Quake zone hero pig named China's animal of the year
China's Animal of the Year
A pig that survived for 36 days buried beneath rubble during the Sichuan earthquake has been named China's animal of the year.
»Fat and lazy now
Enlarge Photo
Pigs near collapsed buildings in Yingxiu, in the southwestern province of Sichuan. A celebrity pig that survived for 36 days buried beneath rubble in quake-hit southwest China has been named the nation's animal of the year
<cite class="auth">AFP - Monday, December 22</cite>
BEIJING (AFP) - - A celebrity pig that survived for 36 days buried beneath rubble in quake-hit southwest China has been named the nation's animal of the year, state press reported.
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The pig won the award in an online vote after his ordeal earned him celebrity status and a plush life as the top attraction at an earthquake museum, the China Daily said in a weekend report. The pig, known as "Zhu Jianqiang" which means "Strong Pig", shot to fame after he was discovered alive beneath rubble, 36 days after the magnitude-8.0 earthquake struck Sichuan province on May 12. The pig survived on rainwater and a bag of charcoal during his ordeal and was sold to the Jianchuan Museum, which agreed to nurture him for the rest of his life as a reminder of the nation's resilience in disaster. Now free from the worry of the slaughterhouse, the pig enjoys a cushy life at the museum, the report said. "It's gotten fatter and lazier by the day," the paper quoted a museum staff member as saying. "We used to take it out for a walk every morning and afternoon, but now it's too lazy -- and too fat -- to do it. So we're feeding it only twice a day." According to the Red Net forum, the website that held the online vote, the two-year old pig "vividly illustrated the spirit of never giving up" and has become a model for Chinese entrepreneurs" amid the current economic downturn.
China's Animal of the Year
A pig that survived for 36 days buried beneath rubble during the Sichuan earthquake has been named China's animal of the year.
»Fat and lazy now
Enlarge Photo
Pigs near collapsed buildings in Yingxiu, in the southwestern province of Sichuan. A celebrity pig that survived for 36 days buried beneath rubble in quake-hit southwest China has been named the nation's animal of the year
<cite class="auth">AFP - Monday, December 22</cite>
BEIJING (AFP) - - A celebrity pig that survived for 36 days buried beneath rubble in quake-hit southwest China has been named the nation's animal of the year, state press reported.
<script language="javascript">if(window.yzq_d==null)window.yzq_d=new Object(); window.yzq_d['Cv7qbnxsfLg-']='&U=13flbugq3%2fN%3dCv7qbnxsfLg-%2fC%3d712983.13125192.13325551.5775860%2fD%3dLREC%2fB%3d5574906%2fV%3d1'; </script><noscript>
The pig won the award in an online vote after his ordeal earned him celebrity status and a plush life as the top attraction at an earthquake museum, the China Daily said in a weekend report. The pig, known as "Zhu Jianqiang" which means "Strong Pig", shot to fame after he was discovered alive beneath rubble, 36 days after the magnitude-8.0 earthquake struck Sichuan province on May 12. The pig survived on rainwater and a bag of charcoal during his ordeal and was sold to the Jianchuan Museum, which agreed to nurture him for the rest of his life as a reminder of the nation's resilience in disaster. Now free from the worry of the slaughterhouse, the pig enjoys a cushy life at the museum, the report said. "It's gotten fatter and lazier by the day," the paper quoted a museum staff member as saying. "We used to take it out for a walk every morning and afternoon, but now it's too lazy -- and too fat -- to do it. So we're feeding it only twice a day." According to the Red Net forum, the website that held the online vote, the two-year old pig "vividly illustrated the spirit of never giving up" and has become a model for Chinese entrepreneurs" amid the current economic downturn.