“It's a dream, it's a show, but more than a show, it's a dream. It’s magic, pure magic with history. Because we are living the history but, at the same time, it takes us through that magical world,” said Noemi Maldonado Cardinales, a university professor.
“I saw how all the divinity of human beings and all the most beautiful things we can create were represented on this stage. I thought it was very, very beautiful,” said Ana María Hernández Candelas, a musician in the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra.
“They bring us the China of five [millennia]. We are part of it. We can live, we can feel as they feel at some point in the performance,” said Silvia Cestero, San Juan Hotel School's president.
“The message has really been to never lose yourself for fame or ego, rather go to your humility that we all have inside. Because you don't take any of that with you, neither fame nor ego. You just take the good that you left with another human being and with yourself,” said Mayda Ocasio, a business owner.
“We have to keep our traditions, our culture alive, so that we can move forward. I think it is very important that they who have the knowledge take it to the whole world. And also, highlighting human rights, which are so important, and especially in the moment we are living right now,” said Hernández Candelas.
“It’s really masterful. I had never seen such a beautiful show. So different and, at the same time, presenting Chinese culture in such a specific way that one can really understand what this millennial [old] culture is all about,” said Elvin Rosado Agosto, the Puerto Rican Culinary Team coach.
“It's wonderful and I'm really glad I took the opportunity to attend it. I would watch it many more times, and everybody should see it, even if it's just once,” said Carmencita Rodriguez, a beauty pageant queen trainer.













