Indian’s tearful reunion with Chinese sister

Update: 2015-05-15 00:50 GMT
An Indian woman who came to Beijing to trace her 81-year-old step-sister has had an emotional reunion on Thursday on the sidelines of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's first visit to China.

Jennifer An, 62, daughter of Chinese marine engineer An Chi Pong who lived in Chennai for more than 40 years, finally met her step-sister An <g data-gr-id="38">Roesai</g> here nearly 75 years after their father left <g data-gr-id="39">Roesai</g> in China and migrated to India, where he later died.

The tearful reunion was arranged at an Indian restaurant here, four days after PTI highlighted Jennifer's arduous journey to Beijing to locate her step-sister.

State-run China Radio International (Tamil service) arranged the reunion after locating <g data-gr-id="30">Roesai</g>, who 
stays with her extended family, through the Chinese social media.

Jennifer's husband, V R S Balaji, had sought Modi's help through a letter, saying they were motivated by his efforts to reunite a Nepalese boy with his parents during his visit to Nepal last year.

The Prime Minister on Thursday arrived in the ancient Chinese city of Xi'an. He would be in China on a three-day visit.

However, the reunion happened without any official intervention.

The sisters hugged and cried when they met at the restaurant. They communicated with the help of a translator.

But the reunion turned out to be an anticlimax as some of the accounts Pong had circulated in India stating that his Chinese wife and six children were killed in Chinese city Nanjing during WW-II were contradicted by <g data-gr-id="31">Roesai</g>.

<g data-gr-id="28">Roesai</g> said their father left her with his step-mother when she was only five and never returned.
Contrary to the earlier version that Pong's entire Chinese family was killed in the war and only <g data-gr-id="35">Roesai</g> survived because she lived in a village with her grandmother, <g data-gr-id="36">Roesai</g> said her father divorced her mother and that she was their only child.

Pong, who studied at the Oxford University in early 1940s, first settled in Mumbai in 1945 and later moved to Chennai and married Irene Perera, with whom he had four children, including Jennifer.       

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