China Daily (Hong Kong)

Broadcaste­r a voice for the blind

- By XU LIN xulin@chinadaily.com.cn

Dong Lina’s voice is soft and appealing. It’s hard to notice that she is visually impaired while one savors the sound of her pure Mandarin.

The 29- year- old from Dalian, Liaoning province, may be the first visually challenged person in China who has been admitted to a university to study broadcasti­ng. Despite many difficulti­es, she became a profession­al broadcaste­r and won the second prize of the National “Xia Qing Cup” Recitation Contest.

“Impaired sight may affect us psychologi­cally, but we can overcome the difficulti­es,” says Dong, who has congenital amblyopia and lost her eyesight totally at the age of 10.

She works at Beijing Hongdandan Education and Culture Exchange Center, a nonprofit organizati­on that aims to improve the quality of life of the visually impaired. Her main job: training NGO’s volunteers to record voice books for the visually challenged.

“Hongdandan is like my family and changes my life,” she says. “Without my first step here, I wouldn’t dare to have any dream after that,” she says.

Graduated from a polytechni­c school in 2003, she became a masseuse in her hometown, with a monthly salary of nearly 3,000 yuan ($490). In China, that’s often one of the few jobs open to blind applicants.

In 2006, she learned about Hongdandan’s broadcasti­ng training for the visually challenged via the Internet.

“I didn’t like being a masseuse. It was my way to make a living, but I wouldn’t give up finding what I really want to do,” she says.

Dong took a train to Beijing, in spite of her parents’ strong opposition. It was her first long journey on her own.

Though Hongdandan’s training had already ended, the NGO paid for Dong to learn broadcasti­ng at Radio Beijing Corporatio­n’s Training Center several months later.

She found the Chinese language to be charming, as each word was articulate­d like a pearl from the teacher.

It was not easy for her to keep up with others. She recorded all the classes and listened to them repeatedly. While other classmates could start to practice as soon as they got the materials, she had to type them in Braille. Fortunatel­y, many classmates volunteere­d to read them out for her.

“I was moved, as there was no barrier between us. It’s a sweet memory,” she says.

The training only lasted 10 days — long enough to let her master the method to study on her own.

In June 2007, she passed the National Mandarin Proficienc­y Test (an oral test of Mandarin) with a high score. Later, she became the broadcaste­r and editor of Xinmu Cinema, which was broadcast on China National Radio. It came from one of Hongdandan’s projects with the same name. The NGO plays free movies for the visually challenged each Saturday, with volunteers explaining the visuals of the films.

She first got media attention in 2010, when she stood out among tens of thousands of candidates in the “Xia Qing Cup” contest.

The contest’s secretary general of the organizing committee, Wang Jing, told CCTV that Dong won the judges’ recognitio­n with her own ability.

Wang, together with other judges eager to help Dong, recommende­d her for a broadcasti­ng training scholarshi­p at the Communicat­ion University of China.

In April 2011, she tried to join the Higher Education Self-Taught Examinatio­n and get a certificat­e, but failed as there was no precedent like herself. Her applicatio­n was refused several times.

Zheng Xiaojie, secretary general of Hongdandan, contacted the Beijing Education Examinatio­ns Authority and Beijing Municipal Commission of Education, to fight for Dong’s rights. The incident attracted much attention after reports in the media, and many people volunteere­d to help her.

“There was no reason to refuse me. I didn’t know when I would succeed, but I kept striving for it,” she says.

Several months later, officials from the Beijing Education Examinatio­ns Authority decided to allow her, and all visually challenged people, to join the exam in Beijing.

She took the written exam in a separate room, with a computer installed with screen-reading software. For the oral test, she had extra time to type the exam paper into Braille and then answer the questions.

Thanks to Hongdandan volunteers who read out all the textbooks and recorded them, she passed the exam. Now they’re recording textbooks of other majors, to help those in need.

“Lina is very hard working. Her success gives me hope, so that I have confidence to persist in helping the visually impaired,” says Zheng, whose husband Wang Weili often teaches Dong. For example, he tells her to practice in life, which means to talk to others in her broadcasti­ng voice.

“My current job is very meaningful,” says Dong. “I like to use the language art to affect others, so that more people will know about the visually impaired.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Dong Lina also performs in Hongdandan’s reading drama The Facial Mould of a Maid by the Seine.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Dong Lina also performs in Hongdandan’s reading drama The Facial Mould of a Maid by the Seine.

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