Home / Major earthquake slams SW China / Features & opinions Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Teachers' ultimate sacrifice
Adjust font size:

 

Wang works in the junior class, where more than 40 children are younger than 4. She and other teachers carried the children out one by one.

A group of 43 children from Jiguanshan Township School survived 24 hours in the most brutal conditions and spoke of how their teachers had worked non-stop day and night to protect them.

The students had just finished their exercises at their remote mountainous school when the earthquake struck.

After parents took away most of the students, 43 were left from Zhugen and Yanfeng, two remote villages with no transportation or communication links.

That night, the 22 teachers cut bamboo to build a shelter against the rain, and when a local hotel owner sent them porridge, the teachers gave it to the children.

As rain continued down pouring, the students were terrified by the aftershocks.

The teachers stood in a circle around the children, shielding them from the rain.

"We kept telling them: 'Your teachers are here, don't be afraid. You can lean on each other to get some sleep'," headmaster Wang Jingping told Chengdu Daily.

The teachers had to stay awake all night in the freezing cold, making sure the canvas wasn't blown away by the strong winds.

"We couldn't lower our hands for one minute," Wang said. When the rain finally eased at dawn, the teachers' arms were swollen and numb.

As soon as about 20 armed police found a way to access the mountain, the teachers decided to send the students to a safer place, with one child between two adults.

"The rain was very heavy. We could see landslides everywhere. Rocks kept falling from above us. It was horrifying," recalled Zeng Shumei, a 12-year-old fifth-grader.

"The road was less than 1 chi (33 cm) wide at the narrowest place and the cliff was right below us," said another pupil, Chen Kefeng.

"They sheltered us with their bodies and inched forward. If someone fell, it could only be the teachers and armed police."

It took the students three hours to plough through 10 km of mountainous paths to a hotel in Wenjingjiang town, from where they were sent to Chongzhou city by the local education bureau.

"When the teachers took off their shoes, blood had soaked through the socks. They couldn't take off the socks," Wang said.

One foreign teacher's cool head saved 29 students at the Guangya IB School in Dujiangyan.

As soon as the quake started, the Australian teacher, known as Dane, shouted "desk, desk" to his students, making sure that all students were beneath their desks. As he finally took cover himself, the ceiling broke and fell.

As soon as the trembling stopped, he led the students downstairs. Dane spent the night with his students on the football field before heading for Chengdu.

(China Daily, Xinhua News Agency, May 20, 2008)

     1   2   3  


Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
- National mourning starts for quake victims
- Toyota restarts auto production in quake-hit area
- Intensive care for youngest victims
- Man successfully rescued after 147 hours
- Economic confidence unshaken by quake
- Grid repairs make big progress
- China's top leadership pay silent tribute to earthquake victims
Most Viewed >>
- Moment quake struck captured in wedding photos
- Earthquake hits China
- Exclusive photos of the devastation at Hanwang town
- Girl freed from ruins after legs amputated
- People live in temporary tents in quake-hit areas