Archive for the ‘SQR’ Category

Exceptional Exhibition launches to raise money for earthquake victims

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

Saturday December 5th saw the public opening of The Exceptional Exhibition, showcasing the amazing talents of five-time Oscar winner Richard Taylor and his Weta Workshop, and in particular the wonderful World of Dr Grordbort’s.

The exhibition displays genuine props, sculptures and artwork from the Lord of the Rings trilogy, King Kong, the Narnia series, a huge selection of Dr Grordbort’s work, and Taylor’s five golden statuettes themselves. It runs from December 5th 2009 to January 5th 2010. Tickets cost 25 RMB and all profits go towards the earthquake relief fund.

CIWC Christmas Bazaar this Saturday

Friday, November 27th, 2009

The annual Chengdu International Women’s Club Christmas Bazaar is taking place this Saturday, raising money for four good causes, including our very own Chengdu Sports Aid.

There will be a variety of fun-fair games to play, as well as some sports-based games run by CSA; a bake sale; auctions; local crafts, and a delicious selection of food to keep you going throughout the day.

SQR will have a stand there selling hot-off-the-press CSA-themed calendars produced by the fantastic folks at Chengdu Grooves magazine, and new season SQR and CSA t-shirts.

It’s sure to be a fabulous day of philanthropic fun, so if you’re in the area, come along and join the festivities.

Address:
QSI Quality School International
188 South 3rd Ring Road, Section 5, Chengdu (American Gardens)

成都美国學校
成都市高新区南三环路五段188号 (美洲花园)

Buses: 59, 340, 521. There are also free buses leaving every hour on the hour from Carrefour on Xinguang Rd.

SQR “Re-granting” Project

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

Local communities are still reeling from the effects of the earthquake, and in many areas the recovery effort is being helped by nascent grassroots organisations. These organisations, formed by small groups of people who often have little more than the belief they can make a difference, are vital in the continued development of a civil society.

The specialised local knowledge that these organisations have means they can quickly devise projects that reach those people that may otherwise slip through the net. But many of them find it difficult to secure committed funding to get their projects off the ground.

SQR aims to help incubate these grassroots organisations by issuing small-scale grants to fund projects of their own devising. SQR will assess and monitor these projects, encouraging and advising each organisation on how to develop into a self-sustaining endeavour.

Generous contributions from donors will be used to build up a body of funding specifically designated for re-granting to these dedicated members of the community.

This project description is available for download:

Posters show a brief history of SQR

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

To mark the shift into the mid-term phase of post-quake reconstruction, SQR has produced a series of six posters that describe its history and intended direction.

These posters may be freely distributed and/or printed (unchanged). Please let us know if you’re proudly displaying any of them somewhere.

SQR and The Library Project install libraries in 14 Baoxing schools

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

The long-standing partnership between SQR and The Library Project continued last month, as reported by SQR’s Development Coordinator, Li Jiehao.

In the week beginning October 19th, The Library Project’s China Regional Director Jenny Wang and Donation Team Leader Jocelyn Jia, together with two Swedish volunteers — Jennifer and Tarlan — and myself, visited rural village schools around Baoxing County, 130km west of Chengdu.

During this five-day trip, 14 village primary school libraries were established in the following villages:

Baoxing Villages visited by SQR and The Library Project in October 2009

Baoxing Villages visited by SQR and The Library Project in October 2009.
Download this map to Google Earth.

  • Wulong Fengshou Village School
  • Shengli Village No.1 School
  • Shengli Village No.4 School
  • Tuanjie Village School
  • Modaoxi Village School
  • Dayu Village School
  • Heping Village School
  • Leile Village School (in Qiaoqi Zangzu Town)
  • Kari Village School
  • Kari Fengshou Village School
  • Jiala Village Qinglong School
  • Zegen Village Jiajin School
  • Zegen Village School
  • Yaoji School

Like a lot of village schools in earthquake zone, these schools were all damaged to some degree, but fortunately none of the students and teachers of these schools was injured during the quake. Well over a year after the quake, the village children have moved back into newly-reinforced classrooms.

These village schools generally comprise one class for each grade from Grade One to Three, each class having around 40 students. Three to four teachers are responsible for the teaching, school management and maintenance. Due to the lack of the educational funding, these schools are usually suffering from extremely poor teaching and general facilities (see the similar conditions of a village school in Qingchuan County).

SQR helped The Library Project to identify the 14 schools listed above, and were there to help the schools to improve both the students’ extracurricular study, as well as teachers’ resources, by bringing them around 300 books and other reading material suitable for each age group with which to establish a lending library.

The members of The Library Project also trained the teachers in some basic librarian skills, and explained how the provided books could be best used in daily education. Jenny Wang said that these suggestions definitely help schools to maintain the usage of the books themselves and to make the most of every single donation.

As well as immediately seeing the benefits that The Library Project brings to these village schools, I was able to use the skills I learned from observing Jenny and the team when I visited Yanyan Village School a few weeks later.

Well done to Jenny, Jocelyn, Jennifer, Tarlan and The Library Project as a whole for keeping up the good work. We look forward to working with you again in the near future.

SQR delivers textbooks and goodie-bags to village school

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

The SQR team took a long, bumpy ride to the north-east of Sichuan at the beginning of this week to deliver more than sixty backpacks, crammed with textbooks and other goodies, for the schoolchildren of Yanyan Village, deep in Qingchuan County. The school is currently being run by volunteers, coping with little or no resources, in a building that is no more than bamboo boards on a dirt floor, with no electricity.

Muddy roads made travel in Qingchuan County very difficult

Although for much of the way there the winding mountain roads were — at best — uneven dirt and stones, and in places ankle-deep in mud, our skilful driver Mr Tang got us the four-hundred kilometres there in about seven hours. We crossed two rivers and there was only one occasion where we had to get out and push the van out of an uncooperative muddy hole.

On the way back we were rather less fortunate. Not only did we have to wait more than three hours while an on-coming truck that was stuck in the middle of the road freed itself (with a bit of teamwork from all the other drivers that were waiting to pass), but we then got stuck ourselves in virtually the same spot — and all other help had chugged away up the mountain. By the time we had pushed and skidded our way out of this and several other points along this particularly bad stretch of road, it had taken six hours to travel a distance that had earlier taken about an hour, and it took another six and a half hours to complete the rest of the journey back to Chengdu, our shoes and clothes caked in mud.

It’s the unpredictable nature of these roads that makes daily trips to a central school in the nearby town of Qima so infeasible. For this reason — together with the village school’s current lack of educational resources — many schoolchildren are not currently attending classes at all. The central school is too hard to get to (or too much to afford boarding or renting closer to town), and the village school does not have the means to provide a decent education. (For more information on why village schools in Qingchuan are so lacking, see our earlier posting.)

Yanyan Village's temporary school-building

In an attempt to both raise awareness and address this problem, SQR decided to use a generous donation from Chiao Hsin Chinese Language School in California, USA, to purchase a selection of the required textbooks for the sixty children we had been told were not currently attending the central school. Packed neatly alongside the textbooks, inside a brand new backpack, each child also received:

  • exercise books
  • a pencil case containing pencils, rulers, pencil sharpeners
  • a skipping rope
  • a tennis ball
  • a jianzi shuttlecock
  • an electrically-heated hand/body warmer
  • a woolly hat
  • a pair of gloves
Yanyan Village's temporary school-building and playarea No electricity Pay attention

We also donated a CD player and teaching materials (chalk; books with ideas for lessons) to the school, and received a promise from the head of the village that students from nearby villages who were not present on the day would be given their backpacks as soon as possible.

And as well as the brand new books, on behalf of Sichuan Normal Junior School we also donated two large boxes of used, good condition textbooks covering a wide range of subjects including art, mathematics, English and music.

As you can see from the selection of photos below, the trip was a great success and was well worth every bone-juddering, shoe-ruining moment of the journey.

Handing out the goodie-bags About to run off and see what's inside Wear them on the front or the back, the choice is yours! Happy pre-schoolers Happy pre-schoolers Two bags? No problem A table full of goodies Heading home, laden with gifts Time to walk home

A huge thank you to both Sichuan Normal Junior School and Chiao Hsin Chinese Language School for their donations, and to Jane from Chengdoo Magazine for liasing with Chiao Hsin. These contributions enabled us to not only bring essential supplies to a remote village school, but deliver a message to the people living there that organisations such as SQR have not forgotten about them.

Donate to SQR to help fund more of these important trips.

Autumn NGO Mixer

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

SQR hosted a long-overdue NGO mixer last Sunday, inviting representatives from locally-based Chinese and international NGOs and other like-minded organisations to The Bookworm for a couple of hours of informal chat about current work, issues we all face, and potential areas of cooperation.

We’d like to thank the people from the following organisations for coming along:

And also thanks to Rachael Vaspel from the American Consulate for dropping by to get to know a few of the local NGOs. It was great to see some old friends, make some new ones, and learn about all the good work you’ve been doing.

SAME Camp volunteer testimonial

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

SQR was touched and proud to receive the following testimonial from Nigel Pritchard, a British teacher based in Shanghai who volunteered for our SAME camps over the summer.

The human cost of the Sichuan earthquake, on May 12th 2008, is of course immeasurable. The official figure for lives lost is 68,712. There are still more than 18,000 people listed as missing. Tragically, we have not only to consider so many mothers, fathers and children so painfully lost, but also the catastrophic emotional affect on families, loved ones and communities that survived. Then for a moment consider what else is lost, including homes, schools, jobs and the infrastructure needed for a society to thrive. The psychological and practical impacts are daunting. Rebuilding lives and infrastructure is the enormous task facing the communities, organisations, charities and NGOs that are involved in coordinating immediate relief work and long term projects. Sichuan Quake Relief (SQR) is one such organisation. Founded by a group of Chinese and foreign residents of Chengdu on 13th May 2008, the day after the earthquake, SQR is working tirelessly on many fronts. Its objectives include reconstruction, coordinating projects and working with other organisations to provide long term support to those affected by the earthquake.

Just two hours north of Chengdu is the small town of Xinshi. It was here that I had the humbling and rewarding experience of volunteering for SQR at a kindergarten for one week during July. Most students were aged between 2 and 6 years old, though on some days we had a smattering of older students turn up too. The volunteer group was evenly divided by Chinese and foreign volunteers, from far reaching parts of both China and the globe. During our time there we were welcomed with limitless warmth and hospitality by Principal Zeng and her staff. We camped down in the classrooms in the evenings and became accustomed to early morning cold water washes at the sink. Students began arriving from about 7.am. In a town that, to our knowledge, had seen no foreign visitors previously to suddenly have six in your playground proved to be quite a surprise. The sounds and sights of a playground are universal as is children’s curiosity, from a shy and reticent look from a distance to more direct and confident inquisitiveness. Though language differences create communication hurdles to overcome it never proves to be a barrier that inhibits children from inquiry. This fact became more evident throughout our five days at the school. We divided into teaching teams with each foreigner and Chinese volunteer working together with support from the usual teacher from the kindergarten. It should be noted that communication was also a challenge for some Chinese volunteers as younger students did not speak Mandarin but used a Sichuan dialect. However, this provided for some interesting and amusing moments involving communication in the classroom!

The students’ day was divided between Sport, Art, Music and English lessons, all taught in English. We were aware that students’ current level of English was at complete zero, so we knew what a challenge this would be. For the five days we decided to focus on body parts, animals, colours and shapes, as well as introduce some simple everyday expressions and vocabulary. Each subject area was integrated into lessons and we reviewed these themes on a daily basis. To see such development and confidence with English flourish in many students over five days was astounding. The even greater achievement however proved to be the relationship that developed between the volunteers and students. Though we were teaching English, the overall purpose of such visits is greater. We may hope that we make connections that break down barriers between cultures and that we simply bring something that is rewarding to children’s lives at this time. This sense of reward most definitely worked two ways. I should also state just how much fun and laughter we all shared together and I can say with certainty that each volunteer left feeling emotionally touched and enriched by their experiences. As volunteers in the earthquake area it was natural for us to think back to last year. Images of the earthquake remained firmly fixed in our minds as we considered the lasting impact upon the people of Xinshi. However, these thoughts were so often overwhelmed by being welcomed with such warmth and hospitality. A prevailing sense of community was something that was so clearly evident throughout the town. That this sense of community was extended to us so openly in our short time there undoubtedly left a deep impression upon all of us.

Volunteering is of course just one important part of the process of rebuilding communities and lives. Currently SQR is also involved with numerous other projects to assist affected areas. These include fund raising events, building of schools and collecting essential resources. As SQRs scope and breadth of projects widen it is seeking more people to become actively involved at the organisational level. Though not essential, experience with education, health care, fund raising, media communications or construction would be deemed of great benefit to SQR’s development and progress with future projects. The work goes on. Part of the challenge now facing organisations is to keep the earthquake within people’s consciousness in order to get the people, money, resources, and expertise needed to sustain development and progress in affected areas.

It is hoped that through the continued and unrelenting effort of individuals, communities, private enterprise, and local and national government that SQR and other organisations can continue to rebuild towns and subsequently rebuild people’s lives too.

We thank Nigel and all the other volunteers who had their hand in making the SAME Camps as successful as they were.

SQR website now available in Chinese

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

At long, long (long) last, we are proud to announce that the Chinese version of our website has been launched.

There are already a few blog posts up about the most recent CSA trip to Xiao Yu Dong, and we will keep adding new and back-dated material over the coming months — as well as keeping our existing English-language content up to date of course.

ABE Charity Cup 2009: change of date and venue

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

The SQR-supporting ABE Charity Cup 2009 has undergone a change of date and venue! It is now being held a day later than advertised, on Sunday October the 25th, at the Chengdu Blades Football Club training ground. It’s on Jinhe Road in Shuangliu — near the Sichuan International Tennis Club. (Address in Chinese: 成都谢菲联足球公园, 双流县金河路60号, 紧邻四川省国际网球中心.)

See the SQR events page for more details.

First Chengdu Charity Tennis Tournament tomorrow

Friday, October 16th, 2009
Tournament poster

Tournament poster

A quick reminder that tomorrow sees Chengdu’s inaugural Charity Tennis Tournament taking place at the Hi-Tech Tennis Centre, which this year is supporting one of SQR’s key projects, the Guangji Kindergarten & Community Centre.

The action kicks off early at 8 o’clock in the morning and it’s sure to be a fun and exciting day as the competitors get whittled down to the final matches, with the presentation ceremony scheduled to take place between 5:50 and 6:30pm, so check out our Events page for details of how to get there and cheer the players on.

Chengdu Sports Aid trip to Wudu Community Centre (Mianzhu)

Monday, October 12th, 2009

CSA: Wudu Community Centre (Mianzhu), October 11, 2009 -- 01

By all accounts, CSA had one of their most fun days out of all time last Sunday when they went up to a community centre in Mianzhu. Here are a few comments from CSA Coordinator Mark Soper.

I got to the Bookworm at 7.50am to find the group of volunteers from Humana already there laughing and chatting with the Chinese volunteers from the South-West University of Nationalities — a great start to a chilly morning.

On the bus to Mianzhu we heard some remarkable volunteer stories; it’s a humbling experience meeting some of the volunteers we get on CSA trips.

As ever there was no lack of energetic children looking to find new ways to expend their reserves of energy, but we were pleased to find there were almost as many grandparents as kids on this occasion. Their smiles were huge as the Humana group got things going with a couple of African melodies.

Standard warm-ups are always a laugh when we get into 3 lines of 15—20 kids and volunteers, practicing passing, throwing different-shaped balls around. Then it’s on to game time. Sunday’s variety included jumprope, rugby, 10 pin bowling, chair balancing, blind walking, frisbee-throwing (and general mayhem with the toddlers).

We were back by 4:30 in the afternoon, fitting in a 24-person lunch stop of well-earned beef noodles on the way. Most slept on the bus while the rest of us took sneaky photos of the sleeping faces — hilarious!

One day volunteering adds an extra day to my lifetime.

CSA: Wudu Community Centre (Mianzhu), October 11, 2009 -- 12 CSA: Wudu Community Centre (Mianzhu), October 11, 2009 -- 10 CSA: Wudu Community Centre (Mianzhu), October 11, 2009 -- 04 CSA: Wudu Community Centre (Mianzhu), October 11, 2009 -- 09 CSA: Wudu Community Centre (Mianzhu), October 11, 2009 -- 01

For more photos from this day and other CSA events, head over to the Chengdu Sports Aid trips photo page.

Events for October

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

We’ve got a several SQR-related events happening in October for the more physically-active among you.

  • Chengdu Sports Aid is resuming its weekly Sunday trips after the holiday break, heading out to Mianzhu on the 11th of October and two different venues in Luoshui on the 18th and 25th. Visit the Chengdu Sports Aid page for registration information if you’d like to join the fun.
  • Two big charity events are taking place this month in aid of SQR: October 17th sees the first Chengdu Charity Tennis Tournament taking place at the Hi-Tech Tennis Centre, and a week later on the 25th is the third annual ABE Charity Cup at the home of the Chengdu Blades Football Club.

For more details on all of these great days out, head over to our Events page.

New Chengdu Sports Aid co-ordinator: Mark Soper

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Chengdu Sports Aid is now in the enthusiastic, capable, and beautifully manicured hands of Mark Soper.

Mark has taken part in many Chengdu Sports Aid trips in the past and it’s great that someone with his ability, enthusiasm and commitment has taken this on, carrying on the fine precedent set by CSA founder, Jonny Dallas.

If you are interested in volunteering for Chengdu Sports Aid, email csa@sichuan-quake-relief.org

SQR Jingcheng 500 KM Charity Cycle Challenge: 8th to 9th August 2009 – completed!

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Read about the background to Guy Dru Drury’s epic trip here.

Guy Dru Drury, the CBI's Chief Representative in Beijing, is ready to take on the gruelling 500km 2009 JCCR

Guy Dru Drury, the CBI's Chief Representative in Beijing, has completed the gruelling 2009 JCCR challenge and deserves plenty of ice in delicate places and plenty of donations. Guy - we salute you.

Messages from Guy Dru Drury on the day of his mammoth pulsating pedal-pushing tour to raise funds for SQR:

  • 14:34 “125km completed! Hot & tiring but still doing OK. Now in the mountains!”
  • 15:12: “160km update: Have been cycling for 5:40 hrs according to my bike speedo. Chengde another 40-50km away…
  • Still very hot and just had a series of killer hills but the downhill through a gully was awesome! Feeling fairly shattered but now not far to go!”
  • 18:32: “I finished the challenge! 205km in 6hrs 58 mins. Now heading back to Beijing.  Thanks for your support! Guy”

SAME Camps – huge success in difficult circumstances.

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

360 volunteers from China and abroad taught more than 4000 kids in 13 camps organised by SQR in various locations around the affected areas.

The SAME (Sports, Arts, Music, English) camps have been hugely oversubscribed, both in terms of those attending and in terms of volunteers, and have been a lot of fun, a lot of hard work and well worth the effort put in by all involved.

SQR sends huge thanks to all our volunteers who worked under difficult and sometimes dangerous conditions.

This summer in the quake zone, there have been large aftershocks, horrendous rock and mud slides, and many bridges and roads in the area were blocked.  The extraordinary torrential rains caused 11,000 homes to collapse in the past week alone, and scores of local residents died.  It is a timely reminder that, whilst incredible progress has been made in the reconstruction effort, there is still an enormous amount of work to be done in building up an effective infrastructure in this beautiful area, in terms of roads, bridges, schools, clinics, hospitals and other facilities.

All volunteers were camping, with no hot water available.  To compensate, however, there was often a plentiful supply of warm buzzing mosquitoes (thanks to them for committing to the project), and heavy rains on tap pretty much permanently in recent weeks.  The volunteers and kids showed great good humour and determination to enjoy themselves.

For the volunteers, life really was not easy at times, but they managed to keep the kids occupied and entertained for a week at a time, which is an achievement in any conditions at all.  It is wonderful to see such a tremendous effort from so many people, from students on holidays, from people giving up time from work and their families to help out, from people travelling large distances from all over the country and all over the world to make a contribution.  The SAME (Sports, Arts, Music, English) camps have made a difference.

Thanks to the hundreds of people who contacted SQR to volunteer, and thanks to those we said ‘no’ to as well – there were simply too many volunteers.  To stay in the loop for future volunteering opportunities, email mark@sichuan-quake-relief.org to be included on the SQR newsletter mailing list.

If you took part in the camps and have stories and photos, please email mark@sichuan-quake-relief and we’ll get them up on our Flickr account (www.flickr.com/sichuanquakerelief) and on the SQR website (www.sichuan-quake-relief.org)

Thanks again

SQR

Chengdu Sports Aid trip to XiaoYuDong

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

Chengdu Sports Aid volunteers are currently at XiaoYuDong running a sports day, which will be the last event of the summer season.

See the CSA page for more details on current activities.

SQR Jingcheng 500 KM Charity Cycle Challenge: 8th to 9th August 2009

Friday, July 10th, 2009

The Confederation of British Industry’s Chief Representative in Beijing is raising money for a key SQR project, the Guangji Kindergarten & Community Centre.

Many Beijing residents will have travelled along some part of the Jingcheng (Beijing to Chengde) highway enroute perhaps to the Great Wall at either Mutianyu or Jinshanling.

Guy Dru Drury, the CBI's Chief Representative in Beijing, prepares to take on the gruelling 500km 2009 JCCR

Guy Dru Drury, the CBI's Chief Representative in Beijing, prepares to take on the gruelling 500km 2009 JCCR

However, have you ever considered continuing along its entirety, past Beijing’s principal reservoir at Miyun and on into the mountains that lead, after 200 KM, to the imperial resort of Chengde? Well, if you do then you’ll be visiting the summer hideaway of successive Chinese Emperors who created their very own “summer palace” nestled in the mountains that overlook the Mongolian steppes. It is home to China’s largest palace garden and, incidentally, the world’s shortest river, the Rehe. At a mere 9 miles in length it feeds the bucolic Rehe springs and is largely contained within the vast expanse of the royal palace grounds.  In August, and tentatively scheduled to coincide with the one year anniversary of the Olympic opening ceremony, the CBI’s Chief Representative, Guy Dru Drury, will be embarking on his own journey from Beijing to Chengde following the route of the Jingcheng highway.  Travelling by a mixture of road and mountain bike he aims to cover the mountainous 500km roundtrip route in 20 hours over the weekend of the 8 August.

It is all in the name of a good cause, namely raising money for the reconstruction of the Guangji Kindergarten destroyed in last year’s devastating earthquake.

Downloadable information

If you would like to support Guy’s efforts then please give generously to SQR directly.  By the way, if you do want to visit Chengde you can of course travel there in air‐conditioned comfort either by car or rail if a 20 hour cycle ride is not your preferred means of transport!

Guy Dru Drury (guydd@cbi.org.uk and gdrudrury@gmail.com)

Beijing 01.07.09

First SQR SAME Camp a success: a report from the project manager

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

June 28 – July 3 SQR SAME Summer Camp Session 1 at GuangJi Township near Mianzhu

Last week 7 enthusiastic SQR volunteers trekked up to GuangJi to set up the first SAME Summer Camp at GuangJi Township near Mianzhu (2hrs from Chengdu). The GuangJi Kindergarten and Preschool was chosen as our first location because SQR already had an existing relationship with the school principal, Kang Laoshi (‘laoshi’ = ‘teacher’). SQR is actively coordinating the demolition and rebuilding of one of the buildings damaged in last year’s quake.

The 7 volunteers consisted of international students (an American and Brazilian) as well as local Sichuan university students and recent grads. We met on Sunday afternoon at the Bookworm for a short meeting to discuss the upcoming week’s plans then set off by van to GuangJi, arriving by early evening to meet with Kang Laoshi and discuss the week’s schedule and lesson plans.

Our accommodation were more than adequate in that Kang laoshi allowed us to sleep in the temporary classrooms next door to the permanent buildings. It was quite comfortable since we were provided beds and linen and had access to lighting and electricity. The worst inconvenience was the occassional mosquito bite.

The first morning and day began well with the local teachers starting the kids off with morning exercises and dances to loosen up kids for an active day of learning. It was wonderful to see, and I took loads of pictures.

Throughout the day the SQR volunteers conducted their teaching modules in Sports, Art, Music and English; working alongside the local teachers and adjusting our lesson plans to tailor to the school children’s various levels. In that sense, the volunteers are challenged to adapt quickly and be flexible to the needs of the children.

During the second night at camp a 5.6 quake struck nearby Mianzhu shaking us out of bed, but luckily no major damage was inflicted. Indeed it was a stark reminder of why we were there in the first place. Less than 12 hours later an aftershock of 5.0 occurred during napping time for the kids. The local teachers and SQR volunteers quickly scrambled to evacuate the children from the permanent building and arrange for classes to be conducted in the temporary classrooms the rest of the week. Seeing some of the children distraught and crying from the quake gave us another reminder of why we were there.

The remaining week went on smoothly. The classes and activities were fun and interesting for the kids and the experience gained by the volunteers was challenging yet every bit rewarding and life enriching.

I am lucky to have been apart of such a wonderful experience and will remember and cherish it forever. During our last dinner with Kang laoshi, I thanked her for everything she had done for us and told her that “Sichuan will forever be in our hearts.”

Leeman Now
SQR SAME Summer Camp Project Mgr
The Chinese University of HK, MBA 2011

The first SAME camp of 2009 was a success

The first SAME camp of 2009 was a success, or "A range of high marks for the ballroom dancers."

Volunteers needed!

Thursday, June 25th, 2009
SQR SAME camps 2009

SQR SAME camps 2009

DOWNLOAD PDF INFO in English and Chinese.

We need volunteers! With schools out for the summer the kids living in temporary villages in the earthquake area have two months free and not a lot to do, so Sichuan Quake Relief is currently setting up several fun-based activity camps for them.

The SQR SAME Camps will focus on the four areas of Sports, Art, Music and English-language learning.

Camps will be run in 5-day modules from Monday to Friday, commencing Monday June 29, and running till the end of August.

SQR SAME Camps 2009 - 中文

SQR SAME Camps 2009 - 中文

We are asking volunteers to commit to at least one full week of teaching over the summer, leaving Chengdu on the Sunday, staying in the village teaching from Monday to Friday, and returning to Chengdu on the Friday evening. We are looking to build mixed teams to run each camp, so people of all ages, Chinese and non-Chinese, most welcome. And while teaching experience and some Chinese language skills would be great, they are not necessary. We just need flexible, enthusiastic people who have a sense of humour and are able to live and work under difficult conditions.

Transport costs to and from the camp, (very basic) accommodation, and food will be provided by SQR. We are currently building teams for the first seven SAME Camps:

  1. June 28 – July 3
  2. July 5 – July 10
  3. July 12 – July 17
  4. July 19 – July 24
  5. July 26 – July 31
  6. August 2 – August 7
  7. August 9 – August 14

If you would like to volunteer for one or more of these camps, or if you would like additional information, email volunteer@sichuan-quake-relief.org or call (86) 136 7121 2235.