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《珠海特区报》Guizhou gets GLV's love

时间:2009-06-17 00:00:00  来源:珠海特区报  作者:Betty Lin

简述 :LOVE Has No Border & Home Is Around You

Guizhou gets GLV's love
By Betty Lin 《珠海特区报》
2009.6.14

    "LOVE Has No Border & Home Is Around You," Eileen Peng, a 29-year- old teacher with the Guizhou College of Finance & Economics, tweaked the hearts and purse strings of a hundred teachers and students at Gateway Language Village (GLV) at Ningxi Culture Square in Xiangzhou on Friday after-noon.     

    Depicting the substandard living and learning conditions of students in poverty-stricken areas of neighbouring Guizhou Province, she kicked off a presentation at which 22,4005 yuan ($3,280) and HK$1,400 were donated while some teachers showed intent to become volunteers.    

    At the end of the presentation, Eileen startled the assemblage with her latest decision: she will donate the 150,000 yuan ($21,962) of tuition, which is to be used for her upcoming study in Britain for a PhD, to rebuild a Guizhou school destroyed by a hail-stone just days ago. "I can see my future clearly if I go to Britain, but if I do so, where will be the future of the children in those areas? I won't go; instead I'll go back to the children. However, 150,000 yuan ($21,962) is all I have, and it is far from enough for recon-struction of a school. So here I plea for your help," she said tearfully.    

    A master's degree graduate of Yunnan University Law School, Eileen received an offer of a doctorate of law from abroad in 2005. Before departing, however, she traveled to Guizhou with some friends. There she was shocked by young children wearing thin clothes in cold weather and their family be-longings worth no more than 100 yuan ($14.64). She immediately decided to work there as a volunteer when she re-turned.     

    Despite strong opposition from her family, she spent four years traveling to 35 of the 88 counties in Guizhou, teaching, helping to repair schools, collecting books, raising funds and organizing volunteers. Since she is going to Britain for a PhD in September and the terms of seven volunteers will expire in July, she turned to GLV, where she had studied English, for help.    

    The appeal letter she wrote to GLV Principal Ping Hong and her story were published in the Qianjiang Evening News in Hangzhou in late April. In response, 89 people from various walks of life applied to be volunteers and six of them were eventually selected for training at GLV Hangzhou, according to Kelly Morine, GLV Zhuhai English Programme Teacher Training & Development administrator from Canada. In addition, 17 cases of pencils, note-books, color pens and other items were collected in merely three days. They were delivered via air freight free of charge.    

    Eileen told the assemblage, "A volunteer may change 200 children's fates and 10 volunteers may change 2,000 children's fates," which was what most impressed the volunteers, a Hangzhou entrepreneur applicant surnamed Ying said.     

    GLV Hangzhou then organized a trip to deliver the donations, meet the students and see what Eileen was doing. Foreign teachers Sandra and Robert were in the group. They visited schools and some homes, and enjoyed getting together with the students.    

    Hangzhou is going to set up a training course for volunteers before they go to Guizhou, where the students can-not be separated according to age due to the scarcity of teachers and facilities, Kelly noted.   

    "As the GLV main campus, we will also get the teachers trained here free of charge for Guizhou," said Kelly, adding: "I mean it's a great idea. Obviously there are many poor areas in the world, but the fact is you take an area and you do what you can." 

    The ceremony had been decided up-on a week before and posters were put in the hallway while a memorandum for teachers was issued during the past week. Kelly, who has worked at GLV for nine and a half years, said Chinese are amazing in organizing quick responses such as charity donations to the devastating Sichuan earthquake areas last year. "People, in both Hangzhou and Zhuhai, when they decide they're going to do it, it gets done. I'm amazed by it," she said.   

    "We're hoping that with more people volunteering to go there for a short- term period, there will be more teachers available so that the students can get a better level of education," Kelly said.  

    Helping accommodate the volunteers will be part of the training, Kelly said. The living conditions are quite basic and facilities limited in those areas, posing serious challenges to volunteers from modern cities. The training programmes will not only prepare them to teach those different levels of age groups in one class, but also the reality of an impoverished lifestyle, Kevin Brown, a teacher from the US, noted.   

    "Some people can make a simple confession in life that we're a little modernized here and have these mod-ern comforts. We can't live without them for long. But I mean if somebody has the passion and desire to help and can go through certain inconveniences, the rewards can be fantastic," he said.   

    Nonetheless, it's easy to start, but difficult to keep the momentum, Kelly pointed out, noting: "It's important that people know where the progress is, what's happening and the children are in progress. When they see that kind of progress in life and in humanity, it makes them want to keep going for-ward."   

    Kevin is proud that GLV has fos-tered a philosophy of creating a sense of family and helping each other. Stu-dents are judged not only by what they've achieved academically, but what they contribute to the community. "You have knowledge; you have a skill and a passion. Those are the three ele-ments you've got to prepare individuals for," he said. He foresees that the pro-ject can grow much bigger than even GLV.   

    The volunteer project is designed to cover around 2,000 students in certain areas of Guizhou, Kelly explained. She said she definitely believes the project is long term. "I think we're just going to open doors and other people will walk here and say: Ok, I can be part of it. We hope it can get out into the commu-nity very quickly, as it's not just a small school trying to do something; it's more important that the society understands what's going on with the people outside and then to contribute," Kelly said.

 

编辑:李兵 Lewis Lee


本文链接:https://www.pinghe.com/AboutGLV/GLVState/2010-08-12/548.html

 

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