Ren Jiunu, 38, wrote her name on a piece of paper and read it
aloud, her eyes glistening with tears of joy.
Writing one's own name and reading it correctly does not seem like
much of an accomplishment to most people living in the cities, but
for the millions of rural women in China like Ren, it is a dream
come true.
Born in the village of Sanpai in the poverty-stricken Zhangxian
County of Northwest China's Gansu Province, Ren never had any
chance to go to school.
Her name, "Jiunu," means the ninth daughter of the family. With no
money to go to hospital, her parents were later confined to bed for
years, suffering from unknown disease. The 10 children of the
family struggled into adulthood with charity from villagers and
relatives.
Going to school for children in such a family seemed
impossible.
In
2003, however, the turning point in her life came with the arrival
of "the Literacy Class for Rural Women" initiated by the Cultural
Development Centre for Rural Women (CDCRW), a non-profit
organization serving women in rural China.
When Wang Yuanyuan, a teacher of the only primary school in the
village, told Ren about the class, she was overjoyed and registered
at once.
In
the following two months, she not only learnt reading, writing and
maths, but also basic facts about women's physiology, human rights,
and practical agricultural technology like how to use compound
pesticide.
Now she is confident enough to go to market alone to sell Chinese
angelica, a kind of medical herb and local specialty.
"I
fear no more," said she. "I can do sums now; no one can cheat
me."
Ren's life has changed, but many of her peers are still shackled by
illiteracy.
Illiterate mothers
According to the National Bureau of Statistics, by the end of 2003,
the total number of illiterate Chinese was 85 million, about 6
percent of the population. And 70 percent of these were women.
Most of these women live in western China, like Ren's hometown in
Gansu Province, where farming is still the most important way to
make a living.
The traditional viewpoint regarding men as superior to women still
has an influence in these regions. If the family can offer their
children a chance to go to school, they will send boys rather than
girls.
"Girls will be mothers," said Xie Lihua, head of the CDCRW.
"They will shoulder the responsibility to educate their children.
What kind of education will the future of China receive if the
mothers themselves are illiterate?"
Her concern for illiterate rural women started in 1992, when she
became editor of the Rural Women Knowing All magazine, which serves
women in the countryside of China.
In
1994, she went to the city of Xinji in North China's Hebei Province
to promote the magazine. There she met some migrant women from
Xinyang, a city in Central China's Henan Province.
She gave them some magazines as presents, but to her surprise, when
she handed out the magazines, they all flinched.
Xie was puzzled, but then she was told that only one of them had
entered school, and the rest could not read at all.
She was shocked, and then felt the urge to help them.
In
1996, the first literacy class was set up in the city of Zaoyang in
Hubei Province.
In
the following eight years, Xie and her colleagues also traveled
through other provinces like Gansu and Guizhou in Southwest China,
bringing knowledge and hope to local women.
The first course the women took was how to write their own
names.
As
Xie recalls, when the first class finished, a woman walked to the
front of the classroom, wrote down her name on the blackboard. When
she wrote, she could not help crying.
She said: "Now I can sign my son's test paper."
Xu
Rong, literacy project officer of the centre, witnessed numerous
touching scenes in her two years running literacy classes in
Zhangxian County.
She still remembers the tiny sparks of the kerosene lamps in the
classrooms at evenings in Sanpai Village, where electricity was
only something on radio before 2002.
With no electricity, the local women filled medicine bottles with
kerosene, and the twisted cotton thread were used as wicks. It was
with this shabby "lamp" that they fulfilled two months of courses
after everyday's housework and farm work.
Li
Huibin, 33, was a teacher of the primary school of Wujiashan
Village in Zhangxian County. In 2003, the women's federation of the
county asked her if she wanted to teach her rural sisters in the
village, she immediately said yes.
Having taken some training courses offered by Xu Rong and her
colleagues, Li began her work at 7:30 every evening.
Her students were all middle-aged women who were past their prime
learning years. Some of them even had difficulty holding the
pencil.
"It was a tough task to teach them," recalled Li. "But all of them
worked very hard, even harder than their children do."
Their zeal for knowledge made up for the defects in age.
Some of them stuck strips of paper with words on them on everything
in their houses to learn the words. For example, they affixed a
strip with the Chinese character "men," which means "door" in
English, on the doors of their houses, to remember the word.
Confidence gained
Their efforts were awarded by enormous changes in their lives.
In
the past, they dared not go to the market alone, but when their
husbands were busy, they would have to go by themselves. It was
torture for them, because they did not know how to count.
They dared not go to public toilets in the town, for they could not
tell which section was for women. So they had to suffer for hours
until they arrived home.
Taking the bus also was a trial. The words on boards at the bus
stops meant nothing to them, so they tried their best to remember
the face of the driver on the way to the market. On their way back,
they waited along the road, staring at every bus passing until they
recognized a familiar face. Most of the time they would make
mistakes and waste a lot of time on the road.
Neither did they dare go to hospital, stores or the post
office.
Now things have changed.
Women who have attended literacy classes happily found their lives
are different with the acquisition of knowledge.
Wang Qiuhe, a 55-year-old Christian in Sanpai Village, was excited
by the fact that she could read the Bible herself.
Zhou Xianglan, a villager at Nuanshui Village, no longer had to
bring a friend or relative to the store every time she wanted to
buy shoes for her son.
More subtle changes took place for them.
Many women after joining the classes became empowered not only with
knowledge, but also the belief in themselves.
Xie Lihua recalls that the first time she went to Zhangxian County,
all the women in her classes lowered their heads, too shy to look
her in the eye.
Now, every time they see her, they will sing an "anti-illiterate
song" composed by themselves together with her.
"Confidence is even more important than learning itself," said
Xie.
Several women found a job planting cotton in Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region. They have paid back the debts of the family and
some even built new houses.
Their changes in life gave motivation for more rural women to
learn.
Xie Lihua, the founder of the project, also has her hopes.
The literacy class in Zhangxian County, supported by charity from
abroad in the past five years, was cancelled this year, due to the
shortage of funds and qualified staff.
"We hope that more people will join us in helping rural women
change their lives starting by becoming literate," said Xie.
(China Daily August 9, 2004)
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