China Daily Global Weekly

Expats share caring hearts in Shenzhen

Volunteers join group led by Belgian businessma­n to help those in need

- By PEI PEI and XING WEN in Shenzhen Contact the writers at peipei@chinadaily.com.cn

Belgian Ronny Verdoodt’s reasons for settling down 11 years ago in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, were quite pragmatic. As a businessma­n who sells Chinese-made informatio­n technology products to European customers, he was attracted by the city’s factories and suppliers and the convenienc­e of sourcing and checking the quality of products.

However, his bonds with the city are now more emotional than pragmatic. The 56-year-old said he has gathered a “family” of thousands of people around him in Shenzhen who are compassion­ate, generous and willing to help others.

Over the past five years, Verdoodt has organized around 120 charity events to help poor and elderly people, orphans and autistic and disabled children in Shenzhen, attracting nearly 6,000 volunteers from more than 50 countries including Australia, France, Germany, Greece, Italy and Japan.

The Gorkha earthquake that struck central Nepal in 2015 inspired Verdoodt to become involved in charity work. The earthquake killed nearly 9,000 people and damaged thousands of buildings, but Verdoodt wondered why people are often only roused to help others in the wake of a disaster.

“At that moment, it struck me to do something good and simple for the people around me in the country and city that I was living in,” he said.

He immediatel­y set up a group on WeChat called A Heart for China, to try to organize people who were willing to give back to the community. He contacted centers for special-needs children and nursing homes for the elderly to see if members of the group could visit. The visitors took gifts and played games with the children in the homes, or just spent time with lonely elderly people, Verdoodt said.

The success of the group has seen the number of volunteers grow to more than 1,000. During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic earlier this year, the group donated face masks, disinfecta­nt supplies, medical gloves and other protective equipment to hospitals and rehabilita­tion centers.

Verdoodt said charity is more about people giving time to help others rather than just donating money or supplies. “Of course donations matter to a lot of needy people, but they also need constant care and love,” he said.

One place that Verdoodt and the volunteers frequently visited over the past five years is the Renda Nursing Home for the Elderly, a nonprofit

organizati­on that provides financial support, medical care and nursing and recreation­al services.

Last year, they celebrated the 100th birthday of resident “Granny” He by holding a party for her.

“Volunteers, many of whom are foreigners, came to bring flowers to Granny He and tried to amuse her by singing and dancing on that day, making it a birthday to remember,” recalled Zheng Yan, director of the nursing home’s comprehens­ive service department.

Zheng said unlike other charity groups that usually grow from schools and companies, the group is a loose collection of individual­s from different walks of life and countries who often dig into their own pockets to offer help.

Verdoodt said that although expats

get involved in welfare activities in China, it is not always possible to join a Chinese organizati­on because of official regulation­s. “In Shenzhen, an internatio­nal metropolis, the openness of the group and its events have attracted new foreign members,” Verdoodt said.

Hemnani Naresh Gurmukhdas, an Indian member of the group, has participat­ed in many of the organizati­on’s charity events since October of last year. He said that sharing time with children in welfare centers has helped bring him inner peace.

“The group has also helped me better integrate into local life in Shenzhen as I have made many new friends through the events,” he said.

The group has also recruited volunteers from outside Shenzhen who assist in running the group’s online

platforms, such as its official website and WeChat account.

“We also plan to hold online activities; then people from around the world can help us make something happen online,” Verdoodt said.

The group is also looking to support the developmen­t of education in remote parts of China. “The financial part, like donations, was never a priority but at this moment it is needed to take AHFC to the next level,” Verdoodt said.

He said the group will be formally registered as a charity under the Chinese system or set up as a foreign NGO. In the case of the latter, it will be registered in Belgium, Verdoodt said, due to his nationalit­y.

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Ronny Verdoodt (left) presents gifts to “Granny” He and her family members at the Renda Nursing Home for the Elderly in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Ronny Verdoodt (left) presents gifts to “Granny” He and her family members at the Renda Nursing Home for the Elderly in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.

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