Outside a chilly construction site in Zhengzhou,
capital of central China's Henan Province, a band of young men is staging
a music gig.
There are no glossy settings, no big stage, no roadies
and no big trucks, but the Young Migrants Band, led by 31-year-old
Sun Heng, whips up as much excitement as any pop singer.
Sun's fan base is the legions of migrant workers who
toil on construction sites and in factories, and who pay no money
to their star.
The band leader was wearing a threadbare pullover and
a striped blue and yellow coat which he bought from second-hand
shops for ten yuan. But the simple appearance cannot conceal the
fiery spirit underneath.
"Hand in hand/ Shoulder to shoulder/ Out of the mist/
Out of hardship/ All workers are a family," Sun sang passionately,
his voice backed by bass and drums.
"This is their New Year's concert," said Sun, adding
that this is the first stop on his first road show across China to
cities such as Xi'an, Qingdao and Chongqing.
Sun has been a media focus since he started to perform
and sing to migrant workers free of charge, comforting lonely and
exhausted hearts and making their voices heard.
He appeared in network shows, documentaries and
newspapers all over China. A Google search gives more than 22,000
results. All this began with a young man's love of
music.
A LONG AND WINDING ROAD
Sun believed in the power of music when left home at
the age of 23, looking for a new life far from the cramped
buildings of Kaifeng, a bleak city in central China.
His decision angered his parents, because he gave up
what they considered to be a decent, stable job as a middle school
music teacher.
"The job was good at first, but it became repetitive
and tedious," Sun said.
The discontented young man headed north to Beijing,
capital of economically booming China and beacon for millions of
migrant workers from less developed provinces.
Sun had hoped his guitar might bring him fame, but
like any other migrant to the big city, he went through a lot of
hardship.
He carried heavy loads, drove pedicabs, did busking
and sang in night clubs. When things got really bad, he had to live
on 1.5 yuan (19 US cents) a day.
Walking, singing, observing, he realized his dream
life would not drop from heaven and that he had more chance of
being shouted at by police than applauded by an
audience.
"I left Beijing for other cities, and realized that
there are millions of migrants just like me," said Sun. "They come
to the cities determined to better their lives."
On a visit to Tianjin, Sun played his guitar for a
bunch of construction workers. "They smiled broadly and their faces
lit up. I realized that music goes straight to their hearts," said
Sun.
Sun's experiences as a migrant worker have given him
the material for songs for the millions of migrant workers he calls
his "brothers".
SONGS FOR BROTHER WORKERS
The struggle of American migrant workers has been
recounted in songs by Woody Guthrie and in John Steinbeck's famous
novel The Grapes of Wrath, but the voice of Chinese migrant workers
has remained marginal.
"We need songs about our lives, not hollow ditties and
sweet melodies about urban vanity," said Sun, knowing that his
songs could reach out to the 2.8 million migrant workers in Beijing
and over 120 million nationwide.
"Work is glorious! Work is glorious!" Sun boomed to
the workers, who in response rolled up their sleeves, clapped their
hands and sang along with him.
"Unite your hearts and strive as one/ And get your
money when the work is done." The song, "Get back our wages,
fighting in solidarity", relates a story in northwest China's Shaanxi provincial dialect about bosses that
owe the workers back pay.
He also sings about life far from home, antagonism
from urbanites and workers' dreams for a better life. His songs are
sung in regional accents and sometimes in rap style.
"For me, music is not the end anymore, it is the
means," said Sun, "I hope my music can enrich their lives of labor
and help them form bonds."
Sun's band, which was set up in May 2002, has staged
over 200 performances for more than 50,000 migrant workers. Over
100,000 cassettes and CDs have been distributed.
Sun's ballads touch the lives of thousands, and also
impressed a university graduate called Zhao Ling who later became
his wife. She is now doing research in social work at Hong Kong
Polytechnic University, and helps her husband compose
lyrics.
"I was excited about these performances. This is what
the workers need because they do not have money for costly
karaokes, shows or opera houses," said Li Changping, a consultant
with Hong Kong based Oxfam, a charity organization which sponsored
some of Sun's performances.
Many people have supported Sun in his desire to help
China's migrant workers but he has also encountered immense
difficulties.
"Factories shut their doors when we offer our free
performances, making us do them outside. Only one out of ten bosses
or foremen is wiling to let us in," said Wang Dezhi, a member of
the band. "They fear that we will call upon the workers to defend
their rights by asking for back pay or insurance."
LIFE IS MORE THAN MUSIC
Although music has become the key to his work for
migrant folks, Sun knows that it takes more than music to improve
their lot.
With support from university volunteers and workers,
Sun built a private school for migrant children in August 2005 in
Pi village at a disused factory of east Beijing's Chaoyang district
far from downtown Beijing.
The Tongxin (meaning solidarity) Experimental School
provides schooling for over 430 children whose parents cannot
afford the tuition fees or even the cost of a school uniform at a
public school.
"I am glad to have a school near my home," said
ten-year-old Wang Hong, a migrant girl who has gone to four schools
in four years as her parents changed jobs.
The school also provides parents with night courses on
law subjects or on how to use a computer and has opened reading
rooms to increase literacy, according to Shen Jinhua, a school
staffer.
Sun is on the road traveling and performing, but his
ideals continue to resonate in the singing voices of hundreds of
children:
Far from our homes,
We have our dreams,
We crave knowledge and bright sunbeams
From different places,
We are brothers and sisters
Like the dancing flag, we will fly.
(Xinhua News Agency December 22, 2006)
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