Duo find new lives, homes a world apart
Updated: 2013-07-31 09:57
By Tang Yue (China Daily)
|
|||||||||
Editor's note: Kesang Tashi is a Tibetan who lives in New Hampshire, while Douglas E. Wilford is a native of Ohio, who lives in Lhasa. Tang Yue spoke to them to discover the pros and cons of their unusual lifestyles.
Although the two men have never met, they have something in common - they live in the lands of each other's birth.
Kesang Tashi is a 70-year-old Tibetan born in Shangri-La, while Douglas E. Wilford is a 49-year-old from the US state of Ohio.
US expat Douglas E. Wilford with an employee at his Summit Cafe in Lhasa. Li Zhou / for China Daily |
Tashi attended college in the United States in 1966 and now lives in Hanover, New Hampshire, with his wife and two children.
Wilford first traveled to Tibet in 1998 and has lived in Lhasa since 2005 with his family, including an adopted Chinese daughter.
Both are businessmen. Tashi sells traditional Tibetan rugs in the US, while Wilford runs two cafes in Lhasa.
China Daily's Tang Yue spoke to the pair to discover why they chose to live and work in their "second hometowns", how they understand each other's culture and reflect on life, from what Tashi calls an "analytical distance".
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Duo find new lives, homes a world apart |
Education overhaul |
Carbon market helps cut emissions |
Attractive Cities for Foreigners |
Terraces on top of the world |
No summer relief for kindergarten |
Today's Top News
China-US talks yield 'incremental progress'
Spain investigators: Train driver was on phone
Apple faces more staff abuse charges
Spending surge for renewables
Beijing and Canberra to resume trade talks
Top leader vows to meet growth target
2,290 disciplined for extravagance
Japan diplomat seeks to mend ties
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |