Great mathematician Archimedes said: "Give me a lever long
enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the
world."
In China, millions of mothers are struggling to find a fulcrum
to raise their poverty-stricken families.
The Program of Happiness, a project especially set to help
impoverished mothers, has helped them secure the fulcrum, not only
lending them money but also paving the way to self-support.
Launched a decade ago in Beijing by the non-profit making China
Population Welfare Foundation, the China Family Planning
Association and the China Population Daily, the program
has funded about 150,000 impoverished mothers with an accumulative
260 million yuan (US$32.1 million) in 341 counties throughout the
country by the end of 2004. As a result, some 600,000 people have
benefited from the program.
According to an evaluation team composed of experts from
Tsinghua University, 89.5 percent of the beneficiaries' families
successfully got out of the poverty trap.
Liu Shuyun is one of the beneficiaries.
Living in a remote village in Kalaqin Qi of the Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Region, the 36-year-old woman and her
husband concentrated all their efforts on growing crops on their
10-mu (0.67 hectares) of land before 2003.
"It all depended on the weather then. At harvest time, the per
capita income of our family could reach some 700 yuan (US$86.3)
each year. But the income would be dramatically reduced in
fruitless seasons by adverse weather, after which we could hardly
maintain our daily lives," said Liu in a telephone interview with
China Daily.
To take care of bed-ridden parents-in-law, two young daughters
and a young sister and brother-in law, Liu had borrowed a total of
more than 10,000 yuan (US$1,233) from relatives and friends by
early 2003.
However, their life has changed significantly since she received
the aid from the Program of Happiness in April 2003.
With the help of the program, she signed a long-term contract to
raise ducks for a company in a neighbouring county, which exports
frozen ducks abroad.
To start the business, the program lent her 10,000 yuan
(US$1,233) and helped her get another 10,000 yuan bank loan. She
has since borrowed an additional 10,000 yuan.
"Each time we bought 2,000 baby ducks from the company and sold
them in less than two months. We can earn more than 10,000 yuan net
profit each year now," Liu said happily.
She has nearly paid back all the loans now, and as consequence
"life will become better and better," she said.
An increasing number of mothers like Liu will benefit from the
program in the coming years since it will attract more attention
from the public, said Yu Dehui, deputy director of China Population
Welfare Foundation.
(China Daily July 29, 2005)
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