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ahojunk

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I am starting a new thread for interesting faces or personalities found in China. If you come across them, please post them in this thread. Thanks.

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Foreign face, Chinese heart - Global Times

Foreign face, Chinese heart
By Bai Tiantian Source:Global Times Published: 2015-1-16 5:03:02

Abandoned at birth, Li Yizu makes Xinjiang his home

~Xinjiang_Foreign.faces.1.jpeg

Li Yizu in Hejing county, Xinjiang in 2014. Photo: Courtesy of Li Yizu

~Xinjiang_Foreign.faces.2.jpeg

Li Yizu with his mother in Beijing in 1939. Photos: Courtesy of Li Yizu

~Xinjiang_Foreign.faces.3.jpeg

Li Yizu on a field trip in Xinjiang in 1964. Photos: Courtesy of Li Yizu

Li Yizu is not a typical Chinese man. For a start, he doesn't look like one.

Ever since he was a child, he has been singled out for his chiseled facial features, blue eyes and blond hair.

In 1938, a year after Japan initiated its full-scale invasion of China, a Caucasian woman of unknown nationality gave birth to him in a Christian hospital in Tianjin. Then without a word, she vanished from his life.

His foster mother, a woman from Shandong Province, raised him during the turmoil of the war and later sent him to college in Beijing in the late 1950s.

For the next 50 years, Li worked as a geologist in Northwest China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, traveling through mountains and steppes to find mineral deposits.

These days, he lives with his wife in Urumqi. After retiring, Li volunteered for the Next Generation Working Committee, giving science lectures to primary and middle school students across Xinjiang.

"People often mistake me for a Tajik or a laowai. I call myself a Chinese of foreign origin. I was raised by a loving and humble Chinese mother. I have never considered myself a foreigner," Li told the Global Times.

Early memories

In a photo that Li has kept for over half a century, his foster mother, dressed in a plain traditional Chinese gown with her hair tied up in a bun, holds the baby Li Yizu in her arms in the courtyard of their Beijing home.

His parents were Christians and had him baptized at the Asbury Church in Beijing. At the time, his father was a senior manager at Columbia Pictures' China office.

"My father had the power to choose theaters for movie releases. One year, they were celebrating my grandmother's birthday. All the theater managers in North China came to the party," Li said.

After Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, films from the US stopped coming to China and life became difficult. His family had to leave Beijing to seek sanctuary in the countryside.

Li remembers his mother as a traditional Chinese woman with bound feet.

"She had very little education, like most Chinese women at that time. The one thing I remembered about her is how she refused to raise me to be weak. She told me that one should die standing rather than live on one's knees. It was this belief that supported her through all the turbulence in her life."

Li's father died at a young age. His mother raised him by herself through the war. When the war ended, they returned to Beijing. Li enrolled at the China University of Geosciences in 1957. In 1961, he signed up to work in Xinjiang.

"Before I got on the train, she managed to get hold of some pork and made me dumplings. This was during the Great Famine and food was scarce. She watched me eat and sent me to the train. At the time, Xinjiang was underdeveloped and distant. I was her only child. She knew life was going to be hard for her. But she never asked me to stay, not a single word."

Holding his tongue

Throughout his life, Li has repeatedly been seen as a foreigner.

Foreign tourists would come to him on the street, asking for directions in English. Taxi drivers are constantly shocked by his fluent Chinese and his profound knowledge of Chinese history.

Li said he used to be able to speak English but refused to do so ever since the Cultural Revolution (1966-76).

"My appearance drew some attacks at the time. Some people said I was not a Chinese and said those who study English are spies. I was so mad. I told myself that I would never speak English again."

Li was about to join the Communist Party of China in 1966. After he submitted his application, the revolution began. His work was suspended. No one would write him a recommendation letter.

"A lot of people asked me how I survived the Cultural Revolution. Maybe I was lucky. Things turned out all right."

Li eventually joined the Party in 1981.

He told the Global Times that he has never travelled to a foreign country. But it's not because he didn't have the opportunity.

His eldest cousin, Li Huaizu, was a student at Yenching University. Li Huaizu left Beijing to study in the US in 1949 and never returned. His other cousins all emigrated to the US after 1976.

Some people have offered to help him find his relatives abroad, but he politely refused.

"Maybe I was stubborn. I have spent so many years in China, in Xinjiang. There is no better place for me but here."

Going out west

Of the 330 students who graduated from Li's department in 1961, more than 70 signed up to work in Xinjiang. Like his classmates, Li said he volunteered because he wanted to serve his country.

"I remember the first time I arrived in Urumqi. I got off the train and had my first meal. It was a bowl of lamb. At that time of famine, it was the best thing I could possibly have had. I fell in love with this place immediately," he said.

Li spent most of his career searching for mineral deposits in the most desolate areas of Xinjiang. The job was strenuous and dangerous. Many of his classmates died in the field.

He met his wife through a friend and got married in 1965. They have a son and a daughter. Li said he and his wife have never quarreled in their lives.

At the age of 50, Li embarked on a trip across China on a motorbike. He traveled from Urumqi all the way to Tianjin, his birthplace.

"I believe in science, not destiny. But looking back, something seems to have guided me. I have met so many good people in my life," Li said.

After retirement, Li volunteered for a program that teaches children about science, law and life. More than 300,000 people have been to his lectures.

At his home, portraits of Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai can be seen on the wall. Li told the Global Times that he misses the old times.

"People were less materialistic back then. Children were taught to be selfless, to be dedicated to their community. I want to bring this back to today's society."
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A very interesting documentary about Russians in China. Not historical Russian minorities but people who stayed in China following the Sino-Soviet split and put down roots. Also, anyone else get a kick out of Petrov's Shandong accent? The guy even smokes like a Chinese person. :cheers:

Edit: And the documentary is subtitled in English.

 
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A very interesting documentary about Russians in China. Not historical Russian minorities but people who stayed in China following the Sino-Soviet split and put down roots. Also, anyone else get a kick out of Petrov's Shandong accent? The guy even smokes like a Chinese person. :cheers:

Edit: And the documentary is subtitled in English.

haha,dude,that's northeast accent,not shandong accent.His wife talks in northeast accent too,though she is said to be from shandong in this video.
I guess u r a Canada born Chinese? welcome back to visit:china:
 
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To the Chinese members: Do people in China have a fascination for Caucasian featues?
 
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haha,dude,that's northeast accent,not shandong accent.His wife talks in northeast accent too,though she is said to be from shandong in this video.
I guess u r a Canada born Chinese? welcome back to visit:china:

Born in Beijing actually but moved when I was 4 years old. :cheers:

To the Chinese members: Do people in China have a fascination for Caucasian featues?

Not particularly since there are a lot of foreigners living and working in China. However, to see a "white" Chinese person who speaks flawless Chinese and thinks, acts, and for all intents and purposes *is* Chinese, is a rarity. China isn't an immigrant culture, after all.
 
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In a slight twist around, what about the 'interesting personalities' in Japan ? I've always wanted to hear more about how Chinese living in Japan feel about their life in the country, specially the Chinese students studying in Japan. This video -- gives us all a genuine impression. I thought you guys might like to see it. Enjoy.

And remember, no trolling....Tee Hee! :D



a ha ha ha, and his interesting video on "being cool in japan". :P


A bit different IMO.
If a Chinese guy can speak perfect Japanese without accent and dress in latest Japanese fashion, no one would even suspect that he is not Japanese to begin with.
 
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A bit different IMO.
If a Chinese guy can speak perfect Japanese without accent and dress in latest Japanese fashion, no one would even suspect that he is not Japanese to begin with.

Yes, because a Chinese just looks like a Japanese, physical appearance wise.
Even if we suspect that he is not Japanese, it is still not that fascinating because they look alike (there is not a lot of difference or contrast).
But if that person is white or black - that's what causes the fascination and the interest.

Just my 2-cents.
 
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Uncle Hanzi is quite a character|Life|chinadaily.com.cn

Uncle Hanzi is quite a character
Updated: 2014-04-24 07:21

By Deng Zhangyu (China Daily USA)


The Chinese Dream | Richard Sears

~Richard-Sears-studies.etymology.of.Chinese.characters.jpg


He was just an academic with an unusual hobby - until his etymology website of Chinese characters became a smash hit online. Deng Zhangyu chats with an unlikely Internet hero.

Prior to 2011, Richard Sears was little known in China.

His Sears' etymology website of Chinese characters, which traces the origin and evolution of 6,552 of the most-common modern Chinese characters, had a small following. The academic was living quietly in the United States.

Now, Sears has more than 20,000 followers on the micro blog Sina Weibo, and is called "Uncle Hanzi" in China where he has become something of a celebrity.

Sears spent 10 years learning Chinese, 20 years establishing a database of Chinese characters (hanzi in pinyin), and another 10 years setting up his etymology website.

"People thought I was crazy when I was in the United States, spending all my money and time on the website. But for me, it's just an interest," Sears says.

The 64-year-old teaches physics in the department of system science at Beijing Normal University and spends his spare time working on his website, chineseetymology.org.

Wu Jinshan, an assistant professor and a colleague of Sears, says the American is the first person in the world to digitalize Chinese etymology and share his research for free online.

"Chinese scholars have written many books on Chinese etymology. It costs a lot of money to get all of them. But Richard did all the collecting, compiling and digitalizing of the information," Wu says.

Sitting at his office at Beijing Normal University, Sears shows the evolution of the Chinese character wu (dance) from its seal script to modern Chinese on a blackboard.

"If you look at the strokes of the character, it has no meaning and is difficult to memorize. If you know how it evolved and find the logic behind the character, it's easy for foreigners like me to remember," says Sears in fluent Chinese, although he jokes about his Chinese with an "American accent".

Sears' love affair with the Chinese language started 42 years ago, when he woke up one day in the US city of Boston with the idea that he would like to learn Chinese, a language then spoken by one-fifth of the world's population. He bought a ticket to Taiwan and started to study.

He spoke to everyone he met on the street in Chinese. But he found writing Chinese characters incredibly difficult. A professor told him that if he studied the evolution of every character, he might find them easier to remember.

In 1990, he had the idea to make the etymological information of Chinese characters available online, so people could trace them back to their original form. More importantly, he thought it would help foreigners better understand the logic behind Chinese characters. Sears did some research but didn't start the project, until he suffered a near-fatal heart attack in 1994. He did not know how long he had to live and kept asking himself questions like: "What should I do if I only have one day left? One year or 40 years?"

"I finally decided to live like I only have one year left. And to computerize Chinese characters was what I want to do the most," Sears says.

"The experts I visited in China didn't believe I would be able to digitalize Chinese characters while the computer scientist had no interest in doing so. I was alone."

He started reading etymology books and writing programs that made 96,000 archaic Chinese characters available online. To scan the huge number of Chinese characters was also demanding and time-consuming and Sears hired a Chinese to help him.

In 2002, Sears put his website online, free for anyone who is interested. For many years, Sears worked quietly on his website in the US when all of a sudden, in January 2011, he received 600, 000 page views in a single day. A Chinese netizen had written a micro blog about Sears' website and the unassuming academic suddenly found himself thrust into the spotlight.

Sears' story was covered in newspapers and on TV, and he soon became known as "Uncle Hanzi". His website also received many donations from Chinese people. He moved to China in 2012.

Now Sears is fond of chatting with his Sina Weibo fans in Chinese. He tells stories about how characters evolve and answers questions from Chinese netizens.

Two months ago, Sears bought a computer at a much higher price than he should have been charged. He blogged about his experience on weibo and was inundated with responses from his loyal fans pledging to get him his money back. A few days later, Sears got his money back from the salesman, who had been overwhelmed with phone calls from angry netizens.

"Many Chinese netizens care about Uncle Hanzi online. When he is not well, his fans will express their concern for him," says Jiang Lihui, a volunteer who helps run Uncle Hanzi's Sina Weibo. Jiang is a scholar who is studying at Beijing Normal University for her PhD. She says Sears is a simple man who devotes himself to enhancing the Chinese etymology website.

Uncle Hanzi is now satisfied with his life in China. His job at the university provides him with a house and money for his website. Teaching two classes a week gives him enough time to build his website.

His next goal is to collect pictures related to those Chinese characters and turn the evolution of each character into a cartoon film. "The cartoon project is huge and needs more time and effort. But I don't have enough time left to complete it," he says.

Contact the writer at dengzhangyu@chinadaily.com.cn.

~Richard-Sears-teaching.Chinese1.jpg


~Richard-Sears-www.chineseetymology.org.jpg
 
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Born in Beijing actually but moved when I was 4 years old. :cheers:



Not particularly since there are a lot of foreigners living and working in China. However, to see a "white" Chinese person who speaks flawless Chinese and thinks, acts, and for all intents and purposes *is* Chinese, is a rarity. China isn't an immigrant culture, after all.

This is the wrong way to think. The correct way to think is "as Chinese ideas gain attraction, it is natural for people to want to learn about them." We should priase them, but never put these ppl on a pedestal.

Hell, lets not even talk about immigrant nations. A Chinese guy that speaks flawless Russian, thinks Russian and chugs vodka like a Russian would not get this recognition from Russians. Russians would say "pretty cool" but wouldn't write a news article on him.
 
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I am starting a new thread for interesting faces or personalities found in China. If you come across them, please post them in this thread. Thanks.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Foreign face, Chinese heart - Global Times

Foreign face, Chinese heart
By Bai Tiantian Source:Global Times Published: 2015-1-16 5:03:02

Abandoned at birth, Li Yizu makes Xinjiang his home

View attachment 185204
Li Yizu in Hejing county, Xinjiang in 2014. Photo: Courtesy of Li Yizu

View attachment 185205
Li Yizu with his mother in Beijing in 1939. Photos: Courtesy of Li Yizu

View attachment 185206
Li Yizu on a field trip in Xinjiang in 1964. Photos: Courtesy of Li Yizu

Li Yizu is not a typical Chinese man. For a start, he doesn't look like one.

Ever since he was a child, he has been singled out for his chiseled facial features, blue eyes and blond hair.

In 1938, a year after Japan initiated its full-scale invasion of China, a Caucasian woman of unknown nationality gave birth to him in a Christian hospital in Tianjin. Then without a word, she vanished from his life.

His foster mother, a woman from Shandong Province, raised him during the turmoil of the war and later sent him to college in Beijing in the late 1950s.

For the next 50 years, Li worked as a geologist in Northwest China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, traveling through mountains and steppes to find mineral deposits.

These days, he lives with his wife in Urumqi. After retiring, Li volunteered for the Next Generation Working Committee, giving science lectures to primary and middle school students across Xinjiang.

"People often mistake me for a Tajik or a laowai. I call myself a Chinese of foreign origin. I was raised by a loving and humble Chinese mother. I have never considered myself a foreigner," Li told the Global Times.

Early memories

In a photo that Li has kept for over half a century, his foster mother, dressed in a plain traditional Chinese gown with her hair tied up in a bun, holds the baby Li Yizu in her arms in the courtyard of their Beijing home.

His parents were Christians and had him baptized at the Asbury Church in Beijing. At the time, his father was a senior manager at Columbia Pictures' China office.

"My father had the power to choose theaters for movie releases. One year, they were celebrating my grandmother's birthday. All the theater managers in North China came to the party," Li said.

After Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, films from the US stopped coming to China and life became difficult. His family had to leave Beijing to seek sanctuary in the countryside.

Li remembers his mother as a traditional Chinese woman with bound feet.

"She had very little education, like most Chinese women at that time. The one thing I remembered about her is how she refused to raise me to be weak. She told me that one should die standing rather than live on one's knees. It was this belief that supported her through all the turbulence in her life."

Li's father died at a young age. His mother raised him by herself through the war. When the war ended, they returned to Beijing. Li enrolled at the China University of Geosciences in 1957. In 1961, he signed up to work in Xinjiang.

"Before I got on the train, she managed to get hold of some pork and made me dumplings. This was during the Great Famine and food was scarce. She watched me eat and sent me to the train. At the time, Xinjiang was underdeveloped and distant. I was her only child. She knew life was going to be hard for her. But she never asked me to stay, not a single word."

Holding his tongue

Throughout his life, Li has repeatedly been seen as a foreigner.

Foreign tourists would come to him on the street, asking for directions in English. Taxi drivers are constantly shocked by his fluent Chinese and his profound knowledge of Chinese history.

Li said he used to be able to speak English but refused to do so ever since the Cultural Revolution (1966-76).

"My appearance drew some attacks at the time. Some people said I was not a Chinese and said those who study English are spies. I was so mad. I told myself that I would never speak English again."

Li was about to join the Communist Party of China in 1966. After he submitted his application, the revolution began. His work was suspended. No one would write him a recommendation letter.

"A lot of people asked me how I survived the Cultural Revolution. Maybe I was lucky. Things turned out all right."

Li eventually joined the Party in 1981.

He told the Global Times that he has never travelled to a foreign country. But it's not because he didn't have the opportunity.

His eldest cousin, Li Huaizu, was a student at Yenching University. Li Huaizu left Beijing to study in the US in 1949 and never returned. His other cousins all emigrated to the US after 1976.

Some people have offered to help him find his relatives abroad, but he politely refused.

"Maybe I was stubborn. I have spent so many years in China, in Xinjiang. There is no better place for me but here."

Going out west

Of the 330 students who graduated from Li's department in 1961, more than 70 signed up to work in Xinjiang. Like his classmates, Li said he volunteered because he wanted to serve his country.

"I remember the first time I arrived in Urumqi. I got off the train and had my first meal. It was a bowl of lamb. At that time of famine, it was the best thing I could possibly have had. I fell in love with this place immediately," he said.

Li spent most of his career searching for mineral deposits in the most desolate areas of Xinjiang. The job was strenuous and dangerous. Many of his classmates died in the field.

He met his wife through a friend and got married in 1965. They have a son and a daughter. Li said he and his wife have never quarreled in their lives.

At the age of 50, Li embarked on a trip across China on a motorbike. He traveled from Urumqi all the way to Tianjin, his birthplace.

"I believe in science, not destiny. But looking back, something seems to have guided me. I have met so many good people in my life," Li said.

After retirement, Li volunteered for a program that teaches children about science, law and life. More than 300,000 people have been to his lectures.

At his home, portraits of Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai can be seen on the wall. Li told the Global Times that he misses the old times.

"People were less materialistic back then. Children were taught to be selfless, to be dedicated to their community. I want to bring this back to today's society."
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This story is very beautiful. That's one character I do admire and really like about Chinese ; they are filial. Chinese are open to take in people who are in need , irrespective of their background, even if they are children of (then) the enemy. For example, after Japan lost the war, thousands of Japanese children and babies were left in China, and they were adopted by Chinese families, and raised Chinese.

52d5d9bad9bbb79a8d50257b1f0b30dd.jpg



Japanese War Orphans in China
 
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Blind Man and His Armless Best Friend Have Planted Over 10,000 Trees in China | One Green Planet


Blind.man.armless.friend.jpg


Blind Man and His Armless Best Friend Have Planted Over 10,000 Trees in China
Kate Good - March 19, 2015

It doesn’t happen often, but every now and then you hear a story about people overcoming all odds to help others and it completely changes your perspective of the world. The story of Jia Haixia and Jia Wenqi is certainly one of these.

Haixia and Wenqi are two 53-year-old men from China who have faced incredible challenges in their lives. Haixia was born with congenital cataracts that caused him to be blind in one eye. He then lost sight in his one good eye after a work accident in 2000. Wenqi tragically lost both of his arms in an accident when he was only three years old and has been living as a double amputee ever since.

Despite their physical setbacks, Haixia and Wenqi have remained utterly determined to live life to the fullest. These two best friends help one another navigate the world and when they’re together there is nothing that they cannot do.

Adding to their amazing story of friendship is the fact that the pair have managed to plant over 10,000 trees over the course of the past 10 years.

“I am his hands,” said Haixia. “He is my eyes. We are good partners.”

Blind.man.armless.friend.02.jpg


The pair met in 2001 when they were both struggling to find work because of their disabilities.

Blind.man.armless.friend.03.jpg


Neither wanted to “give up” on life, so they hatched a plan to plant trees to earn money.

Blind.man.armless.friend.04.jpg


By planting trees, they could give back to the community and ensure a better future for others. With this idea in mind, they set out to lease three acres of land from the government and got to work.

Blind.man.armless.friend.05.jpg


Haixia and Wenqi rise every day at 7AM and set out to plant trees. When they reach the busy stream they need to cross to get to their site, Wenqi carries Haixia to the other side.

Blind.man.armless.friend.06.jpg


Money is tight, but the pair are determined to reforest their land. Unable to buy new saplings, they use cuttings from older trees to sprout new life.

Blind.man.armless.friend.07.jpg


When it comes time to scale trees to collect cuttings, Wenqi carefully directs Haixia, acting as his eyes.

Blind.man.armless.friend.08.jpg


The work requires much patience and the fruits of their labors are not always apparent. But seeing young saplings grow inch by inch is enough to bring Haixia and Wenqi peace of mind.
 
Last edited:
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Continued from previous post, as I can only post 8 pictures per post.

Blind.man.armless.friend.09.jpg


“We stand on our own feet,” Wenqi tells Oddity Central. “The fruits of our labor taste sweeter. Even though we are gnawing on steam buns, we find peace in our hearts.”

Blind.man.armless.friend.10.jpg


A number of generous people have volunteered to help Haixia and Wenqi after hearing their story; one kind benefactor has offered to pay for a surgery that could help restore Haixia’s sight, and another has donated money towards their pensions to ensure they always have a good roof over their heads and enough food to eat.

Isn’t it amazing to see one kind action turn into countless others? Take a page from these two today and help keep the compassion going!

All image source: Mymodernmet
 
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Continued from previous post, as I can only post 8 pictures per post.

View attachment 211490

“We stand on our own feet,” Wenqi tells Oddity Central. “The fruits of our labor taste sweeter. Even though we are gnawing on steam buns, we find peace in our hearts.”

View attachment 211491

A number of generous people have volunteered to help Haixia and Wenqi after hearing their story; one kind benefactor has offered to pay for a surgery that could help restore Haixia’s sight, and another has donated money towards their pensions to ensure they always have a good roof over their heads and enough food to eat.

Isn’t it amazing to see one kind action turn into countless others? Take a page from these two today and help keep the compassion going!

All image source: Mymodernmet
Thanks for sharing these stories.
Chinese generally are not aggressive people(don't get fooled by keyboard warriors).
The first year of college in Shanghai, I met a Dutch student in a youth hostel dorm on New Year's Eve.
Even we have a lot of difference in ideology and world view, we are good friends.
The next time he came to China, we happened to be travelling in the same city.
The third time he came to China as an exchange student in Peking University, I invited him to visit Wuhan. And we took a train to Three Gorge Dam.
 
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Thanks for sharing these stories.
Chinese generally are not aggressive people(don't get fooled by keyboard warriors).
The first year of college in Shanghai, I met a Dutch student in a youth hostel dorm on New Year's Eve.
Even we have a lot of difference in ideology and world view, we are good friends.
The next time he came to China, we happened to be travelling in the same city.
The third time he came to China as an exchange student in Peking University, I invited him to visit Wuhan. And we took a train to Three Gorge Dam.

There are so many interesting and heart warming stories in China.

As I come across them, I will share.

The world needs to share more of these stories.
 
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Some more information regarding the "Blind Man and His Armless Best Friend".

Across China: Blind man and his armless friend turn wasteland to oasis - Global Times


Across China: Blind man and his armless friend turn wasteland to oasis
Source: Xinhua Published: 2015-4-3 14:36:38

Spending 13 years to turn a wasteland into an oasis is an inconceivable task for ordinary people, let alone for an elderly blind man and his friend who has no arms.

However, the 54-year-old sightless Jia Haixia and 53-year-old armless Jia Wenqi from north China's Hebei Province have made it.

The duo changed a land covered in nothing but rocks and weeds into a forest in Yeli Village of Jingxing County by planting more than 10,000 trees.

Jia Haixia was born with congenital cataract which left his left eye blind. The sight in the other eye was lost after an accident at work in 2000. His friend and neighbor, Jia Wenqi, lost both arms after being electrocuted at the age of three.

"It seemed impossible for us to find jobs, so we decided to brace up and face the misfortunes of life," Jia Wenqi said.

In 2002, they noticed a vacant lot near the riverbank and got approval of villagers committee to plant trees there for the purpose of "earning some money" and supporting their families.

Unfortunately, the ambitious plan lacked money and saplings were expensive. Wracking their brains, the pair decided instead to prune branches from grown trees across the lot's river and plant them to create new life.

It was a physically demanding job. Jia Haixia climbed large trees to prune branches under the guidance of his armless companion, who had to carry his sightless friend, tools and branches on his back across the river several times every day.

"I often fell into the river at the very beginning. Now I can walk stably on the slippery and cold river bottom," Jia Wenqi said.

Every day, Jia Haixia used drills to dig holes, while Jia Wenqi put the branch into the hole and watered them with his toes. Their lunch usually consisted of cold steamed buns and water.

However, arduous work does not necessarily mean immediate returns. In the first year, they planted 800 tree branches, but only two survived.

"Villagers laughed at us. They said this land was impossible to conserve water and soil. Planting trees? How stupid!" Jia Haixia recalled.

But they decided to start over and came up with another idea -- pumping water from the river to their land. When the water flowed into the land, their baby trees started to bud.

"I was unable to see the color of the buds, and my friend couldn't touch them. So he described the details of each tree to me, and I told him how I felt when I touched them," said Jia Haixia.

Over time, the duo's attitudes also changed.

They became reluctant to cut trees down and sell them. The trees were like their children and gave them a glimpse of hope because they know they can do something for others.

Despite the daunting nature of the task, the pair's success has spurred them to continue their work. They recently contracted another plot of land in the nearby mountains and use their experience to transform the barren landscape.

Their second project may prove to be a lesser challenge, however, as Jia Haixia was told by doctors he may regain sight in his left eye.

"People say we contribute to the ecology. I don't understand what 'ecology' means. What I only know is that handicapped people are not useless," Jia Haixia said.
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