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Like the Five Olympic
Rings from which they draw their color and inspiration, the Five Friendlies will
serve as the Official Mascots of Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, carrying a message
of friendship and peace--and blessings from China--to children all over the
world. Designed to express the playful qualities of five little children who
form an intimate circle of friends, the Five Friendlies also embody the natural
characteristics of four of China's most popular animals--the Fish, the Panda,
the Tibetan Antelope, the Swallow--and the Olympic Flame.In China's traditional
culture and art, the fish and water designs are symbols of prosperity and
harvest. And so Beibei carries the blessing of prosperity. A fish is also a
symbol of surplus in Chinese culture, another measure of a good year and a good
life. The ornamental lines of the water-wave designs are taken from well-known
Chinese paintings of the past. Among the Five Friendlies, Beibei is known to be
gentle and pure. Strong in water sports, she reflects the blue Olympic ring.
Each of the Friendlies has a rhyming two-syllable name--a traditional way of
expressing affection for children in China. Beibei is the Fish, Jingjing is the
Panda, Huanhuan is the Olympic Flame, Yingying is the Tibetan Antelope and Nini
is the Swallow. When you put their names together--Bei Jing Huan Ying Ni--they
say "Welcome to Beijing," offering a warm invitation that reflects the mission
of the Five Friendlies as young ambassadors for the Olympic Games. The Five
Friendlies also embody both the landscape and the dreams and aspirations of
people from every part of the vast country of China. In their origins and their
headpieces, you can see the five elements of nature--the sea, forest, fire,
earth and sky--all stylistic rendered in ways that represent the deep
traditional influences of Chinese folk art and ornamentation.
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