By Yang Jingzhong and Devapriyo Das |
2012-1-11 |
NEWSPAPER EDITION
Four foreigners participate in a mahjong competition in Xi'an, capital city of northwest China's Shaanxi Province. More than 30 contestants from the US, England, France and South Korea take part in the event.
MAHJONG, the famous game played with clinking tiles, is a recent instance of Chinese culture or soft power spreading around the world and one lively community in Denmark is hooked on the "game of a thousand intelligences." Yang Jingzhong and Devapriyo Das report.
The rattle of plastic tiles and relaxed conversation fills the air in a community center hall in eastern Copenhagen, where a group of Danes are playing mahjong, a traditional Chinese board game.
In Denmark, whose population is crazy about football, handball and cycling, mahjong's intellectual challenge and exoticism have raised its profile in recent years.
"The beauty of the tiles inspired me to start playing. They are quite exotic to a European person," says Tina Christensen, chairman of Mahjong Denmark (MD), a national association for Danish mahjong players.
"Later, I became fascinated by the many variants in the game. When you get a new hand of tiles, you have a new mystery to solve, and that is very fascinating," she adds.
Christensen, a researcher at the Danish Meteorological Institute, the country's weather forecasting bureau, founded the mahjong association in 2000 to play the game in an organized and regular way.
The association started with a handful of members meeting to play at a cafe and today has around 50 full members, who meet every Thursday evening in the community center.
Its monthly introductory courses have nurtured a new generation of mahjong fans in this country, many of whom play outside of the association.
Traditionally, mahjong is thought of as a game played only by Chinese people, who sit around mahjong tables set up in quiet side corners.
So it is something of a shock to find blue-eyed, blond-haired players of the game who have Danish language names for the various mahjong tiles.
Mind game
In fact, Mahjong Denmark's members include ethnic Danes, Chinese, East Asian residents and other expatriates living in Denmark. All of them share a fascination for the game's intellectual and social character.
"I enjoy a game like mahjong, where you have to calculate your moves, both because of the multiple combinations and because every 10 minutes you get a new hand, which forces you to make new decisions," says MD member Henrik Leth, a software specialist for a mobile telecommunications company.
Christensen agrees, calling mahjong "the game of a thousand intelligences. Whenever you sit down at the mahjong table, it is a new game. You have to use your head."
MD members also find the game a great way to meet new people and unwind after a long day at work.
"There is a strong social aspect which makes it nice to play like this. It is not just about playing but also about socializing," says Morten Andersen, a student of computer science, who believes online games cannot compare with mahjong.
Sheila Seah Hansen, a Singaporean expatriate who learned mahjong from her Chinese mother, pointed to yet another advantage.
"For me, as a foreigner, it is a way of getting to know the Danes better by playing an Asian game," she says, explaining why she was attracted to Mahjong Denmark.
Many of the members discovered mahjong at university, while others heard about it at Danish board game conferences or through family and friends who have visited China.
Mahjong Denmark is now an established sports organization and is part of the European Mahjong Association (EMA), which Christensen helped to found; she is also the president.
The first EMA European championship was held in 2005 in the Netherlands, which is widely considered as the pioneer of European Mahjong culture.
The EMA helped boost popular awareness of the game in other European countries and Mahjong Denmark itself hosted the European Championship in Mahjong in Copenhagen in 2007.