Archive for the ‘SQR’ Category

New CSA sports-skills sessions start at Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

As well as organising its Yushu earthquake relief trip, SQR also soft-launched a new Chengdu Sports Aid project on the newly-resurfaced playground at the Di Kang Le Kindergarten in Guangji last Friday.

First 'CSA sports-skills session' at Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten First 'CSA sports-skills session' at Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten First 'CSA sports-skills session' at Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten

Groups of the older kindergarten students were introduced to a variety of different skills to improve their physical- and hand-eye coordination, ball skills, and team-playing abilities, incorporating fun games such as Duck, Duck, Goose and Simon Says into the mix. Key SQR volunteer Cate Papez will be leading the first few session as the children and kindergarten staff get used to the format. After the first session, Cate told us:

The kids were so enthusiastic, particularly about the Western games. Smiles broke out the moment we brought out the tennis balls. I look forward to seeing their skills develop in the weeks to come. We made enormous progress in just the first hour-long sessions!

First 'CSA sports-skills session' at Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten First 'CSA sports-skills session' at Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten

Future sessions will be able to be joined by small groups of volunteers wanting to do something for the rural Sichuanese community. We are also interested in offers to sponsor the sessions. Please contact csa@sichuan-quake-relief.org if you would like to help.

Yushu update

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Map showing some areas affected by the 14 April 2010 Yushu earthquake: Jiegu Town, Longbao Town, Haxiu Village, Lixin Village

  • The round-trip from Xining to Longbao took 52 hours along some very dangerously icy roads; we saw more than 10 relief vehicles that had come off the road, left to be recovered at a later date. At points we were forced off-road by the earthquake damage, which made the journey even tougher on the vehicle.
  • We eventually arrived in Longbao town at 11pm, met with officials and donated the goods we had brought. The most pressing needs in the area are tents and and medicines. (The 8,000 residents of Longbao had already used up 50,000 assorted tablets in the first 2-3 days.) We were also made aware of two other, more remote villages that are still in need of relief: Ha Xiu Village (哈秀乡), population 3,000, and Li Xin Village (立新乡), population 2,000.

Images from post-quake Jiegu Town, Yushu County

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

On our way through to Longbao Town, we stopped briefly to survey the damage at the site of much of the initial relief activity, Jiegu Town. Locals we spoke to indicated that Xihang District was particularly badly hit; most of the images below are from that area of town.

Earthquake damage in Jiegu Town (结古镇), Yushu Earthquake damage in Jiegu Town (结古镇), Yushu Earthquake damage in Jiegu Town (结古镇), Yushu Earthquake damage in Jiegu Town (结古镇), Yushu Earthquake damage in Jiegu Town (结古镇), Yushu Earthquake damage in Jiegu Town (结古镇), Yushu Earthquake damage in Jiegu Town (结古镇), Yushu Earthquake damage in Jiegu Town (结古镇), Yushu Earthquake damage in Jiegu Town (结古镇), Yushu

Update: progress of SQR aid delivery

Monday, April 19th, 2010

UPDATE at 3:10pm local time, Tues 20th April:
SQR team should be back in Chengdu by Wednesday lunchtime.

UPDATE at 9am local time, Tues 20th April:
Aid delivered, SQR truck and team now heading back to Xining. They hope to be there by tonight.

UPDATE at 11pm local time, Mon 19th April:
The truck loaded with supplies arrived in Jiegu town about 6pm on Monday April 19th, and is now moving on to Longbao.

The SQR team described the Jiegu town as ‘eerily calm’ and saw the huge amount of destruction caused by the earthquake.

Longbao has suffered terribly; one sign of this is that SQR received verbal permisson from the Longbao authorities to visit, deliver aid and conduct further needs assessments.  Written permission was not possible, as all chops/stamps, fax machines etc. were (and possibly still are) buried under rubble.  Note that SQR has been given official permission from the Provincial Civil Affairs Bureau to deliver this aid.

As with its post-quake efforts in Sichuan, SQR will focus on more remote areas that may not have received the attention they need, such is the scale of the disaster.  There are several villages on the mountain road to Longbao; SQR hopes to be able to survey the situations there on this trip.

Donations can be made via our donations page marked “Yushu”.

SQR delivering aid to quake-stricken Longbao town

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

Following our recent post drawing attention to the plight of those awaiting aid in Longbao town, 75 kms from Jiegu, SQR will be delivering much-needed aid directly to the afflicted early on Monday morning (we are leaving this evening and arrive Monday morning).

A 1.7 tonne truck has been loaded with the following supplies:

  • 2 petrol-driven generators
  • 100 dynamo torches
  • 50 dung-burning stoves
  • 1 tonne flour (1/2 tonne wheat, 1/2 tonne barley)
  • 1200 pots of instant noodles
  • 50 bottles of disinfectant

SQR has been given official permission from the Provincial Civil Affairs Bureau to deliver this aid. We will be liasing with town officials to ensure that the aid gets distributed evenly and to those most in need.

UPDATE: SQR truck left at around 830pm on Sunday 18th April.

Coordination efforts from Xining

Friday, April 16th, 2010

It was a busy first day for SQR in Qinghai capital Xining, arriving just 48 hours after the earthquake struck Yushu County. We immediately met with a contact originally from striken Longbao town, who filled us in on the situation there. Recovery efforts have so far concentrated on the more populous Jiegu town, and Longbao has yet to receive any aid. Please see our funding request for more information.

We also spent part of the day getting up to speed with the local NGOs that have been coordinating the relief effort so far — Plateau Perspectives has been based in the county for over 10 years, and its staff, volunteers and friends have all done a tremendous job in these first crucial days acting as first points of contact for those wanting to assist. Their local knowledge and connections are invaluable assets.

Working closely with the local government to ensure access to the quake zone is available, a team of medical experts from Global Doctor as well as locally-based doctors left late this afternoon in three 4x4s stocked with emergency medical supplies. The drive will take 12 to 14 hours non-stop, meaning they will arrive shortly after first light on Saturday morning. SQR will be keeping in close contact with Plateau Perspectives and the other groups involved as we help coordinate the relief effort.

As well as the urgent need to get medical aid to the afflicted, there is a wider pressing need to distribute food, water, blankets and other emergency supplies.

Specific Funding Request for Longbao town, Yushu

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Sichuan Quake Relief has begun to conduct research to identify pockets in the Yushu disaster area that have not yet been reached with aid and medical support. As of this afternoon (April 16) locals report that Longbao town, 75kms from Jiegu Town, is in need of support.

The road from Jiegu to Longbao is now accessible. The town has a population of 8,700 (1,800 families). Initial reports indicate that the town was severely affected by the quake and there is a high death toll and many injuries. The survivors are in need of:

  • basic medical supplies (mostly bandages, antibiotics, painkillers etc.)
  • tents
  • blankets
  • a power generator
  • water
  • instant food.

All these supplies can be purchased in Xining and trucked to Longbao in a matter of hours with the support of local officials.

Donations can be made via our donations page marked “Yushu”.

Sichuan Quake Relief to assist with Yushu earthquake relief and recovery efforts

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

On April 14th 2010 several earthquakes struck the Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Qinghai province, the largest of which was magnitude 6.9.

Initial eyewitness reports from the prefecture government seat Jiegu (Jyekundo) speak of extensive damage to houses and many wounded and dead. Official figures at time of writing are 600 dead and 8,000 wounded. The Ministry of Civil Affairs said about 15,000 houses had collapsed and 100,000 people need to be relocated. The area sits at around 4,000 metres (13,000 feet) and is very poor.

SQR is sending a team from Chengdu to work with the Yushu prefectural government and locally based NGO Plateau Perspectives to carry out wider needs assessments and help coordinate NGO relief activity.

The Yushu Prefecture government has requested aid in the form of medical personnel, medical supplies, and temporary shelters (ie tents and blankets). Additional supplies and medical teams will be sent once an operations base has been established in Yushu. There is already a solid network of medical personnel in China prepared to depart for Yushu, and gifts of cash are the easiest and quickest way that you can help out. Gifts of supplies are more difficult and time consuming to receive, and most supplies needed can be bought in the provincial capital, Xining.

Updates will be posted on the SQR website and at dedicated website yushuearthquake.com (mirrored at yushuearthquakerelief.com).

Donations can be made via our donations page marked “Yushu”.

Work on new buildings begins in Guangji, as does flu season

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

After completing the reinforcements and laying the new playground and car park up at SQR’s Guangji Kindergarten and Community Centre project, the next phase was immediately begun. A brand new building will not only replace one that was damaged beyond repair, but expand and improve on it too. The building will contain new classrooms, a dormitory for that all-important nap time, a kitchen capable of feeding 140 hungry mouths each and every day, and an environmental toilet.

Work has begun on the new buildings at the Guangji kindergarten Work has begun on the new buildings at the Guangji kindergarten Work continues on the new buildings at the Guangji kindergarten

Meanwhile, flu season is here. Principal Kang and her staff keep an eye on their students to make sure no one is neither unduly suffering nor spreading the illness to their classmates. Temperatures are taken as the students arrive at school every morning — any sign of fever and the parents or grandparents are advised to take them back home or to the local clinic.

Until now the staff had been using traditional thermometers, which is not ideal when handling such a large number of people. On one of our regular visits to the school, SQR brought along a brand new non-contact thermometer, which can accurately read the temperature from a few centimetres away, in under a second. The new gadget not only brings a hygenic benefit, but the added speed means the staff can give the grandparents a quick temperature-check too.

Checking temperatures

Guangji Kindergarten rebuilding process continues

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Work continues apace up at SQR’s Guangji Kindergarten project, with the completion of a new, protected pathway from the gate to the first school-building. A small wall prevents the children from running onto the new bike- and car-park on the way up the path. As they enter the building, a new sign politely reminds the children and staff to speak Mandarin, as opposed to the local dialect that they speak at home, to ensure that by the time they are graduated to primary school, they have the same language levels as their urban peers.

New protected path to school New Guangji Kindergarten parking area New Guangji Kindergarten parking area

In front the recently-reinforced existing building, the newly-laid playground is already in use, with flowerbeds all along the back wall either side of the daily assembly point. A temporary wall restricts access to the site at the back of the grounds, where work has begun on the foundations of the new classrooms, dormitories and kitchen.

New Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten playground New Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten playground New Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten playground New Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten playground New Guangji Kindergarten foundations
New Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten playground

Guangji Kindergarten reinforcements completed

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

SQR is immensely pleased to report that a major stage of our Guangji Kindergarten & Community Centre project has been completed: the existing building has been reinforced with steel, certified as safe and the children were back having lessons in a permanent structure on the first day of the Spring semester yesterday.

Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten reinforcement completed
Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten reinforcement completed
New secure front gates and walls for Guangji Di Kang Le Kindergarten

Sunshine Family Education Centre

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

The Sunshine Family Education Centre, based in Luoshui (an earthquake-affected community visited many times by Chengdu Sports Aid), develops parenting skills and improves children’s quality of life in disadvantaged rural areas. Sunshine instills the importance of children’s education, health care, living conditions and healthy child-parent interaction in parents through seminars and workshops to create more harmonious family environments.

Sunshine runs family education seminars for parents twice a month. Seminars address all aspects of family life, but consistently focus on shifting over-emphasis on school grades and academic achievement, to better balance with their physical and emotional welfare. The seminars utilise practical, hands-on demonstrations to emphasise the benefits of their family lessons. At weekends, the centre also facilitates self-help groups and outdoor activities to further instill parenting lessons by putting classroom theory into practice with the children’s participation.

Since Sunshine’s founding in November 2008, the centre has developed a team with strong expertise in family education and development. The staff is composed of two members of the high-level family education guidance division, two members of the mental health division, three social workers and one teacher. This team currently collaborates with the Chengdu branch of Non-Profit Incubator (NPI), whose incubation services will continue until November 2010. The team has also worked with the Trafigura Foundation, which built the community centre in which Sunshine operates.

In addition to providing direct family services, Sunshine is developing a detailed five-year model for the replication of its community centre development and services. Sunshine is looking for a long-term partner (two-three years) to provide funding assistance as well as to collaborate on future expansion. While Luoshui is just one of the disadvantaged areas in need of family development, Sunshine has had enormous success to date and has been well-received by its participants. Sunshine hopes that the implementation of this model in neighboring areas will continue the improvement of children’s welfare in rural Sichuan.

Tianping Village Seniors’ Society

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Tianping Village Seniors’ Society (TVSS; Chinese name: 绵竹市广济镇天平村老年协会) in rural Guangji was founded in January 2010 to enhance the quality of life of its senior citizens and to strengthen their community engagement. Although in general, seniors in China receive financial support from their children, it is increasingly common for the children to have moved to urban areas for their greater economic potential. As a consequence, the parents can often suffer from feelings of loneliness and detachment; community-based groups such as TVSS can provide a warm sense of cohesion. The lasting effects of the earthquake on the community — including loss of loved ones — has heightened the need for such organisations.

TVSS has already hosted numerous recreational activities to serve its 260 members, including sightseeing trips to Chengdu, and free traditional storytelling and dance performances. A community centre, constructed by the Macau Red Cross in response to the earthquake, currently houses the TVSS offices and its local performances.

Programmes to date have been funded out of pocket by the society’s chair, Yang Zhenqing (himself a senior), or by individual participants. In the near future, Mr. Yang would like to purchase a projector, exercise equipment and performance supplies for his community members, but currently does not have the means to do so. Profits from the sale of agricultural produce (grown and managed by members of TVSS in a garden adjacent to the community centre) have only partially covered the expenses of ongoing recreational activities, and have not allowed for these additional purchases.

TVSS aspires to partner with a local organisation for funding assistance and business management for its upcoming economic projects, including the opening of a grocery store and affordable public bathhouse facilities. TVSS will reinvest profits into the organisation for future operations and activities. In the long-term, Mr. Yang envisions TVSS expanding into nearby communities and providing more public services, such as microloan, health and childcare services (including public information talks).

Nashville-Mianzhu Penpal Project

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Hello! I am your new penpal. I am 10 years old. There are six people in my family: my father, my mother, my older sister, my younger brother, our dog, and me. I go to Julia Green Elementary School. I love football, and pigs.

So began Julie from Nashville, Tennessee’s introduction to her newest friend, almost 8000 miles away in Mianzhu, Sichuan. She had hand-written carefully in a mix of Chinese characters and pinyin for those characters she had not yet learned in the two years she has been studying Mandarin. Her letter, along with dozens of those of her classmates, was scanned and emailed — combining the pleasure of reading hand-written letters with the speed and convenience of the Internet. She received her reply from China, written in English, only a few days later, as did her classmates in response to their own letters, and the Nashville-Mianzhu penpal project was officially underway.

In September 2009, Ms. Caitlin Harris, a teacher at Julia Green Elementary School in Nashville, contacted SQR. Abigail Washburn had recently visited their school, playing songs from the Afterquake project and talking about the work of SQR and other organisations helping the victims of the earthquake. Ms. Harris wrote to say that she and her students were “very moved by the documentaries, information and images” they saw. Ms. Harris is a fluent Mandarin-speaker, and teaches the language to Julia Green students, which they learn in addition to their core subjects. She wondered if SQR would be able to help them set up a penpal exchange with a school in the quake-affected area: her students would write in Mandarin, the Chinese students using English.

Ms. Harris explained her hopes for the project:

The project will promote international understanding and commitment to the Chinese language. My students have already learned about Sichuan, so it will be very meaningful to my students to communicate with students from there. They very much enjoy Chinese, and composing letters for a native Chinese reader will benefit their studies. I would like to foster their excitement. I would like the Chinese students to learn about American children for the same reasons.

Our two countries’ futures are intertwined, and promoting friendship, cultural appreciation and understanding is an important goal.

SQR’s Outreach Coordinator Li Yuanyuan contacted the Mianzhu Education Department and, after introducing the project, received their full support. The department helped us select the Mianzhu Nanxuan Primary School, whose teaching building was seriously damaged in the earthquake. Fortunately only one student was injured. All the other students were safely evacuated through the efforts of the school’s faculty. With the help of three companies, including Nanjing Shengkai Corporation, the school moved into its new permanent building in September 2009.

Liasing with SQR, the headmaster of the Nanxuan primary school, Zhang Xiangyun, and Ms. Harris worked out project details. 61 Nanxuan students were selected for the project by review of students’ personal applications and their teachers’ recommendations. In January 2010, the Chinese students received the first batch of letters from America. Despite their busy exam preparation schedule, the students wrote back straightaway. The replies were sent back in the beginning of February. The Julia Green students are already composing their next batch.

Xinlong Village Mutual Aid Centre

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Xinlong Village lies near Jiulong Town, around 100 kilometres from the epicentre of the earthquake. In March 2009, the Beijing Rural Women’s Cultural Development Centre founded the Xinlong Village Mutual Aid Centre (XMAC; Chinese name: 九龙镇新龙村妇女互助中心) to develop the independence and self-sufficiency of local women through career education and literacy. When SQR visited the village last month, Liu Daqing, the Beijing Centre’s representative in Xinlong, emphasised the objectives of nurturing the career skills of women and its positive impact on the security of their families.

To date XMAC’s community projects have focused mainly on agricultural skills development. In 2009, they funded the purchase of rabbits and pig-fodder for the raising of livestock. With Liu Daqing’s help, the three full-time staff of XMAC established a group-purchasing system and acquired pigs for farming as well. With agricultural training organised by Ms. Liu’s team, the XMAC participants successfully raised, further bred and sold their livestock.

Other 2009 XMAC projects included embroidery training. In a building next to the Mutual Aid Centre, fifteen women skillfully hand-embroider cloth for sale. Such projects have strengthened the independence and self-sufficiency of women in the community. The Xinlong female participants have proudly supported their families through the profits of their livestock and embroidered goods.

To help cover its administration costs, the Beijing Centre helped XMAC to set up a small supermarket in Xinlong, which also houses a library designed to develop literacy levels amongst the women of the village. The books are divided roughly into two categories: reference material on agricultural practices, and novels. XMAC plans to expand its library collection in 2010 to include more agricultural resources and to further encourage literacy among Xinlong women. Liu Daqing commented, “Many women here cannot read Chinese characters or even write their name.” Prior to the end of the Beijing Centre’s incubation services in March 2010, she will help train a librarian to manage the collection. XMAC has also begun organising performing arts shows to give the women an outlet for their creativity, which could also motivate the goals of the literacy campaign through staging plays.

XMAC is currently looking to partner with a local organisation that can provide business and management training (to improve the supermarket’s operations) as well as direct funding for its library expansion and economic projects. The profits from the XMAC supermarket, run by a local couple out of the XMAC office, cover annual administration expenses, but are not enough to sustain the organisation’s upcoming projects. XMAC director Liu Minghui is confident that, based on last year’s successes and the enthusiasm of its members, the Xinlong Village Mutual Aid Centre will continue to grow and better serve the women of the village throughout 2010 and beyond.

Heart Starting Point (Xin Qicheng), grassroots disabled rights organisation

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

Huang Li was at home alone in Dujiangyan when the earthquake struck. Pinned under the rubble of her collapsed building, she remained trapped and undiscovered for 96 hours. She says the thought of her 9-year-old son losing his mother kept her alive for so long. Eventually, after four days of searching by local police, firefighters from Yunnan Province and volunteers, Ms. Huang was rescued and rushed to hospital. The extent of her injuries left doctors no choice but to amputate both of her legs and her left arm.

Through months of rehabilitation and treatment, Ms. Huang has retained her warmth and strength of spirit, and resolved to improve the lives of people with disabilities in China. With the support of Dujiangyan Disabled Persons’ Federation and the Department of Civil Affairs, she founded a disabled rights organisation called Heart Starting Point (HSP; their name in Chinese is Xin Qicheng: “xin” means “heart” and “qicheng” is “to begin a journey”). Her husband, Deng Ze Hong, gave up his popular out-of-town restaurant to be Ms. Huang’s full-time carer and co-director of HSP. He attends to every aspect of his wife’s life without complaint, despite suffering back strain from lifting her in and out of bed. “I’ve chosen the right guy,” says Ms. Huang, smiling. They are still living in temporary accommodation but expect to be back in their rebuilt home before the second anniversary of the disaster.

HSP was established to build on “the enormous support from all areas of society that helped us out of the shadow of fear and sorrow,” says Ms. Huang. “We hope we can show people, through our own experiences, that even though we are disabled, we still embrace life, and we can create wealth and value for this society.” It aims to support not only earthquake victims, but also people who were disabled before or since the disaster.

One of the primary missions of the organisation is to develop the means for disabled people to earn a living. So far they have opened a small workshop that trains people in the art of traditional Qiang Minority embroidery and other handicraft skills, setting up outlets as far away as Guangzhou, Hong Kong and Shanghai to sell the work. There are now more than ten disabled people creating beautiful designs to support themselves.

One of the hard-working cross-stitchers is 18-year-old Meng Hongmei from nearby Hanwang Town. She lost both legs because of injuries sustained in the earthquake, causing not only physical but severe psychological distress. Slowly, through informal counselling from Huang Li and others similarly affected, she has grown in confidence, come to terms with her injuries, and has learnt to walk again with the use of artificial legs. She has made new friends through HSP and enjoys her new creative outlet immensely.

Other important aspects of HSP’s work are to encourage the adoption of disabled access and facilities in local businesses and public areas; to help other groups and organisations to provide medical and psychological assistance to disabled people in the area; and help allocate funding (either raised themselves or donated by other organisations) to those that need it most.

HSP has established a growing network of people with disabilities in Dujiangyan — almost 200 members and counting — providing a hub of information about services help available, mostly disseminated through home-visits as part of their community outreach.

With their strong desire to improve society, not only in terms of the needs of disabled people, but also to show that they are just as valuable members of their community as able-bodied people, HSP has an important and long-term mission ahead of it, and SQR hopes they continue to grow and make a strong contribution to social development.

The Heart Starting Point (心启程) team with two of the SQR staff

See also: SQR’s Re-granting project.

The Spirit of China NGO and the Santai School for Orphans

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

The Spirit of China, operating under the officially-registered auspices of Soul of Qiang Cultural Communication Centre, is a grassroots NGO based in the Mianyang area, formed just three days after the earthquake. They have four full-time staff and a base of volunteers to help victims of the earthquake and with general social development. They generally focus on improving the lives of elderly or disabled people, orphaned children, and disadvantaged students. SQR recently visited their office in Mianyang to learn of their work and the issues still being faced in the local area.

Since May 2008 they have sponsored the education of over 200 poor students, and for the last two summers have run camps similar to SQR’s SAME Camps. Among their recently-announced small-scale projects is a request to help rebuild, supply, and bring relief to an orphan school of 31 children in Santai County.

Santai Orphan School orphans

Lying on the edge of earthquake-zone, the orphanage was in the process of building a brand new building, designed to accommodate more orphans in the future, when the earthquake struck. The building they were living and schooling in at the time was slightly damaged and rather than spend their limited funds on reinforcing it, they decided to move to the new building early, despite it being unfinished. The children both live and are educated there. The early move has put a significant strain on their financial resources, and they are already 70,000 RMB in debt to a local contractor.

The orphanage receives no financial support from the government, but is subject to official inspections to monitor the safety of the building. Spirit of China provides a small amount of funding for the orphans’ food and living expenses — amounting to just over 3000 RMB a month, allowing the orphans to be provided with meat in their meals two to three times a week, and occasionally drink milk with their breakfast. (Before the support of this organisation, the orphanage could only afford to provide meat twice a month.) As well as paying for the work already completed, among the most pressing requirements of the orphanage are:

Santai Orphan School planned playground area

  • The school playground and walls need rebuilding, at a total cost of 40,000 RMB. Spirit of China has already raised more than 17,000 RMB (10,000 RMB of which has been given directly to the school by a donor) and is seeking further generous donors to reach the target amount. At present there are very limited recreational facilities for the children — they have a very crude table-tennis table, and otherwise play on the mountainside, where it is difficult to be supervised and easy to be injured. A planned activity room on the upper floor of the building also remains unfinished due to lack of funding.
  • They also need sets of winter clothes (mostly coats, trousers, shoes, warm underwear, socks, scarves and gloves), and are asking for 200 books, comics, or other reading material suitable for children.

Santai Orphan School recreational facilities

Additionally, for the coming Chinese New Year — traditionally a time when families come together — the orphanage was asking for donations to buy New Year gifts for their 31 children. It had been decided that the valued of the gifts should not exceed 50 RMB, so they were looking to raise around 1500 RMB.

After we visited the orphan school and talked with the staff and children there, a donation of 1600 RMB was made in the name of Sichuan Development Foundation Limited, the registered charity under whose auspices SQR operates, to provide the orphans with New Year gifts.

Organisations such as Spirit of China, which can provide concrete ideas for projects as well as details of administration costs and evidence of making a contribution to society, would be potential candidates for SQR’s planned “Re-granting” project, but they can also be supported directly by individuals, companies or other organisations.

If you are interested in making a donation directly to support the above orphan school project, or would like to learn more about the Spirit of China organisation, please contact us.

Reconstruction progress in Yanyan Village, Qingchuan County

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Yanyan Village (岩堰村) housing reconstruction progress - 1

While SQR was delivering the school supplies to the children of Yanyan Village (岩堰村), we were able to get an overview of how to reconstruction of housing is going, eighteen months after the quake.

Yanyan is just one of over 270 villages in the county of Qingchuan. The county has a population of 250,000, around 220,000 of whom are in rural areas, and almost half lost their homes in the quake. The steep mountainsides on which three-quarters of the villages are located has made reconstruction particularly slow in this region.

Before the quake struck, the few hundred households that comprised the village were well spaced-out in the surroundings, with each family having an area of land around their house in which to keep animals or store food and possessions. Homes were often close to the land on which the villagers farmed.

Yanyan Village (岩堰村) housing reconstruction progress - 2

Post-quake, housing in Yanyan has been centralised and rebuilt in two terraced rows either side of the very muddy through-road. Timber has been used for the two-storey frames, with un-reinforced bricks and mortar filling the wallspace. Neither level has insulation, due to the added expense this would bring to each family. The terraced construction has drastically reduced the personal outdoor storage space for each house, and means some villagers must travel greater distances to their farmland. However, it can be argued that there are greater security and social-community benefits to this type of layout.

As is generally the case in rural communities such as this, families are rebuilding their own houses, but the construction of the framework was completed by a professional contractor from Mianyang, paid for collectively by the villagers.

Government grants for home-rebuilding are dependent on the number of people in the house; in this village, grants range from 16,000—22,000 RMB. The grants are given out in installments according to the progress of construction, with the final 5,000 RMB only being delivered upon completion. The actual cost of rebuilding one family house here is in the region of 40,000 RMB, leaving the villagers no choice but to seek bank loans of amounts in excess of 20,000 RMB. Although from the exterior, the lower levels of some of the houses appear to be near completion, a look inside reveals cold, unplastered concrete walls and floors, starkly lit by bare bulbs hanging from ad hoc wiring.

Yanyan Village (岩堰村) housing reconstruction progress - 3 Yanyan Village (岩堰村) housing reconstruction progress - 4

Winter is almost upon them, temperatures are dropping considerably, but the houses are not yet completed and the through-road is still nothing but a muddy track. The temporary village school we visited has now closed due to having neither any form of heating nor any qualified teachers. The pre-school, Grade One and Grade Two children we provided with textbooks and other supplies have no choice but to study at home, their parents unable to afford to send them to the central school in Qima Town on top of their home-rebuilding costs.

Cargill’s Chengdu-based staff raise 122,500RMB for SQR and CSA

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

The following is a translation of SQR Outreach Coordinator Li Yuanyuan’s original Chinese:

Cargill, an international producer and marketer of food, agricultural, financial and industrial products, has built 34 enterprises of either exclusively invested or joint venture in 20 provinces and cities in China. On December 20th, the third Cargill Seed Oil Festival grandly opened in Chengdu. Cargill took the opportunity to organise a fund-raising dinner party in support of SQR.

In the afternoon on December 21st, four volunteers from the South West University of Nationalities and I, accompanied by over 100 Cargill employees and clients went to the Dazhonghua Community Centre in Luoshui. When we arrived mid-afternoon, the local children joined us in games and activities. Because there were so many people involved, I divided them into two groups. One group stayed with the kids and the other group, led by the director of the community centre, Mr. Yang Yunxiu, went to visit the community.

“There are 995 families still living in the Dazhonghua Community Centre,” Mr. Yang explained, “and they are provided with facilities within the community, including a supermarket, a clinic, a barber shop and restaurants. The city of Shenzhen helped us to build the temporary houses so we could move in 3 months after the earthquake, and we have been living there since then. It is planned that before May 12 next year, we could move in the new lianzufang (cheaply-rented apartments designed for people in quake-hit areas).” He showed us a kitchen in a temporary house. “This kitchen shared by 10 families.”

Mr. Yang continued as we walked out of the temporary house, “Luoshui was one of the hardest-hit areas. 95% buildings collapsed during the earthquake, and all the businesses halted at the time. Now all the young people have gone to other places to make money, leaving the seniors and the kids at home in the town. The kids barely have any activities, so whenever you come to play with them, they are very, very happy.”

While we were visiting the temporary houses, the other group played happily with the kids in the recreational area. They enjoyed skipping rope, basketball and bowling. After 40 minutes, the two groups swapped activities. At half past four I gathered all the kids together so that all the people who joined this trip could give well-prepared presents to them.

We finished all the activities at the community centre and were on the way back to Chengdu around 5:30. Though we were tired and still had to spend a few hours on the road, we were satisfied: we now know better about the people affected by the earthquake and their conditions; we are happy that life is slowly improving and eager to know what else we can do for them in the future.

The dinner party sponsored by Cargill began at 7 o’clock at Daronghe restaurant. Two employees from Cargill took charge of the auction. Various things, including cloth roses made by the students of Weichuan Shuimo Middle School, baseball bats, footballs, CSA T-shirts and Cargill Olympics medals were auctioned for a total of 122,500 RMB. Our special thanks go to Grace and Simon from Cargill, who had worked hard to make sure that the auction could go smoothly.

On behalf of all the members of SQA and CSA, I would like to thank Cargill employees and clients who participated in the activity and the auction for their consistent support. We will make good use of the money, and let it reach the places which need it most.

Abigail Washburn reunites with Afterquake schoolchildren

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Afterquake EP's Abigail Washburn reunited with the schoolchildren of Shuimo

Abigail Washburn made an emotional return to The Bookworm in Chengdu on Saturday evening for a special performance reuniting her with the children from Shuimo who performed on the fund-raising Afterquake EP.

Song for Mama

As well as treating the packed room to a selection of her newest songs with Kai Welch, they also invited Chen Honglin, Luo Shuang, and the other children on stage to sing Little Birdie, Song for Mama, and sing-along-favourite Sala (which, after such an impressive earlier performance, was requested as an encore by the enthusiastic crowd).

As a special bonus for the children (and a number of excited audience members), Oscar-winner Richard Taylor and Weta Workshop wizard Greg Broadmore made a guest appearance, enjoying the show and posing for photos with the children.

A post-performance rush for Afterquake CDs, all proceeds of which raise money for SQR, made a welcome end to a wonderful evening’s entertainment.

Sala Sala dance Sala dance Abigail Washburn, Kai Welch, the schoolchildren and parents of Shuimo, and the SQR team

Abigail and Kai entertain the children of Xiaoyudong on our CSA trip

The following day Abigail, Kai and their engineer/vocalist/instrumentalist James joined parents and staff from EtonHouse International School, students from the South-West University of Nationalities, and the SQR team, on a Chengdu Sports Aid trip to Xiaoyudong.

After an hour or two of football, frisbee, basketball and other warming activities, Abby and Kai wowed the children with four or five songs in English and Chinese, and got them going with a sing-a-long version of Little Birdie. EtonHouse kindly handed out gifts of toys, games and clothing to the gathered children.

Catch! Can Kai kick it? Abigail Washburn and Kai Welch entertain the children of Xiaoyudong Abigail Washburn and Kai Welch entertain the children of Xiaoyudong
Banjo lesson