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Xinhua News Agency, Hohhot, December 7 (Reporter Wei Jingyu) “Use the power of poetry to fight the epidemic.” More than half a month has passed since a confirmed local case of coronary pneumonia occurred in Manzhouli, Inner Mongolia. This phrase is often liked by local poetry The person mentioned.
“Doctors are treating patients, community personnel are patrolling, what can we do if we can’t get to the front line? I think we can use the form of reciting poems to encourage the epidemic,” said Dai Yali , a 63-year-old citizen of Manzhouli.
A few days ago, Dai Yali and several colleagues organized more than 300 recitation enthusiasts in the city of Manzhouli to perform a recitation of poems to encourage the epidemic. In this small, romantic border town, citizens remain optimistic about the epidemic and encourage the fight against the epidemic in a poetic way.
On November 21, the city of Manzhouli reported two new confirmed cases of new local coronary pneumonia. This small border town between China and Russia suddenly entered a state of emergency. At that time, Dai Yali was in Shenzhen and he could only continue reading about the epidemic situation in his hometown by swiping his mobile phone. He saw the medical staff back off again, all the citizens participating in the nucleic acid tests, community volunteers on guard against the wind and snow, and his eyes were wet over and over again. .
“Far away, what can I do for my hometown?” Dai Yali wondered.
Dai Yali, who loves creating poetry, wrote a poem to encourage Manzhouli: “Believe in Manzhouli.” “Whether at the beginning of the year, in the face of a sudden disaster, or now, with the return of the new crown, our determination and confidence in the fight against the epidemic depends only on clenched fists!”
He sent this poem to some friends and quickly flipped the screen in the circle of friends of the citizens of Manzhouli. Many people contacted Dai Yali and they all asked him a phrase: “What else can we do when we stay at home?”
Knowing that everyone wanted to contribute to the fight against the epidemic, Dai Yali had a new idea after arguing with several fans of the recitation. “We can hold a poetry recitation meeting online to write and read poems together to cheer up our hometown.”
The online poetry recitation will be called “Believe in Manzhouli.” Participants in the recitation of poetry include professional speakers and people who have no recitation experience. They formed an online practice group and commented and practiced with each other in the group every day to convey their anti-epidemic power.
Chen Li is a cadre involved in the prevention and control of the epidemic, he condensed his personal experience and personal knowledge at work into a verse and recorded the days of fighting the epidemic. The poem wrote: “There is always such a group of people, united and courageous in the face of the epidemic. They are community women, government officials and company employees. They are messenger brothers, health workers and enthusiastic citizens. They are. It is a drop in the ocean and a bit of stars. Today, I am here, but I feel that I am one of them. “
“I work with the bayonet every day and I cannot participate in the recitation of poetry. I dedicate this little poem to all the extraordinary of us in the epidemic,” Chen Li said.
“Unite as one, fight together, use science and faith to defeat this raging beast.” During the recitation, a poem in Cantonese was particularly striking. The speaker was Feng Shaojin, a host from Shenzhen. “Most of my friends from the north don’t understand Cantonese, but they can feel my regards.” Feng Shaojin said, “I want to tell my friends in Manchuria through Cantonese that there are relatives everywhere in the homeland.”
Citizen Zhang Haiying said excitedly after hearing the recitation, “Now the whole city is fighting the epidemic. These reciters use their voices to inject energy into the fight against the epidemic.”
“Fighting and fighting the snow demands green, waiting to embrace the rainbow after the wind and the rain. Holding hands, holding on to love, maintaining the nobility and calm of life.” Dai Yali is still creating new poems. She and her peers plan to release the second online poetry recitation session, “continuing to send warmth and strength to family members on the front line.”
Editor in Charge: Li Qian Li Guodong