taking in stride the
outbreak that has panicked the rest of the world. When we were
in Beijing we saw a few people wearing masks in places like
Tiananmen Square, the Forbidden City, and along the Great Wall,
but these were mostly foreigners.
The government's official policy in the
People's Republic of China is "Ignorance is Bliss" when
confronted with negative news originating from within its own
borders. That approach, coupled with the general ambivalence of
the Chinese people, is a dangerous mixture.
From Nanning we traveled to Guangzhou with
the sixteen other families in our adoption group. Guangzhou is a
hotspot for SARS and many were nervous about the next phase of
the journey, but there is no other choice. All of us have
appointments at the US Consulate to obtain our daughter's visas
before departing back home through Hong Kong in another week --
assuming by then we will be allowed back into the US.
Darrel and Linda Millard are traveling with
their son, Jeff, and his wife Melanie. As the grandparents they
could have stayed home to avoid the risk of exposure to SARS.
Linda had a scratchy throat when they left their home in Cedar
Rapids, Iowa. It turned into a cold after they arrived in
Beijing, but much to her relief, quickly cleared up. They told
me that if the trip had been for business or vacation, they
would have cancelled. "But we had no choice but to come and get
that little girl of ours," Linda said.
"You just have to trust God with some
things," Darrel added.
China Daily finally ran a front-page
story on SARS in its April 2 edition headlined "Health groups
update efforts." The article explained that Chinese health
authorities are now taking active measures to inform the public
of ways to prevent the spread of SARS. The Ministry of Health
has posted a bulletin on the Internet to provide more
information about the disease and a promise to publish a more
authoritative report soon.
China's foreign ministry spokesman Liu
Jianchao offered these comforting words: "As long as
preventative measures are adopted properly, Chinese citizens and
foreigners who either work and live in or pay temporary visits
to China are secure from SARS."
Frankly, I'll stick with Darrel's advice. It
echoes that of the psalmist who wrote, "In God I have put my
trust, I will not be afraid."