My first-hand experience with Wuhan’s fight against the epidemic
By Noor-ul-Huda
It was January when I received my
graduation certificate and after completing all formalities, I booked a flight
of January 29 to get back to my home country Pakistan.
Being the first girl in my family to
achieve a doctorate degree, especially from a well-reputed university in China,
was something worth celebrating with my family. As it was my birthday on
January 30, my family had planned a big party to celebrate my birthday and my
PhD on my return from Wuhan, central China’s Hubei province.
But all of a sudden, there were
announcements of locking down Wuhan city. Through all possible communication
means I had: my supervisor, International Students’ Office, friends, news pages
on WeChat and even my telecommunication company reminding me to stock essential
items, I learnt that the entire city was going to be shut down in two hours.
Those two hours were too short for me
because my visa would get expired by the end of January. At that time the Hubei
provincial government and my school – Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese
Academy of Sciences, stood by my side and provided me with all the possible
assistance one could expect.
My visa got automatically renewed for 60
days without any fee and my ticket was fully refunded too. I couldn’t stop
praising the efficiency of the Chinese government. They had an emergency plan
for residents of Wuhan before announcing quarantine for the city.
The next step was to compromise with the
situation and to make my family understand that staying in Wuhan was the best
choice. They got worried about my health and food. So I showed them all the
food I had stocked and later showed them my life here via video calls. They
could see how I wore the mask, gloves, thick jacket, scarf… and how the
security guard checked my body temperature before my friends and I went to the
market for shopping together.
We were also provided with masks, fresh
vegetables and fish by our teachers as a caring gesture. Our health status was
recorded daily as well, so my family got relieved for I was safe and under good
care here. Muslim community in Wuhan also gifted us fresh vegetables, halal
meat, rice and wheat flour as a unity gesture. Community shopping was a
wonderful experience on its own and staff members tried their best to provide
what we needed.
When situation got eased, we eight
international students were divided into two groups. Each group could go
shopping once a week to buy necessities for us all.
During quarantine, the government of
Pakistan advised all students to stand by China in this hard time and cooperate
with local health authorities. The two countries are iron friends since long. I
chose to spend the memorable time by witnessing a strong nation fighting with
this epidemic.
I witnessed Chinese army and paramedical
staff coming from different parts of China to assist Wuhan. I witnessed my
country proudly supporting China. I witnessed tired yet determined faces of
health workers and the marks on their faces. I witnessed research centers
working hard to develop remedies against this virus. I witnessed transparency
of the data shared by China.
I myself donated money to buy protective
gears for frontline workers and witnessed a boy silently leaving boxes of masks
to the policemen. I witnessed people performing their duties even in the snow.
I saw my supervisor, Professor Xie Shouqi, dragging a cart and distributing
vegetables among community members. I celebrated my birthday all alone in the
room singing birthday songs to myself, which was a unique experience.
I recorded a video in Urdu language for
my country mates on basic preventive measures against COVID-19 that I practiced
during the lockdown, so that my experience could help them. It was watched on
social media and well appreciated among the Pakistani community.
My friends and I also started making
meaningful public service slogans about COVID-19 and the importance of
quarantine, especially self-quarantine at home, in English and Urdu. We
circulated it among all friends, family, teachers in both countries so that
they could save themselves and others. The slogans were: “Quarantine is not a
prison; it is for greater good.” and “Quarantine is not a curse. This isolation
will save you and the whole nation.”
Apart from raising public awareness,
another reason of making these slogans was to condemn the discriminatory
behaviors we were facing from different parts of the world. People should
understand that virus respects no geographical boundaries and gender. Mass gatherings
could be the main source of its spreading; quarantining Wuhan and social
distancing was the best possible solutions to contain it, and working on its
remedy is the best practice. These were the footprints China offered the world
to follow, and were the best answer to all the fabricated "truths"
and false propaganda.
When others were busy in passing the
buck, China was busy in constructing two hospitals in record time. I had full
confidence in the Chinese government’s efficiency and its health facilities. I
also believed that the situation would be better soon and Chinese economy would
roar again. The special period proved China as a role model to other nations.
Now Wuhan is back to life, China has almost been healed, and the country is
helping other nations by all possible means.
When I look back, I sum up my experience
during the lockdown as ‘roller coaster of emotions’ as homesickness, increased
number of cases, decreased number of deaths and suspected cases, possible cure for
COVID-19, caring gestures from the community, motivational words from teachers,
family and friends used to bring multiple mood swings within a day.
Death is not just a human body loss but is
actually the loss of an entire source of expertise, and those gaps are hard to
fill. I would like to pay homage to all people in the world who lost their
lives in the pandemic.
Photography and sightseeing are my
hobbies. I once won photography competitions in my institute. Moreover, I am
“Belt and Road Tourism Ambassador” appointed by Belt and Road Travelers
Alliance to promote the charms of Hubei and Wuhan to the world.
I learnt to sing Huangmei opera during
my Chinese language class and have sung it on various events. I always feel
good when I get praise from Chinese people for performing the opera, though I
am far from perfection. I got an opportunity to publish my experience with
Chinese culture and Huangmei opera as an expat in the Changjiang Weekly.
Such cultural exchanges will always connect
me with Wuhan. During the lockdown, I seldom went for running or took pictures of
spring inside the institute to freshen up. I got plenty of ‘me time’ in my room
which served as ‘my space’ for self-realization. I got time to relax after
graduation, and to know my strengths and tolerance range under stressful
circumstances.
I call Wuhan my second home and I would
like to express my sincere wishes to the Chinese people. I wish Wuhan
prosperity by leaps and bounds.
Noor-ul-Huda holds a banner of
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences. Photo: Courtesy of Noor-ul-Huda
My first-hand experience with Wuhan’s fight against the epidemic
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