Facebook co-founder, CEO Zuckerberg thrills Chinese students with 30 minutes of Mandarin
BEIJING (AP) -- China may ban
Facebook, but not its co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who delighted
an audience of students in Beijing with a 30-minute chat in his recently
learned Mandarin Chinese.
There
was no explicit discussion of China's ban on the social media site,
which has been in place since 2009, though an indirect reference to it
drew laughter during the question-and-answer session Wednesday at the
prestigious Tsinghua University. Both Zuckerberg and the university
posted video clips of the Q&A online.
Zuckerberg,
whose company has long sought to enter the Chinese market, noted that
the social media giant already helps some Chinese companies in foreign
markets, citing computer maker Lenovo's ads on Facebook in India.
"Speaking
of China, I have a more difficult question for Mark, which I hope will
not get me fired. What are Facebook's plans in China?" asked the forum
facilitator and Facebook employee Wei Xiaoliang, to laughter and
applause from the audience."We are already in China," Zuckerberg said in Chinese, to more laughter. "We help Chinese companies gain customers abroad."
"We want to help the rest of the world connect to China."
Beijing
promotes Internet use for business and education but bans material
deemed subversive or obscene and blocks access to foreign websites run
by human rights and Tibet activists and some overseas news and social
media sites.
On China's social media, many microbloggers noted the irony that Zuckerberg's famous creation is blocked in China.Designer David Wang, in an interview in downtown Beijing, said he would be happy if Facebook was allowed across the so-called Great Firewall of China.
"Because now we have to use software to jump the Wall if we want to access Facebook," he said.
Zuckerberg visited Beijing this week as a newly-appointed member to the advisory board for Tsinghua University School of Economics and Management. He met Tuesday with Tsinghua President Chen Jining to discuss cooperation in education, according to a statement by Tsinghua.
Zuckerberg's Chinese pronunciation was far from fluent and some native speakers said it was a "challenge" to understand him. But he was able to maintain intelligible conversation for a half-hour and the students responded with warm cheers for his effort and laughter at his humor.
Zuckerberg married Chinese-American Priscilla Chan in 2012, and set himself the goal of learning Mandarin in 2010. He said Wednesday that he wanted to learn the language partly because his wife's grandmother only speaks Chinese. He recalled informing the grandmother of the upcoming marriage.
"Priscilla and I decided to get married, so I told her grandmother in Chinese, and she was very surprised," Zuckerberg said.
He said China is a great country and hopes that learning the language will help him learn its culture. "The Chinese language is difficult, and I speak English, but I like challenges," Zuckerberg said.
Li
Qin, a computer programmer from the eastern city of Hangzhou, said in
an online chat that she could barely understand Zuckerberg's Chinese.
"It
was a challenge for Chinese listening comprehension. But even though
Facebook cannot enter the Chinese market, Mark is still making a
fighting effort to learn," she said. "It was quite a funny scenario."
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