Downtown Shijiazhuang is laid out on a grid with
long axial roads, which change their names several
times along their course, running north-south and
east-west. The main street running east-west across
town, just north of the train station and served by
the #5 bus, is one of the most interesting. Five
blocks west of the station along a section called
Zhongshan Lu, you'll find the
Martyrs' Memorial
(daily 6am-5pm), an ordered, sober-looking park,
containing the graves of the only two foreigners to
be honoured as heroes of the Revolution. On the west
side of the park, the grave of
Norman Bethune
, a Canadian doctor, is marked by an ornate
sarcophagus, a photo exhibition, and a statue,
identical to one standing in Bethune Square, Montréal.
Bethune (1890-1939), whose remains were moved here
from Canada at the request of the Chinese government
in 1953, was a brilliant, idealistic surgeon, who
came to China to help the Communists in the fight
against the Japanese after working on the Republican
side in the Spanish Civil War. He was present at
most of the major battles of the era, and became a
close confidant of Mao when the Red Army was holed
up in Yan'an after the Long March. Mao was so
impressed with Bethune's devotion to his work that
he later exhorted the Chinese to "learn
selflessness from Dr Bethune". As one of the
most well-known foreigners in China, Bethune is one
reason why many Chinese are well disposed towards
Canadians.
Dwarkanath Kotnis (1900-1942) is
given identical treatment on the east side of the
park. Dr Kotnis, one of five Indian doctors who came
to China in the 1930s, stayed in the country for
nearly a decade, joining the Communist Party just
before his death. Both doctors are celebrated in a
small
museum at the back of the park; items
on display include the exercise books in which they
practised writing in Chinese and the crude surgical
implements they had to work with. The large number
of photographs include pictures of Bethune operating
by torchlight and chatting with Mao.
East of the station, the road becomes Jiefang Lu,
the city's commercial sector, with a few department
stores, the largest of which, the ostentatious five-storey
Bei Guo Department Store , at the
intersection with Bei Dajie, is the biggest in
Hebei, and the pride of local residents, who express
regret that it isn't even taller. Overstaffed and
full of window shoppers, it's probably the city's
premier tourist attraction. There's nothing special,
though, about the household goods and clothes on
display.
Two blocks farther east is the unexpectedly good Hebei
Museum (daily 8.30-11.30am & 2.30-4.30pm; ¥10).
The downstairs rooms hold temporary exhibitions of
local products, while the two rooms upstairs display
a fascinating hotchpotch of historic artefacts. The
first hall includes a complete mammoth skull and
tusk, a miniature terracotta army unearthed in a
nearby tomb and a jade burial suit. The second hall,
concerned with modern history, has displays of
weaponry, photographs of battlefields, and a model
village with a network of tunnels underneath
illustrating how the Red Army hid from their
enemies.
CITS arranges tours to the showpiece Bethune
Army Hospital , just west of the train station,
one of the best-equipped and most advanced in China.
Similarly, there are CITS group tours to the Military
Academy outside town, where you'll be introduced
to some happy, smiling soldiers by your attentive
chaperone, and see some fit, well-adjusted cadets
practising their drill. What happens when you are
not around is another question, as this is where
counter-revolutionaries are sent for refresher
courses in ideological correctness. Prices for these
tours vary depending on numbers, but at least four
tourists are needed - expect to pay around ¥50 per
head.