Posts Tagged ‘Becky Hoops’

Clowns Without Borders – tour report, part 2

Friday, April 10th, 2009

The following is a second journal entry from Becky Priebe, who, as Becky Hoops took part in the recent ‘Clown Trauma Tour.’

200903 Clowns Sans Frontieres Sichuan Tour 2009

See also Part 1 for a report on Clowns Sans Frontieres’ tour of Sichuan.

China Earthquake Tour, Part 2

The second half of our tour took place in a city called Mianzhu.  This city, 2 hours north of Chengdu, was gravely affected by the earthquake.  At first glance we immediately  saw small signs of damage: cracked buildilngs, random piles of bricks, almost empty river beds (dams that controlled the rivers had burst during the earthquake), but the most obvious sign was the thousands of rows of temporary housing and temporary schools, on the outskirts of the city.
This “temporary” city, made of white and blue metal, consisted of corrugated retangle row housing, forming a completely new city… like a refuge camp within the country’s own borders.  Conditions are basic: electricity, no heating, no running water and no windows.  There are more than a million people currently living in these conditions.  They are no longer receiving governement aid and most are separated from their family networks.  In China, family, community and work networks are very important, many earthquake victims are left without this support system.

Most of the shows we did in Mianzhu were in one of the temporary schools.  There were about 10 000 children attending this school, so we did multiple shows at the same school for a few days.  The children  were between the ages of 5 and 16, and shows were for between 400 and 1200 kids at a time.  By the end of the week we were had apparently earned a somewhat disconcerning rockstar status…. for those who are curious: yes, 1000 Chinese teenagers who all want an autograph at the same time, is a bit intimidating.

In Mianzhu we also did shows for a retirement home and in the temporary housing project for those who happened to be there.  The elderly reacted just as strongly as the children, with a bit less pushing for autographs at the end.  One man began yelling, or what I perceived at yelling, at me before we started a show.  I was intimated and thought that he didn’t want us there, he seemed agressive and upset.  Upon receiving traslation, we realized that he was expressing his apologies that we should see such an ugly part of the country and that he was happy we had come.  After he saw me two-person-hula-hooping with a stern, young police officer he was even more happy we had come.

The day that hit me the hardest was when we visited the city of rubble where all of the displaced people had lived, worked and attended school.  For the first time since we had arrived in China, it was quiet.  There were no people in streets selling fruit, cheap clothing and plastic toys, no herds of school children, there were no traffic jams or honking horns.  But within the disturbing silence, if you listened carefully, you could still hear the millions of people screaming as their homes and schools collapsed upon them.  Among the rubble we saw toys, stuffed animals, baby shoes; unsettling reminders of  children crying and whimpering under mountains of rubble, wondering if they would be rescued in time. Or relatives, crying out to loved ones for days and weeks, with the chances of their survival dwindling with each hour.  This day hit me hard.  It made me realise in a very tangible way what these “refugees”, we have been performing for, had been through.  It fed me with a heightened desire to make the children laugh, to bring joy and smiles to the people.  My ridiculous complaints about the food and cold weather began to seem  insignificant and frivolous compared with the grim realities these displaced people had lived through and are continuing to face.

One collapsed school we visited was reduced to rubble in seconds, killing 3000 students instantly.  Some parents lost their only child; with the “One Child Policy” in China, families are legally restricted from having more than one child; couples are sometimes sterilized after their first child is born.

The government is not really giving much money or aid to these temporary cities.  Maybe I don’t understand the issue in its entirety, but I am still somewhat enraged when I think back to the massive expenditures of the recent Olympics in Beijing.  There is also a theory that the numerous dams built in the area contributed to weakening the fault line. There are so many issues like these that seem to become increasingly complex upon deeper research and investigation.  It is really touchy for any Chinese people to say negative things about the government; even when we had translaters it was difficult to know how people really felt.

The last show we did was in a school for children that had lived in the hardest hit city of WenChuan.  These kids were, for some reason or another displaced over 6 hours from their families to live in a vacant factory.  The kids were mostly teenagers of minority background.  They loved the show and we even won over the slightly reluctant principal.  This show, and one other show we did during this tour, was in collaboration with an organization called “Sichuan Earthquake Relief”.  This non-governmental oganisation (NGO) has done and is still doing some really phenomenal work in the quake stricken communities accross the province.  For more information on this NGO please visit:

http://www.sichuan-quake-relief.org/

For those who are interested in statistics of the aftermath of the quake (as of June 2008, stats obtained from Sim’s Cozy Guesthouse):
69 197 deaths
374, 176 people were injured
12, 222 missing
7, 789,100 houses were totally collapsed
24, 590,000 houses were damaged
15, 147,400 survivors had been transferred (mostly to temporary housing units, I described earlier)
Up to 46 million people were estimated to have been affected.

See first part of Becky’s report here, and her website, for more.

20090306: Clowns Without Borders – tour report, part 1

Friday, April 10th, 2009

The following is a journal entry from Becky Priebe, who, as Becky Hoops took part in the recent ‘Clown Trauma Tour.’
See also this blog entry for a report on Clowns Sans Frontieres’ tour of Sichuan.

200903_CSF_SichuanTour_008 200903_CSF_SichuanTour_009 200903_CSF_SichuanTour_010 200903_CSF_SichuanTour_011 200903_CSF_SichuanTour_012

Clown Trauma Tour, Part 1
Chengdu, Sichuan, China,

I am going to start with my impressions of the city.  These are coming from a very honest, western point of view and I’m sure my impressions would alter and soften, if I were to spend more time here and have a better understanding of the language and culture.  But for right now… I think that this is a city that needs clowns and it needs color, vibrancy… it also needs fresh air, clear skies, clean water, more living space, indoor heaters, insulation…. but the latter problems, that most major Chinese cities are grappling with, have no short term solutions.  It took me the first couple of days here to accept the fact that buildings here, even schools, hospitals and circus schools, have no heating…. I am slowly getting over the constant chill, but still find myself daydreaming of warmth.  It is amazing what human beings can adapt to, and if the 12 million inhabitants of this city can function in this brain-numbing chill… surely so can I.  The excessively spicy food and my even more excessive green tea drinking are helping.  I do have to say that the Chinese are among the hardiest, resourceful, determined people I have ever seen.
Performances:  Our 4 person show including: David Fiset, Becky Priebe (Canada) , David Bernbaum (USA) & Pipat Suwapat (Thailand) is comprised of contact juggling, juggling, hula hoops, clowning and duo acro.  We are also blessed to have David Bernbaum here as he speaks Chinese and is our link to verbal communication with the children.
Each show we have done and will do are drastically different from one site to the next.  This keeps us on our toes and very sensitive and attentive to the needs and limits of each school, hospital or orphanage.  The first show we performed was about 1.5 hours outside of Chengdu in one of the hardest hit areas of the earthquake at the Xinxing Compulsory School in Pengzhou. The school was quite literally reduced to rubble and the kids now attend classes in temporary blue, corrugated metal boxes.  There were about 700 children waiting for our performance when we pulled up.  The were really excited to see foreigners in their remote village and just our presence caused a fury.  We performed outdoors with huge piles of mangled school desks and tables for a backdrop.  The children loved the show, proving once again that laughter can transverse cultural and language barriers.  During this hour of our performance we hope that the kids forgot for an instant the trauma that they have lived through, the hardship they will inevitably have to endure and that the smiles will stay with them, spreading to their families and villages.  For me… I forgot, for that hour, that I was freezing and upon greater reflection … I am beginning to realize the reasons we have come so far.
The next day of performances included a hospital and an orphanage.  Although it was not heated, the hospital was an impressively clean and modern building.  We perform for about 120 handicapped children.  The children really enjoyed the show and we were happy to perform indoors with a real sound system.  Following the hospital we pulled up to an orphanage where about 150 kids were waiting for us.  They were between the ages of about 2 to 17.  Most of the children’s parents were dead (in a country with a one child policy… most families do their absolute best to look after their only child… the children of the orphanage were therefore for the most part parentless…. they are also ironically among the rare children in China to live a “sibling experience”).  The kids were tough and weren’t afraid to yell and attempt to steal our material.  In the end they enjoyed the show and were very quick learners in the workshop afterwards.
Tomorrow we are off to Mianzhu, north of Chengdu, a more remote, mountain city.  I will send a new update when we return.