Shanghai Daily

Rescued become rescuer: a life dedicated to service

- Chen Huizhi

When Jiang Yuhang emerged from the rubble of China’s worst earthquake in six decades and saw daylight for the first time in five days, he was so impressed by Shanghai firefighti­ng team who rescued him that he decided to devote his life to saving lives.

Jiang, now 29, was among the survivors at the epicenter of the Wenchuan earthquake on May 12, 2008. It left 69,000 people dead, 370,000 injured and 18,000 missing.

Jiang is now vice chief of a regional fire squadron in Guizhou Province after serving nine years in Shanghai. He talked by phone with Shanghai Daily about the disaster that will forever haunt his memories.

Ten years ago, Jiang, a Guizhou native, was an intern for the job of expressway toll collector in Yingxiu Town of Wenchuan County, Sichuan Province.

When the earthquake struck, he was in a hotel room that served as a dorm for him and two colleagues. The whole building collapsed before they could escape, he recalls.

Only later did he learn that he was trapped under the debris of six thick precast slabs.

“I could hear voices outside, but they couldn’t hear me,” he says. “I had no food or water. I think I survived because I had faith that the rescuers wouldn’t give up.”

He was pulled out after 125 hours, and his being rescued was called a “miracle.” His roommates didn’t survive.

“When I saw the rescuers, I felt happy and relieved,” he says.

He was treated for physical exhaustion under the medical care of a team of doctors from the Shanghai No. 6 People’s Hospital.

“I decided that I wanted to be like the people who saved me,” he says.

Jiang joined the army and was later recruited as a firefighte­r in the Pengpu squadron of the Special Firefighti­ng and Rescue Brigade of the Shanghai Public Security Bureau’s Fire Corps. He arrived in Shanghai at the end of 2008.

He says his family was a bit reluctant to see him go off to work in a city about 2,000 kilometers away but they understood his determinat­ion.

In the summer of his first year as a firefighte­r, he was at an apartment fire where a child was crying for help from an upstairs window. Jiang and his squad leader ran into the burning building and saved the kid.

“When I heard the gratitude of the child’s parents and praise from the neighbors about our bravery, I knew I had made the right career choice,” he says.

In the first three years, Jiang was a starting-level member of the squadron. Then he spent two years in full-time college training for fire service cadets in Kunming, capital of Yunnan Province. After that, he returned to Shanghai as a platoon leader, a second lieutenant.

Jiang says his years in Shanghai involved an array of activities, from the serious to the mundane — firefighti­ng, hazardous chemical removal, preventing suicides, saving pets, opening locked doors and taking stuck rings off fingers.

“We work tactically and efficientl­y, with empathy but no superfluou­s emotion,” he says. “But I think it would seriously affect me if any of my colleagues lost a life in the line of duty.”

Jiang says he decided to return to his hometown, Kaili, because his parents were in failing health.

“I love my job and I want to apply all I’ve learned while working in Shanghai to help the people of my hometown,” he says.

When Jiang left Shanghai in March, he was the vice chief of the Pengpu fire squadron, a first lieutenant.

 ??  ?? Jiang Yuhang (left) leads a rescue team saving a man who’s trapped under a truck in an accident in Shanghai’s Jing’an District. Rescuers used an air-lifting bag to lever the truck off the man.
— Ti Gong
Jiang Yuhang (left) leads a rescue team saving a man who’s trapped under a truck in an accident in Shanghai’s Jing’an District. Rescuers used an air-lifting bag to lever the truck off the man. — Ti Gong
 ??  ?? In this May 2008 file photo, Jiang Yuhang was rescued from the collapsed building after 125 hours. — Xinhua
In this May 2008 file photo, Jiang Yuhang was rescued from the collapsed building after 125 hours. — Xinhua

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