Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - Once in an article, a child's diary always said "everything was fine later", which seems to be from a junior high school Chinese textbook. Find out where it is.

Once in an article, a child's diary always said "everything was fine later", which seems to be from a junior high school Chinese textbook. Find out where it is.

Love between life and peace The original inadvertently mentioned Jews to a China, and I believe his first thought was the brutality of the Nazis and those movie clips that we are familiar with: & gt& lt& lt Schindler's List >> ... Movies connect us so closely with the tragic history of mankind that our souls suddenly become depressed; But thanks to this film, we can know that history. Today, the past of "persecution" and "killing" is not only for us, but also for the Jews themselves, especially the younger generation, so far away that only a trace of memory remains. Jews living all over the world, with their outstanding performance in many aspects, have proved to mankind that this nation is full of vitality and great creativity. David Fielding is an American Jewish youth I know. The young man is now engaged in cultural exchanges between the United States and China in Beijing.

I know David because he has read one of my novels. The teacher who tutored him in Chinese once told me that he wanted to help David improve his Chinese by teaching this novel, but he found that he was no longer able to tutor David, because the level of David reading chinese's novels had reached the point where he didn't need tutoring, and the young man had only studied Chinese for four years.

Here comes David, a tall young man with dark brown hair, capable and flexible, and a really happy face that puzzles outsiders-I say this because he has some calmness and maturity beyond his peers. David speaks natural and fluent Mandarin with accurate and free pronunciation and skillful vocabulary, which surprised people who heard him speak Chinese for the first time. He sits opposite you and talks to you in Kan Kan without ostentation, but you are constantly amazed that you do face an American, but this person does speak standard Chinese similar to that of a standard announcer in China-if it is slightly different from the announcer's standard, it is because David's Chinese is more like life than the broadcast itself.

Not long ago, David took the initiative to take the Chinese proficiency test in the State Council, USA. This is a very difficult test, even a senior sinologist can't cope with it. The exam is divided into five grades, with five being the highest grade, with a full score of 5 points. So far, no non-Chinese in the United States has got this score. It seems that the examiner set this score so that Americans will never get it. David's achievement surprised the examiner. He got 4 points in reading and 4+ in speaking. There are only two Americans who get such a high score, and David Fielding is one of them.

In addition to Chinese, David also mastered Japanese, Spanish, Greek and the ancient and beautiful Hebrew of the Jewish people. He seems to have a natural instinct to challenge the language, and he seems to have a special talent to master any difficult language.

This young man, who is particularly sensitive to language and full of interest in all new things, is not yet 28 years old. Why does he have the spirit and ability of persistent pursuit once he yearns for it? This requires a lot of energy and excellent talent. When you want to discuss all this, you will naturally think of the wise celebrities of the Jewish nation, from Marx and Einstein to Freud and Kafka ... In the United States, Jewish professors account for 47% of American university professors, and Douglas Stevenson, a famous American scholar living in Germany, once said: "The United States has been enriched by the arrival of Jewish immigrants, and Jews have dedicated their wisdom to American culture, education and science.

This nation with a history of 4,000 years was born in the birthplace of the Bible. For thousands of years, it was driven away and displaced by their enemies. However, under the great threat of spiritual and physical extinction, Jews scattered around the world have never given up the maintenance of their religious and cultural essence. Early this summer, I visited the synagogue in Oklahoma City, USA. The rabbi of the synagogue proudly said to me, "You know, only two peoples have completely preserved their own culture and language, that is, Jews and China."

I can't help but think of Kaifeng and Shanghai, two cities that accepted Jews fleeing persecution in different historical periods in a friendly and selfless way. The Chinese nation is one of the few nations in the world that treats the tortured Jews leniently. When I arrived in David's hometown, Austin, Texas, to visit his family, I was warmly and sincerely received by David's parents, Mr. Felsting Sr. and his wife.

I learned that David's father is a respected rabbi, a professor who studies Judaism in the synagogue in this city, and David's mother is an experienced diving instructor. The couple visited China twice. When they first took David, he was already 16 years old. Many relationships between David and China in the future may have started with his 16-year-old trip to the Far East, full of youthful fantasies. When he was growing up, his parents never refused the guests' praise for David, but they didn't spoil the youngest child in the family too much. Parents will not deliberately give advice for David's various interests, but will encourage his efforts. When David was eight years old, he wrote a 58-page detective novel with illustrations. Although this is only a childish work by a child, Mr. Fielding carefully printed this "novel" and preserved it well to this day. The affection of this family is harmonious, simple and restrained. They care about each other and can appreciate each other's good. This kind of family atmosphere has created the orderliness and independence of David's thinking, as well as his great resilience and endurance in the face of various difficulties. He seems to have understood his talent for a long time, and he also knows how to use and develop it most effectively.

On a sunny morning in May, David's father, Rabbi Fierstin, took me to visit the synagogue where he had presided for 25 years. In this hall called the Palace of Israel, the dazzling six-pointed star, the seven-corner candlestick, the burning tree of life and the eternal lamp, as well as the elegant ancient Hebrew Bible written on white sheepskin, symbolized the Jewish nation on the huge colored windows, which made me feel the sanctity of life, inner peace and harmony. Here, David and his father, who are on vacation, taught me to say "life" and "peace" in Hebrew.

This ancient voice, which human beings always need, suddenly dawned on me that it is the enduring love for life and persistent prayer for peace that supports the Jewish people to constantly overcome the greatest suffering that human beings can bear, making them cherish family ties and affection, attach importance to knowledge, education and culture, and pay more attention to creating a more ideal environment for their own development. Our ancestors' glorious history and thousands of years of humiliating experience also made them particularly understand how important it is for the whole nation and every individual to ensure that they are invincible in suffering! When David Fielding talks with you face to face, you will occasionally notice a kind of lofty and self-esteem from the bottom of your heart in his lively and modest eyes.

At David's house, he used to read me masterpieces written by him at the age of 8 and short stories written by him at the age of 6. This kind boy, each of his novels ends with the following sentence: "Everything is fine after that." This ending seems too dull, but it really looks like a wise man's peace fable, doesn't it? Although it is a child's pure kindness, isn't this the ultimate collective wish of mankind? Is there any living life in the world that doesn't expect "everything will be fine in the future" Whether it's a child or a president.

In another year, perhaps David's spoken Chinese and reading will reach the highest level that Americans can't reach-Grade 5: 5 points. But maybe that's not the most important thing. What is important is that with superhuman intelligence, vitality and passion, he really created China's language miracle in a short time, which is difficult for foreigners to create. When you try to know and understand a nation seriously, what can be more important than knowing its language and writing? The important thing is that David is serious about everything he does. The more impetuous the times, some young people no longer have this solemn mentality.

The night before we left Austin, David and I went to his primary school. When we walked onto a flat slate in front of the principal's office, David told me that there was a wish for everyone to write when they graduated. I never asked David 12 what his wish was. I hope the wish under the slate is related to life and peace. Is it because David and his father taught me to say "peace" and "life" in Hebrew at Israel Palace in Austin? Is it because David's ancestors have been fighting for the peace of existence for generations? Is it because David gave me a gold medal that says "life" in Hebrew? Is it because the beautiful Colorado River crossing Austin has always flowed in the hearts of Jewish children, and the clear and deep river moistens his sympathy for mankind? Is it because I listened to the Jewish girls in the choir singing Peace and Peace in a pure and quiet voice in the auditorium? I don't know. I just believe that when all human beings can truly love each other with the word "peace", the creativity hidden in the depths of each of our souls will be truly activated, and any miracle on earth may happen. Of course, life can have a simple and heroic ending like David's novel: "Everything is fine after that."