
Everlasting City: Kaifeng's Cultural Renaissance Thrilled SCO Partners
The summit, themed 'Upholding the 'Shanghai Spirit' to Build a More Beautiful Home', designated Kaifeng as a key destination for foreign guests from its inception.
Located in China's heartland along the Yellow River, Kaifeng boasts a history of over 4,100 years as a settled urban center and served as the capital of eight dynasties. Most notably, during the Northern Song Dynasty (960–1127), it thrived for 168 years as both a political hub and one of the world's most bustling metropolises.
Millennium City Park (Qingming Riverside Landscape Garden)
The renowned British historian Arnold Joseph Toynbee once said, 'Given the choice, I would choose to live in China's Song Dynasty.' In his eyes, the Song Dynasty, with its economic prosperity, cultural brilliance, and social openness, was 'the finest age for human life'.
A glimpse of Kaifeng past lingers in Along the River During Qingming Festival, the timeless masterpiece by Northern Song painter Zhang Zeduan: along the Bian River, shops pressed close in a lively cluster, boats and carriages thronged the waters and roads, and crowds bustled with life. Thanks to an open society and abundant resources, ordinary life in the Northern Song Dynasty began to bloom with extraordinary richness and vitality. History was no longer solely the grand tale of emperors and nobles; in the bustle of markets and the warmth of daily toil, it etched its most touching stories.
Though dynasties fade, the pulse of daily life endures. Modern Kaifeng integrates Song Dynasty aesthetics into ordinary existence, embedding ancient elegance within morning bells, evening drums, and the rhythm of daily necessities.
Strolling through Kaifeng's streets resembles stepping into a classical Chinese scroll. Waterways crisscross the city, linking ancient buildings with gray tiles and red walls. On imposing city gates, vivid yet time-honored woodblock New Year paintings burst with life. The fragrance of tea drifts through the lanes, and the melodies of Yuju opera curl endlessly along the Bian River. In classrooms, children recite Song poems with ease. Around every corner, unexpected treasures await: Kaifeng Prefecture, Daxiangguo Temple, Longting, Daliang Gate, and the Ruins of Zhouqiao Bridge. Every inch of the city whispers: History has never left but lives in Kaifeng people's daily routines and flows through the city's very essence.
The Millennium City Park (Qingming Riverside Landscape Garden) was a highlight of the guests' visit. This Song culture-themed park recreates scenes from Along the River During Qingming Festival. Over 200 Song-style structures, including government offices, taverns, and tea houses, stand in orderly rows. More than 800 performers in Song-era costumes wander through, staging over 100 distinctive shows. Here, over 20 intangible cultural heritages are on display, featuring Bian embroidery, the 'Four Arts of Song Dynasty', woodblock New Year paintings, and Northern Song official porcelain. This 600-mu (98.8-acre) 'living museum' does more than replicate the painting's scenes. Through its innovative integration of scene restoration, cultural performances, and tech-driven interaction, visitors gain a firsthand sense of the 'bustle of crowds and buzz of markets' that characterized life in the Northern Song Dynasty.
'This is my first visit to Kaifeng. Its beauty transports me through time to the Northern Song Dynasty's glorious heyday,' remarked Nikita Kornev, Executive Director of the Center for China and Asia-Pacific Studies, Ural Federal University, Russia.
If an unbroken cultural legacy and the enduring pulse of daily life define the soul of a cherished home, then humanity's indomitable spirit forms the very core that builds it.
For millennia, the Yellow River's roaring floods, thick with silt, have repeatedly devastated Kaifeng. Yet, with unwavering resilience, the people here have rebuilt their homes time and again.
Today, this timeless resilience finds perfect expression in the paulownia trees that tower toward the sky.
On the same day, other guests visited Lankao County. They were deeply moved by the story of Jiao Yulu, who, over 60 years ago, led Lankao's people in fighting sandstorms and planting paulownias to restore the ecosystem. Ahmed Hassan Ahmed Mohamed Moustafa, Owner and Director of the Asia Center for Studies and Translation, noted that he was profoundly impressed by China's achievements in poverty alleviation. He further observed that Lankao's remarkable development, driven by afforestation and other efforts, offers valuable insights that could be adopted in his own nation.
Today, the paulownias planted to tame desertification have grown into towering giants. Locals discovered that paulownia wood makes an exceptional material for traditional musical instruments, as it resists warping and offers excellent breathability and acoustic properties. Today, the traditional instrument industry has become one of Lankao's pillar economic sectors. Guzheng zithers, pipa lutes, and other instruments crafted from local paulownia not only sell well across China but also reach markets in numerous countries and regions.
In Kaifeng, a city where ancient charm weaves with modern vitality and economy thrives alongside culture, this confidence finds expression in melodies unbroken through generations, diverse elements advancing in harmony, exchanges that deepen mutual understanding, and differences cherished amid shared brilliance.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Straits Times
8 hours ago
- New Straits Times
#SHOWBIZ: Dua Lipa granted citizenship in Kosovo: 'My two sides are now one'
PRISTINA: British-Albanian pop sensation Dua Lipa has been officially granted citizenship in Kosovo, the country her family is from. The singer, who was born in London to Kosovan-Albanian parents and lived briefly in Kosovo's capital, Pristina, as a child, said the honour "completes the duality I have always had within." The BBC reported that President Vjosa Osmani hosted the special ceremony, describing it as an "honour" to grant citizenship to an individual she hailed as "one of the most iconic cultural figures in our country's history." The President praised Lipa for carrying Kosovo's story "with strength, pride, and grace" on a global stage, adding that the country's gratitude for her efforts is "endless." Lipa's connection to Kosovo is well-documented. She has often spoken of her love for the country and in 2018, she and her father co-founded the Sunny Hill Festival in Pristina. The annual music event aims to "change the rhetoric of what people think about Kosovo and it being war-torn," a reference to the country's past. Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008, a move recognised by the UK, US, and many other nations, but not by Serbia itself. The 'Radical Optimism' singer is currently in Kosovo for this year's three-day Sunny Hill Festival, where she headlined on Friday. She shared her feelings on Instagram, writing that it was "hard to put into words what it means" to share the night with her fans "in the city that shaped me, surrounded by so much energy, joy, and pride." This is not the first time Lipa has been recognised for her efforts to promote her heritage. In 2022, she was also awarded Albanian citizenship and named an Honorary Ambassador of Kosovo, a title she described as an "honour and a privilege to be able to represent my country all over the world." The ceremony was a heartfelt affair, with a children's choir performing a rendition of her hit song 'Levitating'. UK Ambassador to Kosovo, Jonathan Hargreaves, was also in attendance and posted a photograph with Lipa on social media, proudly saying that both the UK and Kosovo consider her "one of our own." With this latest honour, Dua Lipa now holds citizenship for Britain, Albania, and Kosovo.


Sinar Daily
16 hours ago
- Sinar Daily
Man dies after falling at Oasis gig in London
A man aged in his 40s was found with injuries consistent with a fall. He was pronounced dead at the scene. 04 Aug 2025 09:01am An advertisement showing British rock band Oasis is seen in the centre of Cardiff on July 4, 2025, ahead of the opening concert of their highly anticipated reunion tour nearly 16 years after last performing together. - (Photo by OLI SCARFF / AFP) LONDON - A man in his 40s has died after falling at a Oasis concert at London's Wembley stadium, the police said Sunday. Brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher, who brought the iconic Britpop band back together for a blockbuster world tour this year, told the BBC they were "shocked and saddened" by the fan's death at the Saturday evening gig. According to a spokesperson for the London Metropolitan Police, officers and medics were called to the scene after 10pm (2100 GMT) following "reports that a person had been injured" at the packed stadium. "A man -- aged in his 40s -- was found with injuries consistent with a fall. He was sadly pronounced dead at the scene," the spokesperson said, urging any witnesses to come forward. "Our thoughts go out to his family," a spokesperson for Wembley said, while adding that "tonight's Oasis concert will go ahead as planned". Sunday's gig will be Oasis's last London date of the band's 41-gig reunion world tour after 16 years of estrangement between the famously volatile Gallaghers. The tour has sold around 900,000 tickets, with the group heading to Edinburgh next before its international leg takes them to the United States, Japan, Australia and Brazil. - AFP More Like This


The Star
a day ago
- The Star
Beloved children's author Allan Ahlberg dies at 87
Ahlberg's books charmed generations of children with simple rhymes, keen observation and gentle humour, many created with his late wife, illustrator Janet Ahlberg. Photo: AP British writer Allan Ahlberg, author of more than 150 children's books including classics like Each Peach Pear Plum and The Jolly Postman, has died, his publisher said on Friday. He was 87. Penguin Random House said Ahlberg died on Tuesday. It did not give a cause of death. Ahlberg's books introduced generations of young children to reading through simple rhymes, sharp observation and gentle humour. Many were co-created with his illustrator wife Janet Ahlberg, who died in 1994. Peepo! (1981) gave a baby's-eye-view of the world and was interactive in a delightfully analogue way, with peep-holes in the pages to spy the next scenes. The Jolly Postman (1986) was even more inventive, incorporating postcards and letters in envelopes for children to engage with while they followed a letter-carrier delivering mail to fairy tale characters. Penguin Random House said it "pushed at the boundaries of what it is possible for a book to be.' Ahlberg also wrote books of jokes, including The Ha Ha Bonk Book, and poetry for primary school-age children, including Please Mrs Butler and Heard It In The Playground. Born in 1938 and raised by adoptive parents in a working-class home in OIdbury, central England, Ahlberg worked as a "postman, plumber's mate and grave digger,' according to his publisher, before becoming a teacher. He met Janet at teacher training college and the couple's first book, Here Are The Brick Street Boys, was published in 1975. Then came Burglar Bill in 1977, about a burglar who steals a baby, and Each Peach Pear Plum in 1978, with its pages of intricately drawn nursery-rhyme characters. It won Janet the Kate Greenaway Medal for illustration, one of the most prestigious awards in children's publishing. The Jolly Christmas Postman won the same prize in 1991. "Just because a book is tiny and its readers are little doesn't mean it can't be perfect,' Ahlberg told The Guardian in 2006. "On its own scale, it can be as good as Tolstoy or Jane Austen.' The couple's work brought huge commercial success. The Jolly Postman has sold more than six million copies. The Funnybones series about a playful skeleton household was adapted for television. After Janet died of cancer aged just 50, Ahlberg worked with illustrators including Raymond Briggs and his daughter, Jessica Ahlberg. For adults, he wrote a tribute to his wife, " Janet's Last Book,' and autobiographical volumes The Boyhood of Burglar Bill and The Bucket. In 2014, he turned down a lifetime achievement award from the BookTrust charity because it was sponsored by Amazon, which was facing criticism over its tax arrangements. Francesca Dow, head of children's literature at Penguin Random House, said Ahlberg's books have been described as "mini masterpieces.' "He knew that making it perfect for children matters, and above all that the very best stories for children last forever,' Dow said. "Allan's are some of the very best - true classics, which will be loved by children and families for years to come.' Ahlberg is survived by his second wife, Vanessa Clarke, his daughter and two stepdaughters. - AP