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Tent dwellers never lose heart
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When a Hong Kong-based charity organization gave out teddy bears to the children, the anxious crowd got out of control. Some parents pushed to the front to snatch a toy for their children.

One little girl cried in her mother's arms for not getting one.

"How come we can do that to lose face for Beichuan after the quake disaster?" one woman scolded.

The crowd became silent. Several people put their toys back into the charity box.

"Householder" Mao Zhiyun is not in his tent. He has walked back to his home about 20 km away. The return trip takes two days because the roads were damaged in the quake.

This is his second trip home after the quake. Last time he took back at least five kilos of pork he found in the rubble of his home, and fed the pigs.

Several other men went with him, to feed their cattle, find some food in the ruins, check on the cropland and try to figure out whether they can still rebuild their homes.

Some even harvested some wheat and vegetables in the field.

Helping ourselves

Everyone tries to help himself: when the government recruited cleaners for the tent community for 350 yuan (50.54 US dollars) a month, nearly every adult applied; some have chosen to work in factories in other provinces or joined the massive reconstruction in other quake-hit areas.

Eight-year-old Xu Dengyi pursed her lips as her mother scolded her for not having written one single entry into her diary after the quake. "It's a big pleasure not having to go to school, right? "

The girl is certainly eager to get back to her classroom.

Like most other children in the tent community, she was not among the 1,200 schoolchildren to be sent to the eastern Shandong Province for classes.

The only school that has resumed classes in Leigu is a kindergarten built by the Chengdu Area Command of the People's Liberation Army.

The kindergarten's tents are enclosed by fences, outside which stand parents and grandparents every afternoon, waiting to pick up their kids.

Nearly all the preschool children in Beichuan county seat were buried in the May 12 quake. Many died. As a result, the county has few orphans.

The young tent dwellers are largely from the outer areas, Beichuan County official Tang Zongwu said.

Like all children their age, they paint submarines and airplanes, sing songs and tell happily-ever-after tales.

(Xinhua News Agency June 10, 2008)

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