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Lifestyle
Let a hundred flowers bloom: China, Korea, Japan in cherry trifle

Cherry blossoms bloom in Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden in Shinjuku, Tokyo in this photo taken April 2014. Bong Sta. Maria
Cherry blossoms have long been associated with Japan, where viewing the short-lived blooms is an enduringly popular pastime to herald the arrival of spring.
In recent years, some South Korean media have claimed that the country is actually the flower's origin—sometimes provoking prickly reactions in Japan.
But according to He Zongru, executive chairman of the China Cherry Industry Association, both are wrong, and the Middle Kingdom is the blossom's true birthplace.
He cited a Japanese monograph on cherry blossoms which stated that the flower originated in the Himalayan mountains of China and did not arrive in Japan until the Tang dynasty more than 1,100 years ago.

A woman rides her bicycle past a cherry blossom tree in bloom at a park in Tokyo on March 23, 2015. Spring officially arrived in Tokyo on March 23 when Japan's weather agency announced the start of the cherry blossom season. AFP PHOTO/Yoshikazu Tsuno
"As Chinese people, we have a responsibility to let more people know this history," he added.
For decades, Tokyo has given the prized plant to countries including the US as a gesture of goodwill, and every spring people across Japan gather under cherry blossom trees to eat, drink and admire.
Thousands of visitors line the banks of Washington's Tidal Basin every spring to catch a sight of the city's pink and white flowers, which were a gift from Japan in 1912.
In Beijing, the most popular place to view them is Yuyuantan Park, home to more than 2,000 cherry trees—roughly 200 of which were given to China by Japan in the early 1970s, when the two countries re-established diplomatic ties.
Nonetheless the row reflects tense relations among the three Asian rivals, which are frequently at odds with each other on issues including Japan's 20th-century history—when it colonized Korea and parts of China, culminating in World War II—and competing territorial claims in regional waters.
Often, such battles see Beijing and Seoul team up against Tokyo, as when China unveiled a memorial last year to a Korean national hero condemned by Japan as a "terrorist" for killing a Japanese official a century ago.
Even so He's message to Seoul in the latest debate was uncompromising.
"Simply put, the cherry blossom originated in China and flourished in Japan," the paper quoted him as saying. "South Korea has nothing to do with it." — Agence France-Presse
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