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China Mourns the Death of a Student in Boston Blast China Mourns the Death of a Student in Boston Blast
(about 9 hours later)
HONG KONG — Grief over a Chinese student who was the third victim killed in the Boston Marathon bombing rippled across her home country on Wednesday, when Internet sites and news reports described and celebrated a young woman whose ambitions for a career in finance were cut harshly short. HONG KONG — Grief over a Chinese student who was killed in the Boston Marathon bombing rippled across her home country on Wednesday as Internet sites and news reports described and celebrated a young woman whose ambitions for a career in finance were cut harshly short.
Boston University and the Chinese Consulate General in New York have said the victim was a graduate student at the school, but the consulate said her family asked that no personal details be disclosed. But a classmate, a Chinese university official and a state-run newspaper in her home city have said she was Lu Lingzi, who accompanied a friend to watch the marathon from near where the blasts shook the streets. Boston University and the Chinese Consulate General in New York have said the victim was a graduate student at the college, but the consulate said her family asked that no personal details be disclosed. A classmate, a Chinese university official and a state-run newspaper in her home city have said she was Lu Lingzi, who accompanied a friend to watch the marathon near where the blasts shook the streets.
Even without government confirmation that Ms. Lu was killed in the explosion on Monday, Chinese Internet sites filled with mournful messages about a woman whose aspirations took her from a rust-belt hometown, Shenyang, to Beijing and then the United States. Her account on Weibo, a Twitter-like microblogging service used by tens of millions of people in China, attracted more than 10,000 messages, mostly of condolence, in the hours after Chinese media reported her death. Even without government confirmation that Ms. Lu was one of three people killed in the explosion on Monday, Chinese Internet sites filled with mournful messages about a woman whose aspirations took her from a rust-belt hometown, Shenyang, to Beijing and then the United States. Her account on Weibo, a Twitter-like microblogging service used by tens of millions of people in China, attracted more than 10,000 messages, mostly of condolence, in the hours after the Chinese news media reported her death.
“You are in heaven now, where there are no bombs,” said one typical message. “You are in heaven now, where there are no bombs,” said one message.
Ms. Lu was 23 years old and had become interested in Christianity, said a fellow Chinese student at Boston University, Lu Meixu, who is not related but is also from Shenyang. Ms. Lu, 23, had become interested in Christianity, said a fellow Chinese student at Boston University, Lu Meixu, who is not related but is also from Shenyang.
Ms. Lu’s own final message on Weibo was posted on Monday. It showed a picture of a bowl of Chinese fried bread and said, “My wonderful breakfast.” Ms. Lu, shown on her Weibo page as a petite woman with thick, shoulder-length hair, said there that she enjoyed food, music and finance. Other Facebook photos showed her in poses at Toah Nipi, a Christian retreat center in southern New Hampshire. Ms. Lu’s own final message on Weibo was posted on Monday. It showed a picture of a bowl of Chinese fried bread and said, “My wonderful breakfast.” Ms. Lu, shown on her Weibo page as a petite woman with thick shoulder-length hair, said there that she enjoyed food, music and finance. Other Facebook photos showed her at Toah Nipi, a Christian retreat center in southern New Hampshire.
Although mutual perceptions of China and the United States are often overshadowed by political rancor, Ms. Lu’s death gave a melancholy face to the attraction that America and its colleges exert over many young Chinese. More than 194,000 Chinese students were enrolled in American colleges and universities in the 2011-12 academic year, far exceeding any other country outside the United States, according to the Institute of International Education. And Boston, with its many colleges and the cachet of Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has long been a magnet for them. Although China’s and the United States’ perceptions of each other are often overshadowed by political rancor, Ms. Lu’s death gave a melancholy face to the attraction that America and its colleges exert over many young Chinese. More than 194,000 Chinese students were enrolled in American colleges and universities in the 2011-12 academic year, far exceeding any other foreign country, according to the Institute of International Education. And Boston, with its many colleges and the cachet of Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has long been a magnet for them.
News of the death of one Chinese student and the injury of another prompted comment from China’s top leader, Xi Jinping, whose own daughter has studied at Harvard. News of the death of one Chinese student and the injury of another prompted comment from China’s top leader, President Xi Jinping, whose own daughter has studied at Harvard.
Mr. Xi said he was “extremely concerned” and he passed on messages of comfort to the two students’ families, as well as the injured student, the official Xinhua news agency reported. The Chinese government has never publicly confirmed that Mr. Xi’s daughter was studying at Harvard, and it is unclear whether she is still enrolled there. Mr. Xi said he was “extremely concerned” and he passed on messages of comfort to the two students’ families, as well as the injured student, the official news agency Xinhua reported. The Chinese government has never publicly confirmed that Mr. Xi’s daughter was studying at Harvard, and it is unclear whether she is still enrolled there.
Ms. Lu, whose résumé lists a succession of academic achievements and internships with financial firms, appeared to be among the many hoping that an American degree would pave the way to a prestigious job in finance or business. She went to high school in Shenyang in northeast China, a cradle of state-driven industrialization that fell on hard times in the 1990s, and then studied international trade at the Beijing Institute of Technology and statistics at Boston University, according to her résumé on LinkedIn, a social networking Web site, where she also gave her score on the Graduate Record Examinations. Ms. Lu, whose résumé lists a succession of academic achievements and internships with financial firms, appeared to be among the many hoping that an American degree would pave the way to a prestigious job in finance or business. She went to high school in Shenyang, a cradle of state-driven industrialization in northeast China that fell on hard times in the 1990s, and then studied international trade at the Beijing Institute of Technology, and statistics at Boston University, according to her résumé on LinkedIn, a social networking Web site.
But Ms. Lu shared more prosaic pleasures and worries with other Chinese students studying in Boston.But Ms. Lu shared more prosaic pleasures and worries with other Chinese students studying in Boston.
“She said she wanted to have a boyfriend as soon as possible, because her family was worried that if she couldn’t find a boyfriend they would have to help,” said Lu Meixu, her friend also studying at Boston University. “She hoped she could meet ‘the one’ as soon as possible.”“She said she wanted to have a boyfriend as soon as possible, because her family was worried that if she couldn’t find a boyfriend they would have to help,” said Lu Meixu, her friend also studying at Boston University. “She hoped she could meet ‘the one’ as soon as possible.”
The American Embassy in Beijing said it had been in contact with the dead woman’s family in China, as well as the family of a graduate student from Chengdu, in southwestern China, who was “gravely wounded” in the blast. Ming Chen, a 23-year-old graduate student in computer science, met Ms. Lu when they were still in China, preparing to come to Boston to study.
“We stand ready to provide any assistance to the family members to ensure they are able to personally deal with this tragedy as quickly and easily as possible,” an embassy statement said. “Our hearts go out to the families of all victims of this senseless act of violence.” “She was optimistic, outgoing, and really hard-working,” said Mr. Chen. The two shared a love of the rock band Nirvana, he said, adding that she used the group’s line “smells like teen spirit” in her profile on QQ, a popular instant-messaging service in China.
In China, the Shenyang Evening News, a state-run newspaper that announced Ms. Lu’s death on its Weibo account, darkened its Web page in honor of “A Shenyanger who passed away in a far away place.” An editor at the newspaper said Ms. Lu’s father had confirmed his daughter’s death. Ms. Lu’s fellow students realized she was missing after the marathon, and members of a Chinese student group fanned out across the city, sending students to hospitals looking for her.
At the heart of the public mourning, however, there was a very private grief. Ms. Lu’s classmates, and students at her former college in Beijing, were reluctant to talk publicly about her death, other than to say that they respected her family’s wishes for privacy. By Tuesday night, many students had seen Chinese news media reports saying that Ms. Lu was dead.
A Ph.D. student in the School of Management and Economics, where Ms. Lu once studied, said she was surprised that the Chinese news media had disclosed her name. “I still can’t believe it. We just finished class, and no one is sitting at her desk,” said one of Ms. Lu’s classmates, who was clad in black as a symbol of mourning. She asked not to be identified because Boston University had not yet confirmed Ms. Lu’s identity, which it later did.
“Terrorist attacks always seem far away, yet suddenly it was so close,” said the student, who declined to give her name. “Some friends were thinking about applying for further studies in Boston. They’re quite worried.” “We’re all statistics students,” continued the classmate. “The probability of this happening is so low.”
Wang Yao, a graduate student, who said she was Ms. Lu’s former classmate, begged reporters to leave the grieving family alone. “They asked to be left alone,” Ms. Wang said. “And that’s also the general understanding among our peer classmates.”

Jess Bidgood contributed reporting from Boston. Mia Li and Patrick Zuo contributed research from Beijing, and Mary Hui from Hong Kong.

At a daily news briefing in Beijing on Wednesday, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Hua Chunying, discussed the Chinese victims, while not releasing the dead student’s name.
“Chinese leaders and the government are very concerned about the tragic death of a Chinese student and the severe injury of another in the Boston Marathon bombing case on April 15th,” Ms. Hua told reporters. She said that the surviving student was seriously hurt, but that her “condition is quite stable.”

Additional research by Mia Li and Patrick Zuo in Beijing, and Mary Hui in Hong Kong.