日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区

Home
Letters to Editor
Domestic
World
Business & Trade
Culture & Science
Travel
Society
Government
Opinions
Policy Making in Depth
People
Investment
Life
Books/Reviews
News of This Week
Learning Chinese
Tourists Flock to Find "Shangri-La" in SW China

When British writer James Hilton published his book "Lost Horizon" in 1933, he might never have thought that so many people from different nations would have crazily followed his fictitious, mysterious story in search of "Shangri-La", which is said to be a Tibetan word for the paradise, or an ideal place.

In the novel, four people, comprising a British consul and his deputy, a nun, and a "swindler" from the United States, took the same plane to flee from British India where a revolution was in the making. Unexpectedly, the plane was hijacked and finally landed in a place full of snow mountains, lamaseries, and people from different ethnic groups living together in a harmonic and peaceful manner.

Ever since the novel went off the press, many places in India, Pakistan, Nepal and China have claimed they are the very home to " Shangri-La". In the 1990s, most of the "Lost Horizon" fans or researchers turned their eyes to Deqing County in the Diqing Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Yunnan Province, where people could find almost everything the author described in his novel.

People's interest in "Shangri-La" has brought a great opportunity to the Tibetan prefecture, which had for decades been plagued by poverty and a lack of ways to eradicate the poverty for local people. It has taken every chance to promote the Shangri-La- based local tourism industry, by trying hard to prove that it is the very place where the four fictitious foreigners had stayed and enjoyed the local culture, a mixture of the ethnic traditions of the Han People and Tibetans.

A series of domestic or international symposiums have been held in China, at which overseas and local scholars agreed that part of Deqing County is really similar to what James Hilton wrote, though there are some other places in China that have also displayed evidence to prove they are home to "Shangri-La".

Meanwhile, the local government has invested heavily in infrastructure and tourism facilities, with financial assistance from central and provincial governments as well as overseas investors.

"No matter whether there is a Shangri-La or not, Diqing will use its resources to develop tourism and relieve its poverty- stricken people," said a local official.

The efforts have paid off. Last year, over 1.2 million tourists including some 50,000 foreigners visited the Chinese "Shangri-La", bringing about a total of 500 million yuan in tourism earnings, or more than half of the local revenue.

(People's Daily 08/13/2001)

Copyright ? China Internet Information Center. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-68996214/15/16
主站蜘蛛池模板: 长宁县| 淮阳县| 罗田县| 固阳县| 基隆市| 海晏县| 新邵县| 永安市| 南雄市| 平邑县| 建昌县| 游戏| 克拉玛依市| 蓬安县| 巴里| 阜新市| 吴江市| 邢台县| 东安县| 南开区| 象山县| 泾源县| 阜南县| 建湖县| 治多县| 和龙市| 高尔夫| 恭城| 长治县| 安远县| 内乡县| 武宣县| 防城港市| 赣榆县| 宁德市| 呈贡县| 三明市| 安图县| 清丰县| 灵台县| 威海市|