Rural migrant workers in China are helping their hometowns shackle
off poverty by mailing back their earnings cent by cent, but their
kids left behind in rural areas suffer much more "growing pains"
than their peers in urban areas.
While about 9 million of minors, most of them in big cities, are
learning how to play pianos and enjoying their happy childhood,
millions of underage are beset with such challenges as less care,
sense of insecurity, unreliable education and psychological
problems.
Teenager Xiao Yuan was put under the custody of her uncle by her
parents, who migrated in August 1999 from their hometown in Yindian
township of Suizhou city in central China's Hubei province as
transient workers.
Only one month after their departure, Xiao Yuan, then only aged 11,
was raped by a relative and has since lived in misfortune.
"Daddy, I'm so scared. Please come back soon," she wept then.
The parents came home with a limited amount of savings two years
later and almost overwhelmed by humiliation, regret and indignation
after hearing of the crime perpetrated on their daughter, which
cost the girl her reproduction capability.
But to get enough money for a lawsuit against the perpetrator, they
left home again in late 2001, leaving the innocent girl with
lasting physical and psychological traumas.
Despised and often bullied by her schoolmates, the girl is now very
timid and a loner who talks little.
According to Ma Dingming, head of the local court, approximately
10,000 out of the township's total population of 30,000, and 70
percent of all of the young people there, are working outside. They
left behind problems in education and management of their children.
Still worse, the migration has led to a fast growth in divorce
cases, and most of them involved children 5-10 years of age.
Rural development is one of the top concerns of the Chinese
Government. And the problem is quite outstanding with five
provinces, namely Henan, Anhui, Hubei, Hunan and Jiangxi, in the
central part of the country.
In
2001, the combined rural population in the five provinces stood at
255 million, making up 78.22 percent of their total, five
percentage points higher than the nation's average.
However, per-capita area of arable land in the rural regions of the
five provinces was approximately 0.28 hectares below the national
average 0.4 hectares.
The scarcity of farmland is forcing a growing number of rural
residents to migrate for work in cities.
Hubei's labor and employment authority estimated that about 3
million laborers have, since the Chinese Lunar New Year this year,
flocked out of the province for jobs in other parts of China, up 10
percent from the year-earlier level.
According to a recent sample research conducted by the
Beijing-based China Social Survey in Beijing, Shenzhen and
Guangzhou municipalities and Henan, Sichuan and Hubei provinces, 83
percent of the 670 respondents said their purposes for working
outside their hometowns were to change the life of their own and of
their kids. And 79 percent of the surveyed noted that they were
reluctant to leave their kids but they had no other options.
The survey also found that 43 percent of the respondents thought
their migration would have negative impact on their children, and
another 36 percent said that they had never thought about the
problem.
There lies the paradox for China's big force of migrant workers.
Against their original will to better their own living standards
and save more money for the future of their children, absence of
parental care has resulted in the formation of unrestrained and
selfish personalities and even autism for the underage kids they
left behind. Some of the minors left schools and their custodians
and lived a life as waifs. Another direct result is juvenile
delinquency.
According to Wang Caibin, headmaster of the central primary school
of Caowu township of Jingshan county, Hubei province, nearly half
of the 1,000 students had their parents working outside their
hometowns. They made up a majority of the problem students at the
school, Wang said.
Wang cited a sixth grader who, unfortunately, had had his guardians
changed several times before he started to idle all day long, with
his grades sliding down drastically.
This problem of rural minors is a worrying social problem cropping
up in the process of urbanization and labor transfer, said Prof.
Zhou Zongkui, a noted psychologist specializing in children's
socialization with the Central China Teacher's University based in
Wuhan, capital city of central Hubei province.
"Fine and reliable relationship is the basis of the healthy growth
of children, and it may help them build a sense of trustworthiness
and security about the external world," Zhou explained.
"The normal relationship between minors and their parents has been
interrupted, and the interruption will probably lead to failure to
build the sense of security and trustworthiness and then to a
negative tendency in their future attitude towards other people and
the society," Zhou added.
Exertions are being made to improve the social welfare in rural
areas, and in the process, emotional loss of rural children should
be taken into account, he suggested.
Prof. Zhou noted that exclusive counselors should be deployed with
primary and middle schools in the rural areas, so as to help
somehow replenish family care that is absent for minor nesters.
The best choice for the migrant workers is to take their kids with
them, Zhou said. But he added that it costs too dearly for most of
the transient workers to do so.
Guo Xianwen at Luotian county of Hubei province said he and his
wife worked in Wuhan with their kid studying there. Then their
family's annual spending amounted to 10,000 yuan (US$1,200), of
which 3,000 yuan (US$360) was used for the kid alone, much higher
than the 1,000-yuan cost for the minor when he studied at their
rural home.
Guo estimated that two, at most, out of 10 migrant parents were
able to bring their children out with them.
To
this end, some experiments are being made with some rural
schools.
In
Yandian town of Anlu city, Hubei, Sun Xiuchao, praised as "acting
mother", has launched a family-style dormitory for 63 primary
schoolers, of whom 40 are minors.
An
experienced primary-school teacher, Sun not only takes care of the
food and clothing and other basic necessities of life for the
children, but also supervises and instructs their study.
There are now 100-plus "acting mothers" like Sun in the town, which
has nearly 10,000 out of its total population of 16,000 as migrant
workers.
Yan Meifu, a psychologist with the Wuhan-based Hubei University,
said that living in community may help the minor nesters, who were
thirsty for parental love, get some compensation emotionally and
grow in a more healthy way.
Other measures included establishment of special training schools
to tell guardians of minors how to take care of the kids under
their custody.
(Xinhua News Agency May 31, 2004)
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