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| Chinese national flag (up),the national
flag of Britain(down) | BEIJING, May
16 (Xinhuanet) -- "How silly, father! How can't you recognize our national
flag?" the little daughter of Shi Zhanming asked him after he made a serious,
silly mistake in a group final of the 11th CCTV national youth singing
contest May 11. Folk singer
Shi Zhanming from Shanxi Province in Northwest China made headlines for
mistaking the national flag of England for the Chinese flag in the contest,
which triggered strong criticism from the audience.
Waves of rebounds from
the audience may be attributed to the thought that Shi doesn't love his
motherland at all because he even doesn't know the national flag, the basic
knowledge, which is taught in primary schools.
"I feel painful and
sorry when I heard the answer," Yu Qiuyu, a renowned Chinese writer and
academician, said when he heard Shi's answer as an adjudicator of the
contest.
In fact, some minority contestants or those from
the remote rural places do not even know some basic Chinese
historical facts nor speak mandarin at all.
"Do they not love their
motherland? Is this their fault? Should we criticize these
guys since we have received much better education?" The answer to
these questions is definetely
"No." Coming from
a farming family in a remote village in Shanxi, Shi's life was dramatically
changed in 2002 when he won the title "King Singer" in a Shanxi folk song
contest. Prizes began pouring in and the shepherd was invited to be a
visiting instructor at the China Conservatory in Beijing before joining an army
art troupe.
Shi's case is not an isolated problem, it is a
social issue nowadays. The gap in terms of socio-economic-educational
development between China's rural and urban areas is clearly very large, partly
attributed to historical reasons.
However, the Chinese government has started to make
preferential policies to boost rural development in an all-round way.
Starting this year, the central government will
appropriate over 103 billion yuan annually to ensure the normal operation
of grass-root governments and meet the needs of rural compulsory education.
This figure is comprised of more than 78 billion yuan in transfer payments from
the central government budget and over 25 billion yuan from local government
budgets.
Further, over the next two years, the government will
completely eliminate tuition and miscellaneous fees for all rural students
receiving compulsory education. Its budget expenditures for compulsory education
will increase by 218.2 billion yuan over the next five years, said the
Report of Government.
China is really trying its best to improve the
socio-economic-educational quality of the rural areas like the places where Shi
has come from.
Many among the audience hope, for the time
being, the media and the public would not be too harsh on Shi and his
comrades. Sources said Shi would participate in the coming individual final
competition in July and is confident to win. Enditem
(by Han Lin) |