torsdag den 14. november 2013

De blindes majshøst

Lørdag d. 19. oktober var alle os deltagere, der boede i Beijing, inviteret til at lave noget frivilligt arbejde sammen med IES Global. Mig og Miriam sagde ja. Vi skulle hjælpe et børnehjem for blinde med at høste deres majs.

Dette indlæg er oprindeligt skrevet til IES Global, så derfor er det på engelsk. Håber I kan leve med det, ellers må I google-translate det...

On Saturday the 19th of October Miriam and I got up at the hellish hour of 5.45. At 6.00 we took the bus to Beijing. The reason for this was that we had volunteered through IES Global to help an orphanage with their corn harvest.
This trip to China was/is the adventure of my life - so far - and I wanted to make the most of it, getting as much 'adventure' as I possibly could, so when Rona wrote to us Beijingers and invited us to join I thought 'Why not? This orphanage-thing sounds exciting and, incredibly enough, I actually miss hard physical labour.'

So we gave up the idea of a Saturday morning lie-in and instead spend two hours cramped in the subway with half of Beijing's population. We had no idea what we were heading into, who else was coming - if indeed anyone else was - where we were gonna go, what we were gonna do...
But - we'd been promised a good lunch and in our western-food-craving heads that was as good a reason as any:)

We arrived at the office - or Beijing Headquarters, if you like - of IES Global. Here we met Rona and one other participant, Galina, who we knew from the Inner Mongolia trip. The rest were all new faces. Smiling faces, though.
So we got in the bus and drove to the orphanage - that is to say, all the way back to Fangshan District where we had just come from...

We had no idea what to expect. A Chinese orphanage. I mean, you hear so many things about the Chinese... But then again, I had thought Chinese schools would be more like military trainingstations or robot factories and here I'd been proven quite wrong. Anything was possible.

But as familiar citycenter turned into familiar cityoutskirts which again turned into familiar countryside Kirsty from the volunteer department told us about this orphanage. The orphanage was in China, founded by a French couple, who lived in the Phillipines...? and the children were visually impaired, or mostly blind as it were.
They were raised after western standards, with western ideas, values and perspectives.
To me the 'visually impaired' part made the rest make more sense. Of course there are orphanages in China - we have orphanages in Denmark too:) - but I didn't quite understand why a French couple had to start one here and do it like that. 
In my head adopting a blind child must be quite a handfull, which must be why they taught these children English and raised them like westerners - to make adoption to another country so much easier.
We arrived at the orphanage and were greeted by a parkinglot full of corn and some children sitting on the stairs in front of a long, low building. It was kind of weird with these little children who couldn't see. You didn't immidiately realise it - they were just clinging to each other and their carer. I felt invisible, in some way. Like I wasn't there unless they touched me...
So, Kirsty had been here many times before and she gave us a tour of the orphanage. We saw the cosy little classrooms, the cantine and their little houses. They were raised in little family units, which I thought was a very heartening and sweet thing. Much better than the 50-girls-dorm I always get in my head when I think of orphanages and Chinese orphanages in particular.
The children were also taught how to care for themselves as blind people - how to put on their own clothes and do all those small things that people who can see tend to take for given. That was almost the best part, I thought - helping the children to help themselves. All the children came from other orphanages, and I could way too easily imagine what life in as a blind person in a normal Chinese orphanage would have been like.  
The orphanage was almost completely self-sustainable and grew most of their food themselves, which of course explained our reason for being there. Most of the harvest, as far as I understood it, was done by volunteers like us.
We went down to the field where other teams of volunteers were already working. There was still a quarter of the cornstalks standing, but most of them were shucking(?) corn - taking of the peel and putting the corn in big sacks, which could then be taken up to the parking lot for drying and sorting.
We threw our bags in a pile and quickly got to work - seven women around a big pile of corn. The guys started harvesting the still standing stalks. It was a perfect day - warm, sunny and totally smog free:)
Some of the corn had been lying there for a while and was semi-rotten, while others had maggots in them. We were relieved to hear that they fed those to the animals. Oh, well. Never having been on the squeamish side, I eagerly dug in and soon found a soothingly mechanical rhythm.
We shucked corn for two hours, I think, every once in a while moving on to a new pile. It was nice and we didn't mind the work, though we were rather relieved when the gloves arrived and we didn't have to directly touch all the yucky stuff.
Then we had that lunch. It was way better than I had imagined. When we were told there would be sandwiches, we were thrilled at the idea of actual bread and maybe even salad, but this was much better. Not only did we get actual, crunchy bread - we also got ham! and cheese! and pasta salad! and butter! and fruit! and cookies! 
It. Was. Awesome:D
After having gorged ourselves till we couldn't possibly eat anymore - someone madly suggested a dodgeball tournament. I felt pleasantly full and a little sluggish, but oh well, what the hell.
We played for two hours, and it turned out to be more fun than I expected. I didn't win, though - but Miriam got a fancy medal, so I felt that we had in some way redeemed ourselves.
Around 3 or 4 o'clock we said goodbye to the orphanage and drove home.  This time Miriam and I were dropped off in Liangxiang - anything else would have been silly.
This day had been very gratifying. Here I felt like I was really helping - instead of that exasperated 'what the hell am I doing here?!'-feeling I sometimes get with the worst classes.
I mean, even though you know that technically China is a developing country, most of the time you can't see it unless you really look hard, and back home people never mention China as a place where volunteering is needed. I guess there's more media focus on Africa and the other Asian countries.
China? They have so much money - they don't need help! People said that to me, when I told them I wanted to go to China.
Well, I'm here and I see the people back home being proven wrong everyday and on this day especially.

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