Special
report: Reconstruction After
Earthquake
By Ren Ke
BEIJING, June 15 (Xinhua) -- When China's greatest modern writer Lu Xun was
a student of medicine in 1906, he saw a lantern slide of a group of Japanese
soldiers decapitating a Chinese. What dismayed him was the indifference of the
Chinese spectators at the scene. Lu wrote, "The people of a weak, laggard
country, even though they may enjoy health, can only serve as the senseless
subjects of and audience for public executions."
A century later, the Chinese people are no longer indifferent to the
sufferings of their compatriots. After the May 12 earthquake, the whole country
seemed to mobilize for relief work, showing the generosity and sense of duty
expected in a civil society.
The public, officials and soldiers, worked together. Thousands of
volunteers went to the quake zone, and tens of billions in cash has poured into
Sichuan Province. People queued at blood donation vehicles, and many are seeking
to adopt quake orphans.
A month after the 8.0-magnitude earthquake, the official death toll is
almost 70,000, with more than 17,000 missing. More than 14million survivors have
to rebuild their homes from the debris.
Qiu Hua stares into the distance from the stairs of the Jiuzhou Stadium in
Sichuan's Mianyang City. He is assessing his assets. "I have nothing now," says
Qiu, 40. "My house in Beichuan collapsed, my crop is ruined. The plant where I
worked has stopped production. I don't know what the future holds." He now lives
in a tent in the stadium, which shelters almost 10,000 other people who have
lost their homes.
"I've got one thing", says Qiu. "I have the affection and care of other
people in other areas. If they didn't care, more people would be dead."
Qiu is fortunate, as his wife and son also survived. His son, the
11-year-old Qiu Peng, was flown out of the mountainous area in a military
helicopter. "I felt pleased," says the boy, because I saw a lot of kind-hearted
people." His shoes were given to him by a volunteer. On the Children's Day, he
received stationery, clothes and candy.