Li Haibao was a senior in the foreign language department of
Beijing Forestry
University. On seeing a DAPP (Development Aid from People to
People) recruitment video for volunteer work in Africa, a new door
for adventure opened. "My major is foreign languages," Li says.
"For me, one year in Europe and Africa was such an opportunity to
learn, while helping others."
In April of 1998, Li applied for a one-year hiatus in school and
flew to Denmark for volunteer training. In six months, he learned
the necessary languages and got acquainted with Africa. In the
winter of that year, Li finished the program and traveled from ice
and snow-covered Denmark to burning Windhoek, capital city of
Namibia. Two days later, he took a 10-hour bus from there to the
DAPP's Namibian center 800 kilometers away. Li chose the children's
aid project and initially worked as a kindergarten teacher.
"My first day's work was at the center kindergarten," he
recalls. "I taught children the alphabet and a few simple words.
Later they learned alphabet songs and the games I used to play as a
child." The language barrier was overcome with the help of a local
associate named Maria to whom Li spoke English which she translated
into the local dialect for the children.
Within a short time, Li and his young classmates bonded. "They
were shy when they first saw me," he says. "Whenever I wanted to
get close to them, they would run away, but, after a while we
became close friends and they would run to me, surrounding me and
reaching for hands. I was deeply touched by their trust and
affection for me and aware of my responsibility to them."
Li's stint at the kindergarten was only temporary. His main job
was to inspect the 30 village kindergartens within 30 square
kilometers around the center, and to train teachers and teach the
children English.
As the children learn from Li, so he learned about his new home.
"Namibia is spacious but its population is only 1.6 million," he
says. "Villages there are very different from those in China, as
they usually consist of only one or two families. Distances between
villages range from a few to dozens of kilometers."
Getting to know the local culture and mindset was another
broadening experience for Li. "One evening, I visited a village
that had only two families. There was no electricity and the family
I visited lit a candle to welcome me. Three of the children went to
school, but with no light they could not read books at night, so I
gave them an oil lamp. A couple of days later, I visited them again
and found that they had not used it. They said it was too expensive
to run! What a frugal family they were!"
The differences between China and Namibia didn't stop there. "I
felt like a patrolman there, always carrying a water bottle and a
hat," he says. "Only in Africa did I truly understand what burning
heat really was. In the morning, it's fairly cool, but at noon the
sky becomes cloudless, and the temperature reaches 40 degrees
centigrade or more. I became so tanned that when I returned to
China, people take me for a student from Africa."
Sadly, Li's experience had to end. "When my volunteer work was
almost finished, and I was preparing to leave, the children in the
center's kindergarten held a send-off party for me," he says. "They
danced passionately to the pulsing rhythm of goatskin drums, and
sang the English alphabet songs I had taught them. A teacher in a
village kindergarten gave me a set of bow and arrows and Maria gave
me a copper bracelet. These are gifts I will cherish forever."
Li says he will never forget Africa. "I often dream of the
children from the kindergartens of Namibia, looking at me as
clutched my fingers, asking, 'When will you be back again?' If I
get a chance, I will go back to Africa to help them."
(China.org.cn December 10, 2003)