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Feature: Marathon runner turns races into lifeline for families of missing children

0 Comment(s)Print E-mail Xinhua, April 14, 2025
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YINCHUAN, April 14 (Xinhua) -- At a recent charity event in Taizhou, in southeast China's Zhejiang Province, Ma Shuai from Ningxia, northwest China, embraced an elderly father searching for his missing son.

The young man wasn't the child the father had spent years trying to find, but he shared in the pain-and in the mission.

For nearly a year, the marathon runner has turned races into platforms for hope, rallying athletes across the country to wear posters of missing children on their backs during competitions.

His grassroots campaign, Marathon for Missing Children, has already helped reunite families that had been separated for decades.

Ma's journey began with a haunting encounter years ago. A mother whose 15-year-old daughter, Du Sisi, vanished after school spent Mid-Autumn Festival-a traditional Chinese holiday centered on family reunions-at his home. Her grief left a deep impression.

"Du Sisi is my age, yet they've been apart for years. It shattered me," Ma recalled.

Inspired by families who never moved or gave up searching despite fading hope, Ma saw marathons-events that attract massive crowds and media attention-as untapped tools for raising awareness.

At a 2024 race in Wuzhong, Ningxia, Ma pinned his first missing-child poster to his jersey. The campaign quickly gained momentum: thousands of runners have since joined him, wearing customized shirts with names, photos, and contact information for missing children.

The movement had a breakthrough this January. At the Guangzhou Marathon, a man who had been separated from his family at age 4 recognized childhood details on a runner's poster. After 26 years, he was reunited with his family-a tearful moment Ma calls his "proudest finish line."

Skeptics have accused Ma of using tragedy for attention, but he brushes it off.

"This isn't a sprint. It's a marathon," he said. "Doubters fade, but families never stop running."

After Taizhou, Ma headed to the Yangling Marathon in Shaanxi Province, distributing posters to new volunteers.

Each race, he says, fuels his resolve.

"These parents endure a lifetime of marathons. If our miles can shave years off their wait, we'll keep running." Enditem

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