Despite the freezing winds outside and lack of central heating
inside, a 30-square-meter classroom at Sanyuanli Primary School was
warm as it was tightly packed with 109 students and their teacher.
The children, every five of them sharing a 1-meter-long shabby
desk, shout out in unison as the teacher points to Chinese
characters she has written on a cracked blackboard.
This primary school is located in Kaole Township in the Dongxiang
Autonomous County in Northwest China's Gansu Province, one of the
poorest in the province.
With seven classrooms, the school is in an old one-story building
with uneven walls. There are 10 teachers for 455 children in five
grades.
Over 150 new students were enrolled this year, said school
headmaster Ma Zhanying. But despite the overcrowded conditions, he
is happy to see that more and more families in this destitute area
send their children to learn.
Finding space for the new students has been difficult, Ma said.
"We have already turned a meeting room for teachers into a
classroom for Grade Five," he said. "But we still don't have enough
money to buy desks and chairs for every student, let alone build
new classrooms."
The Sanyuanli School and hundreds like it in the county are a ray
of hope for families of the Muslim Dongxiang people, one of China's
56 ethnic groups.
Seeing the urgent need to help schools like Sanyuanli, last month
China Daily and the China Youth Development Foundation teamed up to
form a charity called "Caring for dropouts; Donate to a Hope
School" to help local people.
Donations are collected either to build a new school or enlarge an
existing school to ease crowded conditions such as at
Sanyuanli.
"About 200,000 yuan (US$24,180) can help enlarge and furnish one
existing school and 300,000 yuan (US$36,400) can help build a new
one," said Xue Chaohua, a staff member at China Daily, who has
visited and investigated more than 20 local primary schools over
one-and-a half months this year.
Dongxiang County has a population of 257,800, most of whom make a
living by growing wheat and potatoes and herding sheep. With an
annual per capita income of 776 yuan (US$93.5), the county has also
suffered from a continuous drought for many years.
Many families use rainwater, collected as it flows off their roofs,
for drinking water for themselves and their livestock.
Those who live where it rarely rains often have to travel over 10
kilometers every day to collect water, which they carry back to
their villages on a donkey or on their own backs.
"The shortage of water has blocked Dongxiang's agricultural and
industrial development," said Qi Xiufang, the vice-magistrate of
the county.
Farmers are concerned that their children won't receive proper
education.
"My oldest son will be six years old next year and I don't know
where I can get the money to send him to school," said a local
farmer in his 40s, with the surname Tuo, who has three
children.
Tuo lives in Chitan Village in Fengling Township. His annual
harvest is barely enough to feed his family.
"Among the 50 families I visited in Kaole Township, 49 said they
wanted to send their children to school," said China Daily's Xue.
"But most of them cannot afford fees for textbooks and expenses,
even though they only amount to 45 yuan (US$5.46) for one
term."
Because school costs are hard to meet, many children only receive
five years of primary school training or drop out of school.
Xue also found that 21 out of the 50 families in that area didn't
want to send their daughters to school.
"Girls usually learn the Koran in nearby mosques for two or three
years and then return home to help on the farm or with household
chores and wait for marriage," he said. "Most of villages are
hidden away in remote mountains and it's unsafe for a young child
to walk 10 kilometers to school every day. They also can't afford
the expenses of having their children board at the school."
In
Wangjianao Village in Fengling Township, all the 20 school-age
children from the 17 families cannot go to school because the
nearest is 20 kilometers away. It would take about two hours for
the children to get there.
"Under such harsh natural conditions, education is a key element in
the fight to eradicate poverty, and it is the part where we can
help most," Xue said.
China Daily is working with Dongxiang county, following a campaign
launched by the central government calling for public assistance in
the battle against poverty in poor counties since 1998.
Its aid has helped establish the China Daily Hope School which
opened in 2000 with nearly 500,000 yuan (US$60,000) in donations
from employees at China Daily and the Gansu Association for
Disabled People and local people.
The school has proved to be a great success and has attracted 386
students from four villages. About 95 percent of the area's
school-age children are now receiving education compared with
1998's figure of only 47 percent.
Moreover, previously there were only four girls at the school, and
now there are 83.
"Thanks to China Daily and all the other people, we can sit in such
bright classroom and study," said Ma Yan, 11, who is in Grade Five
and is preparing for the entrance exam into middle school.
The China Daily Hope School is located in Yanling, only half an
hour away from the county seat. Residents in Yanling are slightly
better off than residents who live in deep ravines, Xue said.
"New donations will be used to assist or build schools in much
poorer townships like those around the Sanyuanli Primary School,"
Xue said.
"If you could see those students sitting and squatting on the
ground practicing writing and reading books, or the teachers who
live in rundown buildings with holes in the ceilings, or the tiny
and thin figures carrying little bags as they disappear among the
huge mountains, you wouldn't hesitate to help them."
(China Daily December 13, 2002)
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