Mastering the instruments of fate

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Zhang Qian participates in the 2008 Paralympic Games in Beijing and the Winter Paralympic Games in Beijing in 2022, and playing the Zhongruan, the Chinese traditional national musical instruments, in the Shanshui Folk Music Troupe. [Photo/China Daily]

As the hands of the clock approached 8 pm, Zhong Huile was busy checking his trumpet like suona, while his wife Chen Mengjing was tuning her guzheng-a traditional plucked, stringed instrument-one final time. As the clock struck the hour, the group pressed the start button on the smartphone and started their livestreaming performance.

The tune of All I want is a Bing Dwen Dwen (that's based on the melody of Edward Elgar's Salut d'Amour) pipes up, with comments and "likes" flooding the screen-within 30 seconds there are over 500 of the latter. They have 660,000 followers, of which quite a high percentage maintain the habit of watching the pair's performance at 8 pm every day.

A unique ensemble

Zhong and Chen belong to the Shanshui Folk Music Troupe, the only full-time folk music band formed entirely by people drawn from all over the nation who have various physical challenges. As early as 2008, their core members had impressed the world by participating in the opening ceremony of that year's Beijing Summer Olympics; Now they are a group of 14, eight of whom are full-time participants, while the remainder are part-time members.

Suffering from congenital cataracts, Zhong has endured very low eyesight since he was very young and to read the screen of his smartphone, he has to hold it a centimeter away from his eyes. Despite this condition, he managed to get a degree, which enabled him to get a job as a teacher in the school of special education at the University for Science & Technology Beijing.

During his time there, Zhong came to a stark realization: his students, with their various physical challenges, were going to struggle for finding a job upon graduation. The majority of them, although having received a sound musical education, had to choose other jobs, such as blind massage in the case of the visually impaired.

Zhang Qian was among the first graduates to receive an education from Zhong. Having suffered from infantile paralysis when she was 6 months old, she took many years to learn to walk and, even today, will still fall sometimes. She struggled to make it into college-and even went on to participate in the opening-ceremony performance of the 2008 Beijing Paralympics-but after graduation her dream was ruined by the real difficulties of finding a job.

Zhong Huile is composing music with computer software. Due to his low vision, he has to be close to the screen. [Photo/China Daily]

"Some companies preferred to employ someone with a lesser degree rather than give me the job," she says, knowing that her disability was the reason. She ended up finding a blue collar job in an electronics factory, where, until 2008, she had to work from 7:30 am to 10 pm every day for very low wages.

Liu Jidong, Zhong's colleague, had the same feeling. In July 2008, the pair made the bold decision to resign from their stable jobs and form a band, headquartered in six rented rooms in Zhuxinzhuang, a suburban village of Beijing, so that those with physical challenges could find a place to continue playing music. Liu is the head of the troupe and Zhong his deputy.

It was a difficult beginning. The band didn't even have a name, let alone a chance of performing and generating an income; It took just one month for the group of 30 to spend the 80,000 yuan ($12,576) that Liu and Zhong had taken from their savings, during which period the only income they received was a 3,000 yuan payout from a college students' union.

So, they moved to Xi'an city, Northwest China's Shaanxi province, to make a living. "You might not believe it, but we had no money to rent a place to live, so we squatted in abandoned houses," says Liu. "Our band members had to collect dry wood to make a fire so we could keep warm and cook food."

Somehow, an entrepreneur from East China's Zhejiang province found out about the group and, hoping to "pick two or three" to perform at scenic spots, attempted to secure their services. However, the band were insistent that they played only as an ensemble. So moved by their solidarity, the entrepreneur decided to employ all them.

For most of the members, who are students of Zhong and Liu, that was their first job. For Zhong, that was where he found love-He met Chen, who he later married.

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