Born into a modest home, Linden came to China 38 years ago and was given scholarships to study at the prestigious Peking and Nanking universities, then opportunities to work on a film and for CBS, where he interviewed a number of top leadership officials in the 1980s, including Deng Xiaoping.
And today, at a time when a decline in China-US relations seems to be creating an ever-widening divide between peoples, Linden said he felt he owed it to China to tell his own story and add perspective to attempts to frame China through a homogeneous lens.
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“I read the same things that everybody else is reading back in the States, but I have it balanced by the reality of what I see in China,” Linden said. “I am not an apologist for China, but I found that, in some way, there is a lack of understanding or even curiosity about what was happening in China.”
Linden was speaking in the wake of US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan this month. Meanwhile, China’s zero-Covid approach has resulted in reduced access and economic opportunities for foreigners to study and understand the world’s second-largest economy in person.
Linden’s two sons also grew up in China, as he hoped for them to be “immersed in Chinese culture as well, so in a way, they would be able to understand the nuances of international geopolitics and everything in a better way”.
Before the pandemic halted international travel to China, the Linden Centre hosted visiting programmes for students from Sidwell Friends – the private Washington school where the children of US presidents Nixon, Clinton and Obama went – and from the Shanghai American School, one of the oldest international schools where many of the best foreign students in Shanghai will go.
“We wanted to show some of the future foreign leaders and American leaders, whose kids will go on to become leaders, a different story about China – let them experience a different part of China,” Linden said.
“When you have some of America’s foreign leaders willing to send their kids to Xizhou for their last year of high school, for a semester, it means that somehow even the assistant secretaries of state, the [National Security Agency] director – these kinds of people – believe that knowing China better, and not just through the big-city experience, is important enough to their education.”
Graduate interns from Princeton University have also come to old Xizhou. There, the budding researchers and anthropologists would work with local people to understand them as well as possible, including their hopes to hardships.
“I hope that, in the future, once [Covid] has disappeared, we will be able to restore some of those programmes,” Linden said.
The success of the Linden Centre and its contribution to the local economy has also become a pioneering paradigm of China’s rural-revitalisation plan – an effort to improve the lives of people in the countryside and reduce the nation’s urban-rural divide – since President Xi Jinping declared victory in China’s fight against extreme poverty in late 2020.‘They’re not writing cheques’: China makes rare pitch for foreign investment
Linden said that, in Xizhou and Shaxi – a historic market town in Yunnan where Linden has built a second Linden Centre – at least 90 per cent of the workers and staff were hired locally, from the construction stage to operation.
The centres also help local villagers business-related advice – from building smaller hotels to marketing handicrafts – and this is said to ensure that most of the spending by guests is done in the villages, and most proceeds go into the villagers’ pockets.
“What we were trying to do was inspire the locals to feel they had participated in the whole process, not just somebody building something in their backyard and then saying, ‘Aren’t you proud?’” he said.
As many rural villages in China continue to struggle to find the right stories to tell to attract tourists and business opportunities, the Linden Centre as part of the Xizhou community provides a niche model for China’s rural-revitalisation campaign, as it has successfully integrated into a town with more than a thousand years of history.
Surrounded by the verdant rice paddies and the rolling mountain range, Linden said he knew that he needed to create something not too flashy that blends into nature, which could become an attraction, itself, to bring affluent people to the small village.
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Millions of Chinese millennials become ‘new farmers’ to look for the meaning of life
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“We’re creating a business that really isn’t interfering or disrupting in any way with the locals’ existing lifestyle,” Linden said. “And we don’t interfere with the daily lives in terms of our physical presence footprint in the village. But we do bring in the people, and they’re able to interact.”
One of the major obstacles to future rural development in Yunnan and beyond, according to Linden, is that people with real knowledge are often challenged to come out to these areas and spend extended time, either because of the lack of a good local education system for their kids, or due to the absence of a well-rounded healthcare system.
“I found that, sometimes, we have some really talented people coming from the big cities, and their parents are worried” that living in a small village will make it harder for their children to find a relationship or start a family, he said. “These are the real issues.”
The dilemma could be addressed “by making the villages more sexy”, Linden said, such as by bringing in better education and a more well-rounded social security system. And he expects that to happen when young people living under mounting pressure in big cities realise that quality of life is also important.
In July, the Linden Centre welcomed the most guests in its history thanks to the influx of tourists into Yunnan and Dali as China relaxed travelling rules.
The hotel rooms used to be mostly booked four to six months in advance by foreign guests before the pandemic. Now the rooms are occupied by mostly Chinese guests.
Despite the pandemic taking a heavy toll on their business, like it has on businesses throughout the country, Linden said they are investing in their joy – in a sense that they will be able to help make a difference.
“I want to ensure that our model continues, and I want to ensure that some people still stand up for China,” he said, “and that’s what I’m trying to do.”
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