Xu Jiatian and other volunteers help build wooden classrooms and dormitories for children in Siem Reap, Cambodia. |
Xu Jiatian and other volunteers help build wooden classrooms and dormitories for children in Siem Reap, Cambodia. |
29th August, 2012
Xu Jiatian was a high achiever in college. Instead of climbing the corporate ladder, he is now a volunteer worker in Cambodia. He shares his motivation with Zhang Yue.
By Zhang Yue
The China Daily Xu Jiatian was a high achiever in college. Instead of climbing the corporate ladder, he is now a volunteer worker in Cambodia. He shares his motivation with Zhang Yue.
Xu Jiatian is better known as Kurt to kids in many orphanages and primary schools in Cambodia.
"Kids would happily scream and
run out of the classroom once they see Xu's smiling face outside the
classroom window," says Boran, head of the PACDOC orphanage in Siem
Reap.
Xu, 24, has been a volunteer in Cambodia since he graduated from college two years ago.
"I have always wanted to explore
something new and different since I was still in college," Xu says.
"That was how I got to know about voluntary work."
A year after graduating from
college, with some savings and a loan from family and friends, Xu
founded Green Leaders Adventure, a social enterprise that offers young
Chinese people a chance to do voluntary work.
The group has been focusing on
Cambodia, under the project named Cambodia International Service. So
far, the organization has sent 160 Chinese teenagers to do voluntary
work in Cambodia, such as building wooden classrooms and dormitories,
and renovating primary schools and orphanages.
"Those who want to participate in the project have to contribute 18,880 yuan ($3,000) each," says Xu.
"Half of their contribution will
be spent on traveling and living expenses, while the balance will be
spent on construction work in the village.
"Like most of my teammates, I am
moved by the way people treat us there. I also find volunteering an
amazing experience. I want more young people in China to share the same
experience," he adds.
Xu's hometown is in the Xinjiang
Uygur autonomous region. Before visiting Cambodia, he traveled to many
countries in the Middle East and South Pacific Ocean.
"But working in Cambodia helped me discover more about myself and changed my perspective of the world," he says.
Xu first visited Cambodia in
2010 with a group of volunteers from Taiwan who went to Cambodia to
teach the locals to grow better crops to increase their income. Although
it was not Xu's first voluntary work attempt, he had an amazing time.
"Simple, but sincere," he says.
"Most people do not speak English but when I walk on the streets, people
smile and wave at me. Their eyes shine and their smiles are sincere."
Working in the rural areas of
Cambodia is hard, but full of touching memories. Xu recalls one
afternoon, exhausted from hours of farm work, he fell asleep under a
tree in front of the house they helped.
"The family consists of a widow
with her teenage son," he says. "Her husband died three months earlier
after he was bitten by a snake in the river."
When Xu woke up at dawn, he found himself lying on the bed, with a bowl of food and some fried fish beside it.
"The first thing that came to my
mind was, where did she get the fish?" Xu says. The translator told him
that while he was asleep, the woman asked her son to catch some fish in
the river for Xu, ignoring the danger that her only son might be bitten
by a river snake like her husband.
"I later learned that this is
the way the locals thank the people they care for. Once they get to know
you, they will treat you like a real friend."
At that time, Xu was still
thinking about his career choice after graduation. He was a high
achiever at college, with good grades and an excellent track records in
social activities. Like many of his schoolmates, he was also preparing
to further his education in the US.
"But those days spent in
Cambodia gave meaning to my life," he says. "I felt trusted and needed,
despite the limited communication and language barrier. This is the kind
of feeling that our generation longs for."
Most of the teenage volunteers
joined the project with the initial aim of gaining some social
experiences and to enhance their portfolio for their university
applications, but many ended up visiting Cambodia every vacation.
Ten people have joined Xu as full-time staff. All of them are in their 20s.
Since 2011, Xu has been staying
in Cambodia during every winter and summer vacation, leading his team to
do voluntary work and learning about local demands as well as doing
social research.
One of the first full time staff of the organization, Dong Shiqing, quit her job at a radio station in Beijing to join Xu.
"The people here need me. And I
am very proud of what I do," she says. "This (voluntary work) is what
helps many of those in my generation become stronger, I think. Most of
us try to live a successful life defined by society. But what makes me
happy is to be useful to other people."
"I enjoy the way I am growing as
a person," says Xu. "I see myself making a difference in the world
every day. That's real growth and the experience forms the best memory.
We have started voluntary work in Cambodia and we aim to go further and
last a long time."
Contact the writer at zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn.
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