Feature: New York "tiger mom" steals advantage for nine daughters with Mandarin immersion from infancy

Source: Xinhua| 2019-08-12 00:46:13|Editor: huaxia
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Daughters of Lynn Berat talk with their Chinese teacher Lin (2nd L) at Lin's house in Bernards of New Jersey, the United States, July 13, 2019. (Xinhua/Wang Ying)

Lynn Berat, 58, holds two PhDs from Yale University and has been forcing her nine daughters to learn Mandarin Chinese from their infancy to prepare them for becoming "citizens of the world."

by Xinhua writers Yang Shilong, Chang Yuan

NEW YORK, Aug. 11 (Xinhua) -- It is not uncommon for non-Chinese heritage people to learn Mandarin nowadays as the world's oldest written language is becoming increasingly popular with the rapid rise of China.

But it is phenomenal that 58-year-old Lynn Berat, who holds two PhDs from Yale University, kind of "forced" her nine daughters to learn Mandarin from infancy in a bid to have them well-prepared to be what she called "citizens of the world."

"COMPLETELY CHINESE"

Berat fell in love with Chinese culture when she was giving lectures at Peking University in early 1980s. She quickly realized the Chinese language is "pictographic" and "very different" from Indo-European languages.

"It requires a greater effort than a language with an alphabet... Chinese seemed to be something that they (her children) should learn from infancy," Berat told Xinhua in a recent interview.

"If they were going to learn it, then they needed to be completely bilingual. And so we're working on that," she said.

Berat has actually created a purely Mandarin speaking environment for her nine girls, now aged from 11-19, ever since they were born: a Mandarin-speaking nanny, a Chinese/English bilingual kindergarten and primary school as well as various extracurricular courses including Chinese dances, musical instruments and chorus.

"So their life has really been sort of all Chinese all the time," Berat said. "Living in New York, it's been possible to immerse them deeply in Chinese language and culture. "

The New York metropolitan area is home to the largest Chinese population outside Asia, with the number of Chinese Americans estimated at about 800,000.

Interestingly, when Berat's youngest ones, twin sisters Logan and Lachlan attended the bilingual Pre-K at the age of four, both of them easily passed the Chinese test but failed in the assessment of English.

It was such a "highly irregular thing" for children whose parent's home language was English. They would have been sent to a school for children with "severe learning disabilities" if the teacher and the principal had not known the stories of their older sisters.

"I have to say you have no idea how proud I am of that because to me, it meant that they were really working hard with their brains for Chinese. It kind of indicates the degree of our commitment to the Chinese."

Apart from Chinese, all her girls have also learnt Spanish and French, and can speak Albanian, which is Berat's mother tongue.

Lynn Berat (5th L) and her nine daughters pose for a photo in front of their Chinese teacher's house in Bernards of New Jersey, the United States, July 27, 2019. (Xinhua/Wang Ying)

"GLOBAL CENTURY"

For the reason why she put on such a high priority for her children to learn Mandarin, Berat sounded very forward looking and very deep in thought.

"I feel very strongly of technological change in invention that this century is the global century," she said.

"And to be a global citizen, you really have to know the world, and the more languages and cultures that you really know intimately, the better it is (for you)," she emphasized.

"My hope for them from the beginning has been that they will be citizens of the world, we're pushing them in that direction," she said.

The emerging economies including China, India have been changing the political, economic and cultural landscapes of the world in the past decades, said Berat, who has been to more than 120 countries so far.

Though India "isn't quite awakened yet," the speed of China's development is "very impressive," she said.

"No one had expected" that China would become the second largest economy after the United States when she first visited China's capital city of Beijing, Berat said.

"When one didn't know what would happen with China at that stage, obviously we can see now how things develop," she said.

Naturally, Mandarin Chinese is getting popular in the United States and other parts of the world, she said.

"Chinese is the 'flavor of the month' in many ways," said Berat, borrowing an expression of local ice cream store pushing "the flavor that's popular at the moment."

Daughters of Lynn Berat talk with their Chinese teacher Lin (3rd R) at Lin's house in Bernards of New Jersey, the United States, July 13, 2019.

"LIFELONG COMMITMENT"

"I thought I was a tiger mom," Berat Chuckled when asked how she managed to have all of her girls keep on learning Chinese. "It's not negotiable. They don't complain because they know there's no hope. But then they do it. That's it."

"It's not just textbook learning. You know, this has been their life. Their friends are Chinese. They've been in the Chinese cultural knowledge competitions... it's really been, for them, a lifelong commitment," said Berat, who herself is a strong lover of Chinese culture and history.

"You know, it really even for me is an astonishing way. But I feel all this effort has been worth it because they do get it. I think what's exceptional about them is because they've been deeply immersed in Chinese culture," she said.

"I think they are also beginning to understand that they have a very unique set of life skills," she said. "I think that's a great gift. I don't know how much they realize it's the gift that they have. But I think as they get older, increasingly they will appreciate it."

Her oldest daughter Lindsay is studying international politics in Chinese as a sophomore at the Shanghai campus of New York University. She aspires to find a job in the United Nations after graduation.

"I am very thankful to my mom. Learning Mandarin has opened new windows for my life, and I got many more opportunities than my peers to experience the world," Lindsay told Xinhua in fluent Mandarin.

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