Tsinghua University students visit Spain to widen their understanding of the bilateral relations, which celebrate their 50th anniversary this year.
With China and Spain celebrating 50 years of their diplomatic ties this year, a group of international relations students from Tsinghua University – President Xi Jinping’s alma mater – took on a two-week tour of Spain in July to ensure wider exposure and interactions for younger people who could be China’s leaders tomorrow. This year also marks the 110th anniversary of Tsinghua University. Meanwhile, the visit showed the keenness among Spanish VIP’s and prestigious local institutions to share experiences and views with the visitors.
In Madrid the students were received by Vicente López-Ibor Mayor, former Commissioner of Spain’s National Energy Commission and a founding partner of Abogados López-Ibor Mayor and Associates, specializing in international energy laws. López-Ibor Mayor spoke to the visitors about structuring and contracting large industrial projects in the renewable energy, electricity, and gas and oil sectors. He also touched upon transition and climate change and new forms of production and consumption of electricity in a changing world and answered his audience’s questions on the prospects for China-Spain energy cooperation.
The students also talked with Pablo Rovetta, a Uruguayan entrepreneur and China specialist who had studied at Tsinghua University between 1978 and 1980. Rovetta shared his memories as a student in Tsinghua as well as photos of Tsinghua’s computer department classes in the 1970’s, handwritten lab reports and graduation certificates. During the two-hour meeting, he also uttered his views on Spain-China relations, an update on the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) from Eurasia’s Western part, as well as from the Americas. The students, in turn, told him about the development of Tsinghua in the recent years, the renovated facilities, its internationalization process and curricula.
At the Thyssen-Bornemisza National Museum in Madrid in July 2023, Chinese-language art specialized interpreter, Zhang Jianfeng, explaining Italian Renaissance artist Vittore Carpaccio’s “Young Knight in a Landscape” to the visitors from Tsinghua University.
A remarkable activity was the visit to the Thyssen-Bornemisza National Museum in Madrid, a jewel among European and Western museums, which opened exclusively for the visitors from China for two hours on July 17. Evelio Acevedo, the managing director of the museum, explained the national and cosmopolitan character of Thyssen-Bornemisza. Acevedo had been in Shanghai in June to cut the ribbon for a special exhibition, “The Greats of Six Centuries: Masterpieces from the Thyssen-Bornemisza National Museum,” at the Museum of Art Pudong in Shanghai. His introduction was followed by a Chinese-language tour guided by art specialized interpreter Zhang Jianfeng. She focused on the most outstanding masterpieces, such as Italian Renaissance artist Vittore Carpaccio’s “Young Knight in a Landscape,” fellow Italian Renaissance artist Domenico Ghirlandaio’s “Portrait of Giovanna degli Albizzi Tornabuoni,” and Vincent van Gogh’s “Les Vessenots” in Auvers, a landscape painting of Les Vessenots on the outskirts of Auvers in France.
The students also visited two other museums, the Prado Museum and the Reina Sofía National Museum in Madrid, which together with Thyssen-Bornemisza are part of the famous “Golden Triangle of Art” in the Spanish capital. The triangle is part of the “Paseo del Prado and Buen Retiro, a landscape of Arts and Sciences,” inscribed on UNESCO’s World Heritage List.
Visiting Tsinghua students posing for a group photo with Carlos Santana, former general manager of the Yixinou Spain, and the author Augusto Soto, at the arrival point of the Yiwu-Madrid railway line.
On July 18th, the students enjoyed a unique and historical experience on the Yixinou China-Europe freight train at the arrival point of the Yiwu-Madrid railway line. In 2014, the Yixinou undertook an epic journey of more than 13,000 km from Yiwu in China to Madrid, completing it in 21 days.
Carlos Santana, former general manager of the Yixinou Spain, explains the significance of the China-Europe freight train to the visiting Tsinghua students at Adif-Abroñigal Yixinou terminal premises in Madrid.
In Barcelona the students also paid a visit to Oriol Farres, project manager and International Yearbook coordinator of the Barcelona Centre for International Affairs, Spain’s oldest think tank (internationally known as CIDOB), which is also celebrating its 50th anniversary this year. Farres and other experts specializing in East Asia and Chinese politics as well as global geopolitics and security, briefed the Chinese visitors of the work of the think tank. The students were curious to learn about the agreements and academic exchange development with Chinese institutions. They also learned that Tsinghua’s Director of the Institute of International Studies Yan Xuetong had recently given a lecture at CIDOB’s annual most important event.
The visiting Tsinghua students at the Confucius Institute in Barcelona, with the author Augusto Soto and the Confucius Institute’s director, Li Peihua.