close

From Chengdu, with love: Chinese city thanks Western Pa. for support

3 min read
1 / 11

Harry Funk/The Almanac

Looking forward to sampling Sichuan Gourmet cuisine are attorney Carrie Xu, left, and Marian Lien, right, president of the Organization of Chinese Americans, Pittsburgh Chapter.

2 / 11

Harry Funk/The Almanac

Pier Lee of Bethel Park, left, and Susan Chang of Upper St. Clair are pictured at the Spring Festival, held at North Allegheny High School.

3 / 11

Kwun Kwong Kai comes bearing gifts for guests.

4 / 11

Chengdu is the capital of China's Sichuan Province.

5 / 11

Pier Lee and Rich Fitzgerald

6 / 11

Performers from Chengdu demonstrate the art of Bian Lian during the 2020 Spring Celebration of the Chinese new year at North Allegheny High School

7 / 11

Gifts presented to guests by Kwun Kwong Kai include a miniature, stuffed version of a giant panda.

8 / 11

Harry Funk/The Almanac

Sherry Kai translates for her father, Kwun Kwong Kai of the Chengdu Foreign Affairs Office.

9 / 11

Kwun Kwong Kai acknowledges South Hills residents Pier Lee and Susan Chang, as guest Bhavini Patel of Edgewood applauds.

10 / 11

Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto speaks during the event.

11 / 11

Guests include, from left, Bhavini Patel, chief executive officer of @beamdata; Rich Fitzgerald, Allegheny County executive; and Ying Pu, publisher of Erie Chinese Journal.

Shortly after a performance group from Chengdu, China, returned home from the Pittsburgh area in early 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic went full throttle.

Then during the summer, an earthquake struck Sichuan Province, of which Chengdu is the capital, causing three deaths and damaging thousands of homes.

In Western Pennsylvania, the problems did not go unnoticed.

“The Chinese community here mobilized and donated 20,000 masks to the city of Chengdu,” Kwun Kwong Kai reported.

With Sherry Kai, his daughter, serving as translator, he welcomed guests to a dinner at Sichuan Gourmet in Squirrel Hill. Representing the Chengdu Foreign Affairs Office, Kwun expressed gratitude by hosting the event and presenting gifts to those in attendance.

He particularly thanked two South Hills women for their sustained efforts on behalf of the region’s residents from his country: Pier Lee of Bethel Park, director emerita of Peters Township Public Library and Organization of Chinese Americans Pittsburgh honorary chairwoman for 2019, and Susan Chang of Upper St. Clair, board president of the Chinese Association for Science and Technology’s Pittsburgh Chapter.

Among others attending the Nov. 19 event, which also kicked off the Pittsburgh Chinese Restaurant Association’s Sichuan Cuisine Week, were Rich Fitzgerald, Allegheny County executive, and Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto.

“The growth within the Chinese community in Southwestern Pennsylvania is due to so many people who are coming here in order to use their minds,” Peduto said. “They’re coming here as doctors and engineers. They’re coming here to work in the tech community.”

He acknowledged the role of the restaurant association in helping them adjust to their new surroundings.

“They’re staying here because they’re finding food and a culture that reminds them of home,” the mayor said. “Thank you for building that welcoming and allowing people to call Pittsburgh home.”

In January 2020, performers from Chengdu visited the region to demonstrate the art of Bian Lian, a creative use of masks also known as face changing, during a Spring Festival celebration of the Chinese New Year at North Allegheny High School in McCandless.

Other performers came from Wuhan, a Sister Cities Association of Pittsburgh partner and the reported place of origin for COVID-19. Just a week after the festival, Peduto oversaw a care package of personal protective equipment that was shipped to the capital of China’s Hubei Province.

The gifts of appreciation presented by Kwun Kwong Kai featured Sichuan flavorings – “I hope you guys like spicy,” his daughter said – and small stuffed giant pandas. The rare black-and-white bears are found only in China’s Sichuan, Shanxi and Gansu provinces, and Chengdu is home to a research base for giant panda breeding, along with a panda reserve that is open to the public.

“Once the pandemic is over,” Kwun suggested, “let’s organize a trip to see them.”

Pittsburgh Sichuan Cuisine Week runs through Nov. 28. Participating restaurants are Sichuan Gourmet and Chengdu Gourmet in Squirrel Hill, Jade Grille in Mt. Lebanon, Szechuan Spice in Shadyside and Little Asia in North Oakland.

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $3.75/week.

Subscribe Today