by Xinhua writers Yu Maofeng, Lou Chen, Gao Fan
MOSCOW, May 8 (Xinhua) -- Gan Junda cherishes the
photos taken last year in China's Sichuan province, where he participated in the
disaster relief effort after the devastating earthquake that killed tens of
thousands of people.
The people in the photos, though injured, smiled at
the camera, revealing strong wills after enduring the difficulties they
experienced because of the magnitude-8 earthquake that also left many people
wounded, missing or homeless.
Gan, a 26-year-old doctor who immigrated to Moscow
from Chongqing with his parents 20 years ago, volunteered to join the Russian
Emergency Situations Ministry's medical team that was sentto the
temblor-stricken province.
"I was watching TV reports about the Wenchuan
earthquake. I saw that parents had lost their children and people lost their
beloved ones," Gan said. "I felt so grieved and decided to do something for
them."
The experience in the quake-stricken region has
become one of the Chinese-Russian doctor's most unforgettable memories. The
one-year anniversary of the May 12, 2008, earthquake that hit Sichuan province
and other parts of southwest China has been marked with red ink on his calendar.
Gan arrived in Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan, with
the Russian medical team on May 20 of last year. The team flew in on a plane
that also brought tents, medical equipment, medicine, water and food and
immediately went to Pengzhou, one of the areas hit hardest by the earthquake.
Doctors and nurses shuttled back and forth in the
shelters, striving to help as many victims as they could.
"It was muggy there and some doctors got heatstroke,
but everyone tried their best to save the injured," Gan said. "I felt gratified
as well for what I did for my compatriots."
Some of the victims were nervous when they saw
foreigners, Gan said. On one occasion, a Russian doctor was ready to operate on
a 10-year-old boy but the youth was so frightened that the operation could not
be immediately performed.
Gan said he spoke to the boy in a Sichuan dialect and
calmed him down so the doctor could complete the operation.
The Russian medical team treated about 1,500
patients, performed more than 200 operations and offered psychological
consultations during its 15-day stay in the devastated region.
The doctor said he and his coworkers cultivated deep
friendships with the local residents during their stay.
"I've been missing them all the time," he said.
Gan was concerned about the victims when he went back
to Moscow. He returned to Pengzhou two months later to visit the injured that he
had helped. He also discussed psychological rehabilitation for the victims with
colleagues still working there.
"A girl patient gave me a painting, in which there is
a big hand holding a small hand," the doctor said. "Pointing to the picture, she
said: 'This is my hand and the other is Mom's, but Mom has left.'"
Recuperation is a long process for the victims,
especially for the children who lost their parents and relatives because they
need constant care, Gan said.
Gan made up his mind to get a doctor's degree in
rehabilitation medicine when he returned to Moscow, in the hope that in the
future he will be able to give more assistance to the quake-stricken region.
The doctor now is busy with studies and work but he
still follows the lives of the quake victims and has a message for them.
"No matter how far away we are from you, we will
support you. You are the strongest and the disaster shall not crush you!" Gan
said.