The third "Chinese Bridge" language proficiency competition was held at Sweden's Stockholm University on April 10, 2011.
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Middle school students sing a Chinese song during the "Chinese Bridge" Chinese language competition of Swedish middle school and university students in the Swedish capital of Stockholm on April 10, 2011. Fifty-one students from across Sweden took part in the competition on. [Photo/Xinhua]
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Nine students from Stockholm, Lund and Linkoping Universities and 42 students from a dozen other middle schools in Sweden participated in the competition which was jointly organized by the Chinese Embassy in Sweden and Nordic Confucius Institute in Stockholm.
Professor Thorbjorn Loden said more and more Swedish students have begun to study Chinese.
"I like you to follow the Chinese principle that friendship comes first, competition comes the second and enjoy the process of taking part in the competition," he said in a pep talk before the competition kicked off.
Incomplete statistics show that all the Swedish Universities and over 60 middle schools in Sweden offer Chinese courses. The Swedish government has identified Chinese as a second foreign language in an equal position with English, French and Spanish.
In his speech, Chinese Ambassador to Sweden Lan Caijun highlighted the significance to learn the Chinese language.
"First, it opens a good opportunity for your future if you can speak Chinese as Chinese economy is developing rapidly," Lan said.
He also said it is also better to contact Chinese people directly with their native language even though English is mostly spoken in the current world.
The competition includes a prepared speech in Chinese and a Chinese art and cultural show which includes Chinese pop song singing, poem reading, Taiji Boxing and drama performance.