Players who made history hug, play in exhibition games 45 years later
After 45 years, ping-pong athletes who took part in a series of historic exchanges between China and the US in 1971 and 1972 reunited on Monday at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, the first stop on the Chinese team's visit to the United States in 1972.
Liang Geliang and Zheng Huaiying, the former world champions who played in the 1971 exhibition match in Beijing against the US ping-pong delegation, excitedly hugged and shook hands with Dell and Connie Sweeris, who were among the nine US players invited to visit Beijing back then.
They posed in front of a photo exhibition with highlights of the series that helped bring China-US relations out of the deep freeze, including the 1971 Nagoya World Table Tennis Championship in Japan, where the Chinese team invited Connie Sweeris and her teammates to play in Beijing. The invitation helped open the door for then-US president Richard Nixon's visit to China in February 1972.
"I'm very excited and joyful to be here and meet my old friends today," Liang said. "If it weren't for Ping-Pong Diplomacy helping to break the ice between the two nations, there wouldn't be as much exchange and communication between China and the US today."
Connie Sweeris remembered her first trip to China more than four decades ago.
"I was excited and anxious because we didn't know anything about China at that time," she said. "But Chinese players and people were very friendly and welcoming."
"We not only shared table tennis but also our culture and life together," her husband, Dell, added.
The photo exhibition and the event were hosted by the University of Michigan, the China Soong Ching Ling Foundation and the Chinese Table Tennis Association.
"Today, we are here to commemorate the Ping-Pong Diplomacy of 1971 and 1972 that helped to bridge our nations," said Wang Jiarui, chairman of the foundation.
"Relations between China and the US still face many challenges. I hope we will see more and more cultural, political and economic exchanges between our two countries - including sports exchanges like the Ping-Pong Diplomacy of 45 years ago - in the future, to boost our relationship based on mutual respect and benefit," Wang said.
"The relationship between China and the US is very significant," said Kenneth Lieberthal, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. "China plays a major role in today's world, and the US and China together might have massive impacts globally."
So exchanges and joint projects between China and the US are very important in promoting their working together, Lieberthal said.
"It's wonderful to see the success of Ping-Pong Diplomacy - that's what all people-to-people interaction is about," said Jan Berris, vice-president of the National Committee on United States-China Relations.