YINCHUAN, May 8 (Xinhua) -- A year after the catastrophic
earthquake that destroyed her hometown in southwest China, Bai Lin
is hitting the books in memory of her 1,000 dead schoolmates and in pursuit
of her goals.
Bai, 19, who is studying at a prep school in the
northwestern Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, wants to be a teacher at her alma
mater Beichuan Middle School.
"I want to major in Chinese literature," said Bai,
who will become a freshman at the Northern University of Nationalities in
Yinchuan in September.
Until the 8.0-magnitude earthquake shook her home
province last May 12, Bai, an ethnic Qiang, planned to study economics and find
a well-paid job at a foreign company.
Then came the quake. "I saw how our teachers risked
their lives to save students," said Bai.
One teacher stood firm at the classroom door, waiting
for her students to escape first. "She leaned against the doorframe and pushed
the slowest girl out, and then she disappeared in the rubble," Bai recalled.
Bai jumped from her third-floor classroom window and
hurt her leg. Despite the pain, she was inspired by her teachers and joined the
rescue work.
"It was a horrible scene, with so many people buried
in the ruins, moaning and crying for help," she recalled.
The next day, Premier Wen Jiabao visited the quake
site. "He held my hand and told me to cherish life," said Bai.
Inspired by Wen's words, she worked even harder to
save trapped classmates and care for the injured, some of whom were staying at a
local stadium.
For six days, she lost contact with her family
because her home also collapsed and her parents were nowhere to be seen. Her
father spotted her on TV on May 18, when Bai Lin was invited to a charity
program broadcast live on Central China Television.
After a happy reunion, Bai and her surviving
classmates moved to Mianyang City to prepare for the national college entrance
exam. "I wanted desperately to enter college and never gave up hope," she said.
"But the quake was like a lingering nightmare. From time to time, I hid myself
in the washroom to cry a bit before I could concentrate on my work."
Bai's exam results weren't good enough. She turned
down offers from Hong Kong and Singaporean universities and chose a college prep
course in Yinchuan. "The earthquake taught me to be strong and independent."
Her new classmates knew nothing of her heroic past
until Xinhua reporters followed her to the campus this week. "I don't take pride
in my past; nor do I need other people's sympathy."
She has a tight schedule every day, studying Chinese
literature, linguistics, English, mathematics and history. She spends her spare
time reading extensively, going to the gym and practicing performing arts with
the school troupe. "I'm preparing in every way to be a good teacher."
She hopes to live up to her teacher's expectations.
"Before I left my hometown, my teacher told me to work hard, study what my dead
classmates were unable to study and enjoy the life they had no chance to live."
Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake