China welcomed the world to the Beijing 2008 Olympic
Games on Friday with the roll of thunder from two thousand fou drums and a
battering of fireworks across the Chinese capital -- from the Forbidden City and
Tiananmen Square to the National Stadium.
Fourteen thousand performers offered the 91,000 people in the National
Stadium, popularly known as the 'Bird's Nest,' a history lesson in China's
contribution to world civilization. The spectators that packed the stadium held
the first of some seven million tickets to the 2008 Beijing Games, in which
nearly 11,000 athletes will jump, run, cycle, fight, swim, sail, ride and shoot
their way to Olympic glory.
The Opening Ceremony began with a 9,8,7,6,5,4,3,2,1 countdown in the Beijing
dusk. Then a roar of thunder came from the floor of the National Stadium where
2,008 drummers beat line after line of fou, an ancient Chinese percussion
instrument. The drummers chanted as they struck the fou, "Friends have come from
afar, how happy we are." This phrase comes from the work of Confucius (551
BC-479 BC), one of China's most important educators and thinkers.
Then came the fireworks.
A general
view of drummers performing during the Opening Ceremony for the 2008 Beijing
Summer Olympics at the National Stadium on August 8, 2008 in Beijing, China.
(Photo credit: Adam Pretty/Getty Images)
To begin, 29 huge firework displays were shot up into the air across the four
axis of the ancient capital: the Forbidden City, Tiananmen Square, the Temple of
Heaven, and just above the National Stadium. The impressive firework display was
intended to remind viewers of China's legacy as the civilization that invented
gunpowder, first used in China during the Song Dynasty (960-1276 AD).
As the firework footprints reached the Bird's Nest they illuminated the
Olympic Rings in the stadium bringing a resounding round of applause from the
audience.
Few could see the steel wires and pulleys that carried fairies across the sky
above the Olympic rings.
In the second act, children representing each of China's 56 minority groups
carried the five-starred national flag across the stadium to soldiers who were
waiting to hoist it onto one of two flagpoles nearby. After the flag was raised,
all joined in the singing of the Chinese national anthem, 'The March of the
Volunteers.'
Fireworks
go off after the torch is lit during the Opening Ceremony for the 2008 Beijing
Summer Olympics at the National Stadium on August 8, 2008 in Beijing, China.
(Photo credit: Alexander Hassenstein/Bongarts/Getty Images)
The second flagpole awaited the Olympic flag.
The next section of the Opening Ceremony paid homage to China's contribution
to the world's writing heritage. Almost 900 performers came together to create
characters with their bodies.
In one act, the performers danced across a stadium-length scroll of paper,
creating an ink painting in their path. Next, 100s of men inside boxes bobbed up
and down to create the Chinese character 'he,' which in Chinese means both
harmony and peace.
The next section mingled celebrated forms of Chinese Opera with themes
brought from China's ancient Silk Road traditions in a performance of music and
color.
Games, titled "Beautiful Olympics", in the National Stadium in
Beijing, China. (Photo credit: Xinhua)
Before the audience was able to digest the artistic presentation of China's
ancient past, the second section of the performance, entitled 'Beautiful
Olympics,' which underlined aspects of modern China, began.
A thousand illuminated dancers formed a dove of peace that then broke up,
regrouping to form of human-web that replicated the lattice structure of the
'Bird's Nest.'
The processional section of the ceremony began with a shattering display of
shadow boxing martial arts and magnificent images of man and nature.
By tradition, the Greek Athletes led the 204 competing National Olympic
Committees (NOC) teams into the stadium in a marching order dictated by the
order of strokes in each country's Chinese name.
The Chinese delegation was the last to enter the stadium. Chinese flag bearer
Yao Ming, accompanied by Ling Hao, a 9-year-old survivor from the Sichuan
earthquake, led the Chinese delegation into the stadium.
Each athlete walked over a paper scroll on the floor of the stadium, leaving
their footprints on what then became the Protocol Platform for the Olympic
speeches. Clapping dancers and cheering athletes greeted the entry of the
five-ringed Olympic Flag, as children sang the Olympic anthem and fireworks
sparkled in the sky.
Liu Qi, President of the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games of the
XXIX Olympiad (BOCOG), welcomed the athletes. "Hosting an Olympic Games has been
a century-old dream for the Chinese nation," he said. Adding, "A prime mission
of the Beijing Olympic Games is to enhance cultural exchanges between peoples
throughout the world."
IOC President Jacques Rogge added his welcome, telling China that the world
was grieving with China and the millions who lost family members or were
displaced in the tragic earthquake in China's Sichuan province. "We were moved
by the great courage and solidarity of the Chinese people," he said. "As one
dream, may these Olympic Games bring you joy, hope, and pride."
Then China's President Hu Jintao formally declared the opening of the
Games.
Eight flag bearers - Zhang Xielin, Pan Duo, Zheng Fengrong, Yang Yang, Yang
Ling, Mu Xiangxiong, Xiong Ni and Li Lingwei then circled the stadium with the
Olympic flag, which was raised as 80 children sang the Olympic Anthem in
Greek.
Women's table tennis player Zhang Yining then read the Athletes' Oath on
behalf of all competitors.
Former
Chinese gymnastics star Li Ning carries the Olympic flame as he is lifted to the
air during the Opening Ceremony of the Beijing Olympic Games in the National
Stadium in north Beijing, China, Aug. 8, 2008. (Photo credit:
Xinhua)
Then, the moment that more than 91,000 audience members and billions more
around the world had been waiting for arrived - the Olympic Torch appeared--
carried around the arena by eight torchbearers.
The 7th bearer, champion Volleyball player Sun Jinfang, passed the flame to
legendary Chinese gymnast Li Ning, who was hoisted high into the air to "run"
along the roof's edge. When he reached the cauldron that had unfurled during the
athlete's march through the stadium, a burst of flame lit up the sky.
The Ceremony ended with another magnificent fireworks display staged by a
total of 600 engineers from hundreds of locations around the city, some as far
away as the Great Wall of China.
Opening on 8th day of the 8th month of 2008, the 18-day-long Olympic Games
will take place in 37 different venues, and will award a grand total of 302
Olympic medals to the winning athletes.
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