China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Joy not left behind

Shanghai high schoolers start soccer program for rural children

- Contact the writer at zhulixin@chinadaily.com.cn

Chu Wenhao and his teammates from a rural primary school couldn’t stop themselves from shedding tears after they recently failed to win a two-day soccer tournament.

Though the 11-year-old’s team, from Chashui Primary School in the mountainou­s county of Qianshan, Anhui province, secured third place in the tournament that ended on Oct 1, the children had expected a better result.

Nine primary schools in Qianshan have formed student soccer teams with the help of the Youth Spotlight, a campus community from the Shanghai American School. As the last school to join the program, Chashui Primary didn’t even have a team until early September, when the semester started.

“One of the nine eligible schools didn’t participat­e in the competitio­n because, although the boys wanted to win, they didn’t have confidence in their abilities,” said Huang Yujia, a 17-year-old at Shanghai American School, who founded Youth Spotlight.

Most of the 225 members of school soccer teams in Qianshan are “left-behind children”, whose parents have migrated to cities in search of work.

That means the children are left in the care of their grandparen­ts and other relatives, according to Huang, who was in the county with more than 20 Youth Spotlight members to help organize the tournament.

The teams are primarily for left-behind children, but the organizati­on is wary of labeling them as such for fear of discrimina­tion, and anyway, all local students are welcome to join in, according to Huang.

Chu has been living with his grandparen­ts for more than five years, since his parents left to run a snack stall in Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang province. His 18-year-old brother joined them two years ago.

Though he’s open and active with his teammates, Chu is still reserved in the presence of teachers or strangers. However, in the past month, he has been experienci­ng happy times thanks to the cooperatio­n between his school and Youth Spotlight, according to Chu Guoqiang, his 72-year-old grandfathe­r.

Providing help

Huang, whose father grew up in an impoverish­ed rural family, first heard about leftbehind children in 2015.

“I cried when I saw media reports about how four left-behind siblings in Guizhou province had committed suicide by drinking pesticide,” she said. “I’d never heard of leftbehind kids before then.”

At the beginning of last year, after researchin­g the issue by reading reports and talking to some left-behind children who were visiting Shanghai, Huang decided to provide help by founding Youth Spotlight.

The project quickly attracted the participat­ion of many of her schoolmate­s, mostly internatio­nal students whose parents work in China.

“More than 70 of my schoolmate­s have joined in, with nearly half of them very active in organizing activities for the kids,” she said, adding that many of the left-behind children she has met are bored with their rural existence.

Initially, Huang wanted to help children in Guizhou, where the four children committed suicide, but she realized that the province was too far from Shanghai.

“The distance would make it too difficult and costly to provide regular, meaningful help,” she said.

After more research, she discovered that Anhui, which has a registered population of more than 70 million, is home to a large number of left-behind children.

Early last year, Huang began looking for schools in rural Anhui that would be willing to cooperate with the project, and contacted dozens she found online.

“Most of the people who picked up the phone rejected my suggestion. They asked how I had found their numbers, and they were afraid and unsure of my motivation,” she said.

Things only improved when Tianzhusha­n Primary School in Qianshan agreed to allow her to visit.

When she arrived in March last year, Huang met the principal and explained that she wanted to help the children by offering them the opportunit­y to engage in an activity they loved.

“However, I didn’t decide the activity — the children did. After we asked eight classes of fourth and fifth graders, the answer was clear; the thing they most wanted to do was play soccer,” she said.

“Their wide agreement excited me. What could be better for left-behind kids than bringing them a sport that fosters camaraderi­e and cooperatio­n?”

In November last year, the first team in the county was founded at Tianzhusha­n Primary. Seven more schools joined the project this year.

Huang and her schoolmate­s tried a number of ways to raise funds, with the most effective methods being canvassing donations online or approachin­g individual sponsors.

“We tried raising funds from businesses, but they rejected us because they didn’t think it would benefit them,” she said.

After two rounds competing for funds against other student clubs at Huang’s school, Youth Spotlight received a grant of $3,500, along with a number of donations from individual­s.

The organizati­on used the money to give every team soccer jerseys, with the name of the school printed on the back, and provide subsidies to teachers who coach the children part time.

“Most of the people who picked up the phone rejected my suggestion.” Huang Yujia, a 17-year-old who founded Youth Spotlight

Publishing project

Huang has visited Qianshan five times, and has also spent a month in Boluo, a village administer­ed by Chashui, to see how the children live.

She is planning to publish a book she has written, based on the children’s experience­s, and has also published diary entries written by left-behind children in Guizhou, which she translated into English.

The teachers in Qianshan send her photos of daily training sessions. “That way, I can make sure the children enjoy real engagement in soccer,” she said.

The children’s parents also provide support. Chu Wenhao, now in the fifth grade, recently received a soccer ball worth 90 yuan and a pair of sports shoes from his father.

“The boy’s parents are happy to know that soccer makes him happier and stronger,” his grandfathe­r said.

The family hails from Laowu, or “old house,” a village in Chashui. After years of hard work in Hangzhou, Chu Wenhao’s parents have managed to build a two-story house in the village. Some family members have already moved in.

“The new house was built for my older grandson, who will need it when he marries,” Chu Guoqiang said.

Chu Wenhao’s father, Lu Jiayou, comes from a poorer family than his wife, so he lived with his parents-in-law and his sons have taken their name, not his.

The boy’s grandparen­ts farm about 0.5 hectare of land, just enough to feed themselves, but even with his grandparen­ts the boy is withdrawn.

“He just spends a lot of time playing soccer at home after school,” his grandfathe­r said.

Growing confidence

Wang Zhongwu, a math teacher who is also a part-time soccer coach at Chashui Primary, said Chu Wenhao has become more open and his confidence has grown along with his soccer skill.

Under Wang Zhongwu’s guidance, the boy and his teammates play soccer before and after class. He recalled that when the teachers brought the students to the county seat in their cars, the boys were excited because they hardly have any opportunit­ies to travel.

Wang Rui, the principal of Chashui Primary, said Chu Wenhao is just one of 500 students at the school — who are mostly left-behind children — and hundreds more across the county who need help.

Huang, the student in Shanghai, said some local schools are willing to use their own money to support the soccer project, but a lack of funds is preventing Youth Spotlight from expanding its efforts to help deprived children.

She recently applied to register the organizati­on as an NGO, and is waiting to hear if the applicatio­n has been successful.

“Next year, I will probably go to the United States to study, but Youth Spotlight will continue to try and help deprived, rural children,” she said.

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 ?? ZHU LIXIN / CHINA DAILY ?? Primary school students from Qianshan county, Anhui province, compete in a soccer game on Oct 1.
ZHU LIXIN / CHINA DAILY Primary school students from Qianshan county, Anhui province, compete in a soccer game on Oct 1.
 ?? CHEN DONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Left: Chu Wenhao (right), 11, has been living with his grandparen­ts for more than five years. Right: Huang Yujia (second from left) helps to present a ZHU LIXIN / CHINA DAILY trophy to members of a primary school soccer team in Qianshan on Oct 1.
CHEN DONG / FOR CHINA DAILY Left: Chu Wenhao (right), 11, has been living with his grandparen­ts for more than five years. Right: Huang Yujia (second from left) helps to present a ZHU LIXIN / CHINA DAILY trophy to members of a primary school soccer team in Qianshan on Oct 1.
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