I have developed the habit of walking to work these days.
This morning, walking to a street corner in Hepingli, I was surprised to see a cart selling egg pancakes. A few schoolchildren gathered around, one of them rushing to buy a pancake, and the others cheered for some reason. I couldn’t help but feel a surge of joy: “Long time no see, egg pancakes!” While these pancakes may not meet international or national food hygiene standards, they’re warm and fragrant, and at least much safer than domestically produced milk that’s in line with global standards.
It’s been over two months since I’ve seen these pancake stalls on the streets of Beijing. I remember one morning in late July, I was taking my daughter, who was on holiday, to work at Hongniba, hoping to buy some kind of flatbread along the way. But I couldn’t find any. Finally, I went to Xiaoguan Market, but all the pancake shops were gone! I was baffled. I asked an old man selling eggs why, and he looked at me strangely and said, “The Olympics are about to start!” I’d just returned from the Sichuan disaster area, and I hadn’t been interested in the Olympics at all. It was then that I realized what was happening.
Since that day, I have noticed that the capital city has become very clean and “civilized”. Not only have the pancake stalls disappeared, but even the stalls selling pirated discs and books have disappeared. Many small audio-visual stores have also closed down. What’s worse, even the posters outside the cinema have been removed!
Today, September 22, 2008, is the fifth day after the Paralympics and the first working day since the lifting of the odd-even number restriction in Beijing (September 21). I can see pushcarts selling egg pancakes on the streets of Beijing again. I guess historians wouldn’t bother to record this kind of event, so I’ll do my best to do it for them.
Also, I heard from a friend that I saw stalls selling pirated discs and books on the street again last night. I guess those small audio-visual stores will also gradually resume business soon. — Of course, this is not something I saw with my own eyes, so I won’t record it in the history books for now.
The relevant incident that will be recorded in official history will probably be the discovery of a poison in several domestic brand milks. Historians will regretfully tell us that it is a real shame that the “discovery” was not made after the Paralympics, otherwise it would have been a family scandal “unspeakable to outsiders”! What a shame!
Oh, how embarrassing…