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Mourn for the dead in Beichuan on quake anniversary
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-05-13 11:25 BEICHUAN, Sichuan - Sitting on a rock in the ruins of Beichuan, the hardest-hit place in last May's deadly earthquake, Wang Qingmei, 32, choked back tears in front of her daughter's photo, murmuring her regret again and again. Characters reading "Xiang Yazi, you are always my darling daughter" were written on the photo. A plate of biscuits, cakes and oranges lay next to the photo, an offering to the dead. Little Xiang, then a 5-year-old, had begged not to go to kindergarten on May 12 last year so she could stay home and play with a new toy. "But I sent her to school anyway," Wang said, sobbing. She had promised to bring her daughter back home at noon, but then she and her husband got busy at their clothing store. At 2:28 p.m., the massive quake struck, triggering landslides that shoved the kindergarten's buildings 50 to 60 meters from their original locations. Most of the school's buildings were buried so deep in the rubble that only parts of their red roofs could be seen. Wang set off firecrackers Tuesday. Some in China believe the noise of these explosions can summon back the spirits of the dead. But Wang was never able to fulfill her promise to bring her daughter home. "I was wrong, and I regret it," Wang said.
A REST FOR MOTHER A seemingly endless stream of vehicles, carrying tens of thousands of people, lined the narrow road leading to the quake-flattened county seat, the closest major town to the quake's epicenter, on Tuesday. Traffic was so heavy that many had to park by the roadside and proceed on foot.
"My hometown Jiangyou was also destroyed, so I always feel that I share the feelings of Beichuan residents," Xiong said. "I must come to express my condolences."
Burning candles, sticks of incense and the debris of firecrackers were scattered among dilapidated walls and stones. Wu Youde carefully chose a piece of flat ground, drew a circle with white lime powder and put a yellow, two-story paper house inside it. The mini house, a meter high, was named Jiuquan Mansion, meaning "house in the nether world." Wu Youde burned it for his wife, who was a doctor in Beichuan before the earthquake. "Mom worked hard all her life. She deserves a good rest," said son Wu Tao, who followed his mother into medicine. Wu tearfully hoped his mother would receive the house in heaven and live a relaxed life. Every time Beichuan was opened for public memorials, he came to burn paper items that he thought might be useful to his mother in the afterlife. The ruins of the county have been reopened four times since the quake: 100 days after the disaster, at Spring Festival in January and again for Tomb-sweeping Festival on April 4. It was reopened on Sunday afternoon as the first anniversary approached. More than 80 percent of the buildings in Beichuan collapsed during the quake and only 4,000 out of more than 10,000 then living in the county seat survived, according to local authorities. More than half the county was buried by landslides and declared "unnecessary to be reconstructed", so the local government decided to transform this area into a "quake ruin museum." Some survivors have found business opportunities from it. Stalls selling quake-related videos, photos and embroidery, opened by Beichuan residents, stretched hundreds of meters outside the old county seat. PHOTOS FROM DISASTER A woman who would only give her surname, Wang, set up a business amid the ruins selling photos showing Beichuan before the quake, after the quake and after last September's landslides. "I know it may be not good to do business here, but I have no choice," Wang said. "I am also a victim of the quake. My mother was killed by falling debris, and both my father and I suffered serious injuries. "I burned paper money for my mother Tuesday morning and promised her that I would bring up my children, her beloved grandsons, with great care," Wang said. Her photos go for 10 yuan (about US$1.50) per set, which she said can yield her 40 to 50 yuan a day, just about enough for her two sons' school expenses. "The government has stopped giving us subsidies," she said, "We cannot rely on the government forever. We have to make our own living." LIFE GOES ON When they talk about the future, most Beichuan residents, who are still mourning the dead and having nightmares, wished for a safe life. "We can never ever shake off the shadow," said Li Yuanguo, 34, who lost his daughter in the quake. "All I want is a safe life -- a stable job, maybe another child and enough money to support the family," Li said, looking at his daughter's photos saved in his mobile phone. "We are waiting. Only after leaving these temporary homes and moving into permanent housing, can we have a sense of safety," Li said. |
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