China Daily (Hong Kong)

Seven local speakers address TEDxFutian audience

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What can be achieved in 18 minutes? Seven Shenzhen speakers from various background­s each took 18 minutes to share their observatio­ns and thoughts about technology, arts, education, architectu­re, philanthro­py and sailing at a TEDxFutian talk on April 16.

Themed “Reconnect”, the organizing committee of the annual event, TEDxFutian, aimed to inspire the Shenzhen audience with innovative perspectiv­es to help them to think outside the box.

Philanthro­py was one of the topics and according to the city’s civil affairs department, an increasing number of social organizati­ons and charity groups have been establishe­d in Shenzhen in recent years.

People tend to think that charity is giving money to show love and sympathy. But Cao Jun, a father of a mentally handicappe­d teenager, shared his story of solving charity funding problems with his commercial insight.

In his talk, Cao said that, like many parents of mentally handicappe­d children, he suffered great pain when told that his son would never be able to live independen­tly like other children.

Cao started his talk by sharing his fear that his son would be alone and helpless when Cao and his wife pass away.

“I did not want to drink much water before going to bed during that time for the fear of waking up in the middle of the night and thinking about my son,” Cao said.

After years of thinking, Cao eventually decided to create a center where mentally handicappe­d children could live and help each other, but the center needed a source of income to maintain itself. Having worked in the commercial sector for many years, Cao thought of creating a business to solve the funding problem.

He e s t a b l i s h e d a c a r w a s h i n Shenzhen in 2015 where all of the staff were mentally handicappe­d teenagers or adults. By washing cars, the staff earned their income and respect from customers.

“No one will give you money out of sympathy forever, so you need to earn your own dignity by working,” said Cao.

Another speaker was Zhu Jingxiang, a famous architect in China and an associate professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Zhu’s speech brought the audience’s attention to several design projec ts aimed at building light, easy, flat and inclusive structures in special places such as mountainou­s areas, slums, disaster zones and wetlands.

In particular, Zhu shared a classroom that they had built for leftover children in impoverish­ed areas in China. “We wanted to build a classroom that would naturally attract the students to study because they feel comfortabl­e and can have fun in the room, rather than the same desperate feelings they have in their empty homes,” said Zhu.

The classroom was built so that the walls and floors were filled with squares where the kids could squat, sit and play.

“In such an unexpected way, space can be used totally differentl­y from the way people normally think. Allowing the space to function to reconnect people with their real lives,” said Zhu.

The annual event was organized by a group of volunteers from all walks of life in Shenzhen. TEDxFutian was the first Shenzhen TEDx group to be authorized by the HED headquarte­rs, an internatio­nal media organizati­on which posts talks online for free distributi­on, under the slogan “ideas worth spreading”.

Shenzhen Daily provided the story.

 ??  ?? The audience reacts to speakers at the TEDxFutian talk.
The audience reacts to speakers at the TEDxFutian talk.

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