Latest News:  

English>>China Society

Schoolboy's Egyptian temple shame

By Hu Min   (Shanghai Daily)

08:09, May 27, 2013

Graffiti on the defaced Egyptian artifact says "Ding Jinhao was here". (Source: China Daily)

A middle school boy from Nanjing in east China's Jiangsu Province sparked outrage when he defaced an ancient Egyptian temple.

A picture posted online showed the words "Ding Jinhao was here" in Chinese characters on a relief in the Luxor Temple. The words "was here" were in larger characters.

The post prompted an online search which revealed Ding's identity, his date of birth and his primary school.

The 14-year-old's parents have apologized and asked for forgiveness, the Nanjing-based Modern Express newspaper reported yesterday.

"We apologize to Egyptian authorities and Chinese people who pay attention to the incident. He has realized he made a mistake, and we beg your pardon, please give him a chance to correct his act," they said.

The mother was in tears when she said they realized they had failed to educate their son and felt guilty, the newspaper reported.

The tourist who posted the picture, surnamed Shen, said: "It was the saddest moment during my stay in Egypt, and I felt ashamed.

"We try to wipe out the shame with tissue, but it was difficult to clear it out, and we could not use water as the relief is a historical relic 3,500 years old."

Shen saw the graffiti during a tour of Egypt on May 6 and took the snapshot. "All of the 14 members of our tour group kept silent after seeing the sentence as we felt ashamed," he said.

Shen said he apologized to their Egyptian tourist guide, who was shocked when seeing the writing on the relief but told Shen it was not his fault.

Shen said he hoped the incident would remind Chinese tourists to mind their behavior when touring overseas as their actions reflected on China's image.

The website of Ding's primary school, the Nanjing Youfu Xijie Primary School, was hacked yesterday. It showed "Ding Jinhao was here" when accessed.

Many online comments condemned Ding for damaging cultural relics and his parents for not educating him properly. One said: "Ding's uncivilized behavior disgraced Chinese people." There were even death threats.

Others, however called for tolerance.

"Ding is just a child, and he learns things from adults, and please don't target a kid, he still has chance to correct wrong behavior," was one comment.

A new law on tourism adopted in China in April to better protect the rights of tourists and clear the way for the industry's sustainable development warns against uncivilized behavior but does not specify punishments.

Following the Ding incident, online posts claimed that Song Yin, said to be a senior reporter with the Hong Kong-based Wen Wei Po newspaper, had engraved similar words in a Dunhuang fresco in northwest Gansu Province.

A photograph showing the words: "Senior reporter of Wen Wei Po Song Yin was here for research in lixia in 2000." Lixia is a Chinese solar term referring to the beginning of summer.

Wen Wei Po condemned the act, but said there was no such person working at the newspaper.

Early this month, a Chinese tourist who posted a picture of coral she had picked up while diving in the Maldives was criticized by experts who said such actions endangered the marine ecological system.

In February, an online post by a museum worker accused a tourist of engraving words on a large water vat in the Forbidden City in Beijing. "Liang Qiqi was here," read the characters scratched on the side of the bronze vessel.

We Recommend:

Red Dress Run 2013 in Beijing

Photo story: Child models' adult world

Photo Story: Survivors of the earthquake

China’s weekly story (2013.5.3-5.11)

Photo story: race against death

Giant rubber duck deflates at HK harbor

Hainan Bodybuilding Competition

'Sea view' of Chinese cities after rainstorms

Photo Story: Levitating Beijingers

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:GaoYinan、Chen Lidan)

Leave your comment1 comments

  1. Name

elee at 2013-05-27183.38.253.*
Home discipline is mandatory for kids from childhood stages while schools have to enforce the rules of laws properly with due respect to all sorts of cultural relics. These spoiled_kid effects are adversely showing signs of disgraceful and shameful traits among Chinese guys abroad and domestically which generate hatreds and spites. The example of the UA ticket case against a Chinese passenger told aloud about the images of Chinese abroad as seen from abroad while many "foes" of China are adding salts to wounds.The silly and poorly educated 14 years old should write an apologetic letter publicly 1,000,000 times since he could scribble. But, why should his parents do the apology to cover up for his son? It is spoiling him again and again, isn"t it?
  

Selections for you


  1. Amphibious armored brigade in training

  2. Close view of Chinese female snipers

  3. 'Sea of Hands' event held in Sydney

  4. White angels in Chongqing

  5. Dalian mounted police should be unsaddled

  6. Student earns title of 'juvenile of virtues'

  7. China Final of World Super Model Contest 2013

  8. Funny group photos of college graduates

  9. Migrant workers see slower wage rise

  10. Ladies in finance industries

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Turning-on-red rule is dangerous for pedestrians
  2. Boy's graffiti signals lack of values at home
  3. Sino-Indian diplomatic miracle embarrasses Japan
  4. U.S. dollar could weaken most Asian currencies
  5. Apple's tax dodge smacks of abuse
  6. Chinese premier's Swiss tour fruitful, influential
  7. China-Switzerland FTA to benefit both sides
  8. What China-Switzerland FTA brings about?

What’s happening in China

White angels in Chongqing South West Hospital

  1. Cyber love at heart of teen pregnancies
  2. Sinopec probes staff over report of patient's death
  3. Letters for auction despite widow's protest
  4. China to tighten work safety supervision
  5. Mutton found to contain duck meat