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Lighten the burden on poor kids
A recent survey shows that average Chinese children sleep about
an hour less than their American counterparts. Researchers attribute
this to the heavier academic burden placed on Chinese children.
But Xiaodan, a 12-year-old girl in Chengdu, sleeps a lot less, even
during the summer vacation. It is not because she has a lot more school
work to do or because she is a slow pupil. She has to get up early to
join her aunt and help her clean a section of the street by the Jinjiang
River.
In fact, Xiaodan started in August, when her aunt hurt herself in a
fall, and was hospitalized. Sometimes Xiaodan has to get up as early as
3:00 am and work in the rain.
Ever since pictures of the girl cleaning the streets of Chengdu appeared
on the Internet, she has drawn a lot of media attention. All the major
Chinese language Internet portals as well as several newspapers and a
local TV station have carried Xiaodan’s story.
While a lot of netizens have praised her as “the most beautiful city
cleaner of Chengdu”, others have mulled over the resilience and tenacity
of the 12-year-old.
They marvel at the fact that Xiaodan could be such a hardworking and
understanding person. Her story testifies to the Chinese saying that
“children of the poor grow mature early”.
Indeed, I have heard some college teachers complain that some students
have been so spoiled at home that they do not even know how to use a
broom or a mop. Some of their mothers actually travel several hundreds
kilometers by train to university campuses regularly to help wash the
clothes of their children.
The story of Xiaodan also exposes the disparity between the urban and
rural areas. Xiaodan is a girl from a rural family, whose mother has
mental problems and who has been raised by her grandmother. She started
to help collect grass to feed pigs when she was 5 years old.
However, at least to her aunt, Xiaodan is not really unique. “Our
children cannot compare to the boys and girls of Chengdu,” she says.
“She must labor more in order to know life is not easy and to study
hard.”
But the story of Xiaodan underscores more than teaching children how to
grow up.
Even though her aunt has recovered, Xiaodan still works in the streets
on most weekends. That way, she says, she can help relieve part of her
aunt’s work so that she “would not fall down again”. Meanwhile, she also
helps her aunt to earn her full salary. Otherwise, “her salary would be
cut,” she says.
Without doubt, Xiaodan becoming a temporary street cleaner reveals that
street cleaners work without sufficient social and medical safety nets,
which has affected their life and the life and studies of their
children.
While we praise and admire Xiaodan and children like her, we must
recognize the problems that have forced a 12-year-old to take the place
of her aunt as a street cleaner. We must also push the government and
other related institutions to work out measures to help relieve the
burden on the young shoulders of children like Xiaodan.
It is laborers like Xiaodan’s aunt who make the city clean and urban
life convenient.
The city beauticians are entitled to the necessary safety nets which
provide them and their children a better living. Xiaodan, and children
like her, would be able to get proper hours of sleep.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily news exchange item |