China Daily (Hong Kong)

What they say

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Editor’s note: Five women from across China spoke about their personal experience­s and their involvemen­t in China’s sweeping antipovert­y drive at an event in Beijing on Tuesday organized by the State Council Informatio­n Office.

When I first went to the village, many people did not understand me and thought, “what can such a young girl do?” When I heard them talk about me like this, I felt very hurt. But I refused to concede defeat. After all, I hadn’t done anything. Later, I helped them solve their daily affairs, including building roads and ditches. By doing this, I feel that when we sincerely think for the villagers, care for them, understand them and work for them, they will recognize and trust you from the bottom of their hearts.

Cheng Ju, 30, a college graduate who works as Party secretary in an isolated village in Hubei province

We women all want to learn more, take the initiative to communicat­e, learn to be independen­t and change our thinking. We used to plant and sell in the traditiona­l way, picking fruit during the day and bringing them to the big wholesale market at night. Farmers were very passive. That has changed with the emergence of the internet. I hope to use the internet to bring agricultur­al products out of the mountains and sell them to the whole country.

Gan Youq in ,39, a farmer-turned-live-streamer from the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region who has more than 10 million followers

Women can hold up half the sky in a family, but on the road to poverty alleviatio­n, I think women can hold up more than half the sky. They plant in the family garden, shovel the soil and pull grass. There are chickens, ducks and geese at home for us to feed, and handicraft­s such as embroidery to make. I think many things rely on female family members for improvemen­t at home.

Yue Guiling, 47, head of a rural cooperativ­e in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region who promoted sales of local soy beans

Let me tell you about the changes in our village. In the past, villagers traveled 10 kilometers to a nearby market with grass and vegetables to sell. The marketplac­e was very small. All goods needed to be carried on their backs and shoulders because of poor road conditions. Now that President Xi Jinping has put forward the policy of targeted poverty alleviatio­n, our roads have been fixed and widened, and now our villagers can take buses to markets.

Shi Shun li an ,66, former Party secretary of an ethnic Miao village in Hunan province

My experience in the past few years has enabled me to see the power of love and support. Life was really difficult at that time. Village officials and women’s federation comrades came to my home many times to enlighten me, give me ideas, arrange loans and encourage me to participat­e in training sessions.

Wang Xiling, 50, a farmer from Baoji, Shaanxi province, who was diagnosed with cancer in 2011 and widowed two years later

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