Shanghai Daily

The sleuth on the trail of long-lost families

- Hu Min

Tang Huaibin, 55, is a detective of sorts, hunting clues to crack a mystery. But his is not a whodunit pursuit, but rather a quest to find the families of homeless people in Shanghai.

Tang has become such an expert in his 21 years on the job that he always gets assigned the hardest cases at Shanghai Shelter, where he works.

“This job involves a great deal of persistenc­e, patience, attention to detail, love and experience,” said Tang. “I patch together informatio­n and collect every detail, piece by piece, and then start over again if the informatio­n points in the wrong direction. Frustratio­n is normal, but I never give up on any case.”

Every district in the city has a shelter, providing free meals, showers, accommodat­ion and medical treatment for the homeless on a 24-hour, year-round basis.

Officials from the shelters patrol the streets, asking those sleeping outdoors if they want to come to a shelter. No one is forced to go. Those who refuse are supplied with food and blankets.

Since mid-December, when temperatur­es plunged below freezing, more than 800 people have checked into shelters, almost a third more than usual.

Homeless people who appear to have no families to care for them usually get referred to Shanghai Shelter. Not all of them want to be reunited with families, but many — especially those who are older — are willing.

Last year, the Shanghai Shelter received 2,583 people — about 27 percent of them disabled or with mental disorders. Some 47 homeless people who had lost contact with their families received help finding their families, according to the Shanghai Civil Affairs Bureau.

In the past three years, Tang has had a caseload of more than 100 homeless people. Prior to that, the shelter wasn’t keeping count.

Some of Tang’s “clients” lost contact with their families up to 50 years ago.

Shelter officials use a variety of methods and technologi­es to identify the homeless, including facial recognitio­n, DNA matching, recognizin­g accents and dialects and help from local officials and the media.

It’s by no means an easy job.

“Some of the homeless have mental problems,” said Kang Qingping, deputy director of the Shanghai Shelter. “Others left home so long ago that their memories of family fade. Some don’t want to recall their pasts because of psychologi­cal traumas. Some have had their residency permits revoked. All of these factors feed into the challenge of trying to reunite them with families.”

When the hunt begins, the way forward is blackness and thorns, Tang said.

“In many cases, their memories are blank for various reasons,” said Tang. “But as long as there is a ray of hope, I never give up.”

He added, “When reunions occur, their relatives sometimes don’t even recognize them at first because of so many years of lost contact. Then they burst into tears of joy, which makes me feel my efforts are all worthwhile.”

Cases that seem dead in the water are often reopened if new clues are found, he said.

One of the homeless, identified by the pseudonym Qu Changshun, recently boarded a train from Shanghai to the

city of Luoyang in Henan Province to be reunited with his family after 40 years.

Qu, 63, checked into the Baoshan District Shelter in late December to escape a bitter cold front. He initially refused to communicat­e, give his name or offer any informatio­n about his family.

After initial efforts to find his relatives failed, Tang was called in.

Based on his accent, Tang identified Qu’s hometown, and more details gradually began to emerge.

“Because of psychologi­cal trauma, he was not willing to talk at first,” said Tang.

With gentle but persistent prodding from Tang and his colleagues, Qu gradually opened up. He told them he left his hometown in the late 1970s because of a failed relationsh­ip.

With the help of Luoyang police, Tang’s staff eventually located Qu’s family.

Despite the long separation, Qu and his younger brother recognized each

other immediatel­y during a video chat arranged by the shelter and burst into tears.

Qu was told his family searched for him for many years and that his father died, in part due to grief over his son’s disappeara­nce. His mother is now 86 and suffers from heart disease.

“We never gave up hope over the years that you would return someday,” his brother said.

Tang was in the army and then worked at a hospital before taking his current job.

“My colleagues came from across China, speaking diversifie­d dialects,” he said. “That’s how I learned to recognize many accents.”

Tang said his interests include history, culture and geography. He keeps up on regional cuisine and customs, and reads a lot of books. In short, he can draw on eclectic knowledge to track down the origins of homeless people.

About 80 to 90 percent of the homeless in Shanghai are from Henan, Anhui, Jiangxi, Shandong, Yunnan, Guizhou, Sichuan and Hubei provinces, he said.

Tang speaks eight major dialects but notes that one dialect can vary from place to place.

“Dialect is the most important way to identify a person,” Tang told Shanghai Daily. “Most homeless who lose contact with their families a long time ago are now in their 60s and 70s, but it’s difficult to change your accent.”

Tang is full of stories about his work. Like the 2005 case of a 6-year-old boy that took him three years to crack.

The boy spoke Sichuan dialect.

“He provided very limited informatio­n — fleeting memories of his parents, taking a train, riding a tractor, climbing a mountain, living in a village with a playground, butcher and small shop,” said Tang. “He couldn’t remember anything else, and his accent covered a large area.”

Tang and his colleagues contacted villages one by one, asking about a lost child. They finally narrowed the search down to one village, and the Party secretary there visited all residents.

It turned out that the boy was adopted, and his parents were migrant workers moving from one place to another in Jiangsu Province. They had taken the boy home to Sichuan only once.

The shelter in Minhang District once received a 57-year-old homeless man surnamed Xu, who had two disabled hands and burns on his face.

He couldn’t tell shelter staff his name, address or any informatio­n about his family.

“The man had a very strong accent and could not read or write,” said Tang.

The identifica­tion process was complicate­d and took about a month.

“Xu’s memory was patchy,” Tang said. “But we kept chatting with him trying to

A MAN who allegedly killed a woman in Shanghai in 1997 has been arrested, police announced yesterday.

Police in Songjiang District began their investigat­ion more than 23 years ago after female body parts were discovered under a bridge and in a village creek.

Based on personal belongings found nearby, the body parts were identified as those of a woman surnamed Zhang who used to sell plastic bags in a wet market in the suburban district.

Zhang’s family told

police she disappeare­d in May 1997.

Based on the way she was dismembere­d, forensic experts establishe­d Zhang was most likely killed by someone skilled at animal slaughteri­ng or other knife-related work. They also suspected the murderer had stored the body parts in a freezer before discarding them.

From the handle of a plastic bag, police found a piece of the suspect’s biological evidence, but they were not able to find him.

Thanks to developmen­ts in forensic science, a 66-year-old man surnamed Cai was identified last year as a suspect and apprehende­d at his Songjiang home.

Cai, who sold pork in the wet market where Zhang worked, has since confessed to the murder. He allegedly said he tricked Zhang to go home with him where he tried to take advantage of her, and killed her because he feared she would report him to the police.

Zhang was 25 years old and married at that time as was Cai, who said he changed jobs after the murder and has been living in fear ever since.

Last year, city police solved eight murder cases from previous years, three of which dated back more than 20 years.

 ??  ?? A homeless man is reunited with family via video chat after Tang Huaibin (center) tracked down his relatives. — Ti Gong
A homeless man is reunited with family via video chat after Tang Huaibin (center) tracked down his relatives. — Ti Gong
 ??  ?? Tang chats with a homeless man, trying to find clues about his life. — Ti Gong
Tang chats with a homeless man, trying to find clues about his life. — Ti Gong

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