China
'I want to be a concubine'
An eye-opener for Singaporeans. This translated tale of a peasant girl may partly explain the Geylang phenomenon.
June 5, 2009

Why My Life Is Miserable Because I Am Poor
(Excerpts of article translated by Shaohua on September 25, 2008)

I was born in a remote hamlet in the north of China. I have heard from someone, who never been to the genuine villages, that the countryside is very nice. But in fact, no public road was built and the nearest bus stop is 20 kilometres away, so we always had to walk on foot or ride a bicycle to get out of the village. The street in the village was made of soil and was not flat.

On a sunny day, wind with sound and soil blew you. On a rainy day, rain with the mud poured you. The mud on the road was added with shit from animals raised by villagers, because animals always shit on the road but not in their own country yard to keep it tidy and clean.

No fresh vegetables were supplied to the villagers in the whole year because only radishes and cabbage were planted there. It also had sweet potato, if that is a vegetable. So, as dishes, what they could have were only salted radishes and cabbage.

Some may ask, why did we not fry? The truth was that there was not much cooking oil for frying because of poverty, so fried dishes were always rare for them except in the case of Spring Festival or when some relatives come for dinner. I remember I had my first “you tiao” [a fried bread stick] in the dining hall at my university. And health care was not ensured either.

Take my grandpa for example, he couldn’t help but wait for death once he fell sick.
After he was sent to the hospital ran by the State, they refused to diagnose my grandpa even though we knelt down begging them to cure him. The reason was simply because we did not have 2 yuan for medicine.
We could do nothing but see my grandpa die in the hospital. Some may say that the countryside is developing these days. But the truth is that there has been almost no change for my village since I was born. I really cannot say whether change will happen or not in my life.

I was born at the end of the 1970s. We had 5 children, including me, 3 sisters and 1 brother. Some people may wonder why my mother had so many children if my family was so poor? These people may not understand China clearly. These days, only really poor people or rich people can have more than one child, and we belonged to the poor group.
In the countryside, in my opinion, there are 2 reasons for having more children. First, no entertainment in the countryside. So after working in the daylight, sometimes having sex on the “kang” (bed made by soil and brick) at night may be the only amusing thing for them. Although they did not want more children, no one told them effective means of contraception. I saw with my own eyes that my mother wanted to abort using tied rope or eating tobacco ash for contraception.

The second reason was the traditional concept and environment of the countryside. There must be a man in every home because working in the countryside is so hard that only men can deal with them, so people in the countryside always held the concept that birthing a boy in every generation is necessary for the continuance of the family. If you could not give birth to a boy, you would be looked down upon. Before my brother was born, my mother was always looked down upon by my family members, I was always hit by other children and had the nickname of ‘jue-hu-guo,” meaning “no boy no generation continuance.”

The goodness of the farm is not what you think because of the poor and narrow opinions of countryside life. At that time, there were several children in every family, and every child struggled for subsistence without caring for others. I remembered that when I was 5 years old, my parents had gone to work farming, I took care of my sister at home, and one of my neighbours came to borrow a kitchen knife but also secretly stole a dinner pan. After my parents came back, they found the pan missing, so they went to that neighbour, but failed to get the pan back because my neighbour refused to acknowledge that he took the pan away. The result of this was that I was beat fiercely by my parents and we cooked without the pan for a long period.

And another time when I was 9 years old, I saw a sister-in-law in my village stealing the cotton from my uncle’s field, then she was caught by my uncle and warned that he would show villagers what she did. In order to prevent this, she promised that she could have sex with my uncle if my uncle would set her free. Then my uncle had sex with her in the field. I did not know what they did when I was 9 years old, but after I realised the meaning of what happened, it made me feel sick every time I thought of it. But, in the end, what they did was discovered and spread in my village.

My uncle probably told some people, but that sister-in-law thought I had told my mother and that my mother spread it to the villagers, so she came to the gate of my home and scolded for several days. After that, I was beat by her on my way home and she hurt my mouth. When my mother asked what happened with my mouth, I lied that I was not careful and had a fall. I did not think to tell them the truth because I was afraid that my mother would go quarrel with her and cause a bigger conflict. I knew that, at that time, it was difficult for my mother to raise us. In brief, there are good people and bad people anywhere, and farmers are not synonymous with goodness either.

I was the first and only female undergraduate in my village. As a girl, it was a miracle that I could get into university from a place where boys could not always get an education. My father made all of this come true. My father is a veteran, his outside experiences led him to send me to be educated. His original intention was that I could read the characters and distinguish the toilet. At that time, we had to go to the school approximately 10 kilometres away. There were dozens of children for primary school, but after graduating from primary school, I was the only one that persisted with studying.

I had 2 reasons for that, one was that I had worked so hard. I always represented my school to compete with others from primary school to middle school, so my father might get the hope of getting out of the countryside through my excellent performance. Second reason was that when I was in school, I could do some work made of grass at the same time. We called it “cao-bian,” which can be used for the straw making. In that period, a “cao-bian” could sell for 0.2 yuan, and I could knit 5.

I never did my homework or notes in class, I earned money when I was at school. This is another reason that I could continue my education. But my 3 other sisters paid the price by dropping their studies for my continued education. My youngest sister went to the brick plant with my father to carry bricks, my thin and weak father pulled the handcart and she assisted him by pushing it. They had to carry the brick to the place 2 kilometres away, and the whole process only could earn them 0.2 yuan.

Then I went to middle school. I lived at school and far away from home, so I stopped knitting the “cao-bian.” I was always the youngest student, because I had skipped several grades. I was also mature for my age because I knew that it is very difficult to get an education, and if I could get out of school early, I could start earning money earlier. So I got into campus at the age of 16.

I chose to go to university because of the existing financial support from the government for students in campus. If you could get a high score, you could pay less for your education. I could get 40 yuan to 60 yuan for living expenses every month. I spent nearly 600 yuan when I got into university. A fat pig my father had been raising for a long time was sold for this 600 yuan.(--)

(S$1.00 = 4.7 yuan)

(--) The governmental policy changed when I graduated from university scarcely. They would not take responsibility for the jobs of graduates who had to find jobs by themselves. It was impossible for me to go back to my home town, first reason was that I was no longer suitable for the life of the countryside, another one was that I would be a negative example for the villagers: 4 years’ learning in city resulted in nothing but going back home.

This would be their excuse to persuad their children to drop learning. I had to live in the city, and it was impossible for me, not like others, to find a suitable job slowly. I had to find a job that could offer me dinner and a place to live, since I had no money in my pocket and I mustn’t ask for money from my family either, I had to earn money by myself. In order to earn money, I changed several jobs and cities. My mother needed money for medicine, my brother needed money for learning and my sister needed money for skill learning. But, I found what I earned was not enough and was not very much, even thought I was very thrifty.

My brother’s high tuition fees of 10 thousand yuan scared me and my family extraordinarily. We could not get the certificate of loan because the village head did not want to attest to our poverty. Only those who were orphans or only had a single parent without self-reliance could get the certificate, but my family did not belong to those categories because I had graduated from university and had a job to earn money.

In fact, the reason of this was so simple. The village head envied 2 undergraduates in my family and he deliberately wanted to make it difficult for my family because he was always the king of the village. I could not borrow money from my neighbours firstly because they were so poor too, second because they were not fervent and kind-hearted in that kind of environment. If you were poorer than your neighbours or relatives, they would look down upon you because they were afraid that you would come to borrow money; but if you were rich, they would come to please you for benefits from you. My family was poor because of the high tuition fees of my brother.

Guys without education went out to work for construction and earned some money, and if it was busy in the village, they could come back for busy season. But I and my brother could do nothing after graduating from university because we had not enough power to do some works in the countryside.

After that, I followed my father to the university where my brother was studying and brought some presents to seek help from the vice-chancellor. He promised us to let us pay the tuition fees by stages. However, the money was not enough either. At that time, I feel how difficult a person subsisted, I even thought of suicide.

I just wanted to study hard to find a good job and earn money for my family before, but in fact, a girl from the village, without good-looks and English skills (in schools of villages, English was not a course), trying to find a good job was so difficult. I was not willing to indulge myself, so I felt everything was meaningless without aims.

The idea of suicide always emerged in my brain, but if you wanted to die, you had to choose some way that benefited yourself. In order to get enough money for my brother and my family, I could sacrifice my life.

Finally, being hit by a car was my choice. In a tangled street, I found an expensive car to collide with, I also put my ID in pocket, if this would come true, my family would get some compensation from the owner of the expensive car who would never care about it. This idea, however, was so impudent, I did really.

When I went to collide with the car, the driver stopped his car quickly without injuring me. Instead of dying after being hit by a car, I was beaten damnably by him. But after his angry hitting, he took me to the hospital. What I said may be beyond someone, but everything I have described is the truth, I described the whole story so simply, but this is the truth and most valuable memory in my life.

The driver sent me to the hospital and asked me if I wanted to die. I nodded my head and told him my story, then he gave me five thousands yuan and left. This was the man I met who helped me the most, I did not know what his name was or what he did, but I always wanted to find him to thank him. But before I found him, he was detained by police for drug trade. I got his name after the police came to find me when investigating him, and the name I will remember for my whole life. Please do not suspect the truth of this story, though I may not have described everything very well. After the case was published on the local newspaper I knew he got life imprisonment, and I remembered the police that investigated me. Then I went to jail to find him, I got nothing but was conned 100yuan by the police who were working in the jail. Up to now, I did not know the place where he was kept.

Shanghai

I am in Shanghai now, I came here because I heard the salaries here are high. But as a girl who is from the countryside, nearly at the age of 30 and without English skills, finding a job with high salary is almost impossible. Even as an officer in a company, the salary was only 1800 yuan without bonus. I share a rented apartment with others and have to pay 600 yuan every month for it.

I also had to post 800 yuan to my family and that left me 400 yuan for my daily life, including dinner, traffic and others expenses. In order to save money, I always have one meal a day. The most terrible thing for me is being sick. Once I had fallen sick, not only did I lose my salary, I also failed to pay the rent and medicine cost. The medicine cost in Shanghai is high.

I fainted and was sent to the hospital because of malnutrition. After I got to the hospital, I woke up and the doctors said I was OK. But doctors checked me a lot and gave me a bill of more than 1000 yuan. It really was a dreadful bill for me. Now, I lost my job because of China national identity card. I was fired during the Olympic Games period because I got my national identity card when I was in school and now it is expired. I even went back to my village to keep my hukou, but they refused me for the reason that my hukou did not belong there because of my education. Then, I went to the town for that, but I got nothing either. So I just have the hukou booklet which cost me 200 yuan. Without a job, my financial resources will be cut off and I may be evicted by my landlord since I cannot pay the rent, and I may die of hunger. Before my death, I summarise my miserable life was just because of poverty.

I rented an apartment with 3 other girls when I first came to Shanghai. But we have completely different lives after several years. One of us has become a concubine to a man from Hong Kong. She lives in a top house, wears famous brands, has expensive dinners, and she gets spending money of 10,000 yuan per month.

Another one went on the streets in the night clubs. She will not worry about her bread and cheese, however, being a prostitute is always disgusting. The third one married a guy from the countryside, they worked hard together and earn 5000 yuan a month. Although they have to rent an apartment, they feel happy. Their biggest dream is to earn enough money to buy a house in their hometown. It is just a dream to buy a house in Shanghai for them. But now, her husband is ill and was fired by his company. He is recuperating at home now. There are no safeguards for people who do not belong to this city so she has to pay the rent, water and gas fee. She also has to spend money for her husband’s medicine with her little salary.
Working during the day, washing and making dinner at evening, the difficult life changed her a lot. They do not dare to have a baby because they can not afford the cost of raising a baby. It is so hard for her but her husband’s mother always asks for money, because it was very difficult for his family to help her husband graduate from university, so they need her to return what they have paid for that.

This girl once told me that if you want to marry, you had better not marry a poor man, because 2 poor people will only get a poorer life, so you should marry a man who has an apartment and you would not have to fear eviction at any time.

I am not a concubine because I have no chance to be. But if someone wants me, I think I will be a concubine for him. What I ask for is not so high, I just want to find a place to live and have every meal. I think this is better than a prostitute.

Comments from Sina:

Gaoshan says:
The gap between rich and poor is so great in China. I once cut through a building development in Beijing on my way to a friend’s apartment (a friend who own 5 apartments in Beijing). As my eyes were still adjusting to the darker area I was passing through it took me a second to realize I was surrounded by people sleeping under blankets out in the open. It was the workers. Most of the ones I could see were laying there staring at me. As a 2 meter tall foreigner I was really out of place. No one said anything and I continued through the development but the contrast between them living in the open under just a blanket and my friend’s multi-million dollar apartments was pretty jarring.

SniperWZ says:
Sad story, but that’s the truth of today’s China, many people get left behind, with no hope for the future. I hope this changes in the future, yet a story like hers defines modern society these days…

SH.Yang says:
I do not know how ture this story is. but I think it is the aspects of the life in Countryside of China and its people.
I have read some chinese stories written by some foreign reoprter. they are not city fast growing but slow development of countryside in China. I think the gap between the city and countryside become bigger and bigger.
As a boy from village. I really want to go back home to do something for its improvements. but what can I do? I really do not know! to be a teacher? to be a doctor or to creat your own factory?

anon says
I quote “… would rather be a mistress than to marry a poor person.”
Keep dreaming about snagging a rich man to be his wife/mistress. He has plenty of options better than you, China peasant woman.
On another note, these country bumpkins should be forcibly sterilised, or at least be given free birth control. I know life is harsh in the countryside; in the day you work the farms, at night with nowhere to go, no nightlife, so your only source of entertainment is banging that peasant bitch on that rickety bed in your hut.
Then after 9 months another baby is squirted out, another mouth to feed is produced, and you wonder why you became even poorer.
The dumb and uneducated people who keep breeding will never be rich. Raising a kid is never cheap, not even for a peasant.

Triozon says:
I do not know if the story itself is true… but the description of country life in China certainly is. I had several opportunities to stay in this kind of remote villages and yes, life is very very hard! Village chiefs are indeed “little kings” and can make very miserable for villagers if they want to!
Education, guts and luck are the only ways for youngsters to get out of there.
I was able to finance the building of some village schools in remote Yunnan mountain villages. When a new school makes attendence rise from 28 to 54 children in 4 months time (98% of the kids of the village are now attending, including all girls), we feel that it is worth helping them. Parents are very supporting now in sending their kids to school… the only way for the next generation to have a somewhat better life…

SniperWZ says:
I think Shao Hua is the blogger who translated the article from Sina…the person who wrote this was interviewed by CCTV and is probably doing better? She stopped blogging in Mid September, can someone from Chinasmack follow up and see what updates there are regarding this?

Ann says:
...The choice of being marry rich is rather common through out the world. Women biologically, like others in nature, always look for a good privider for her children. Some in less developed countries are lucky enough to find a husband of means , others are forced to accept the second place as concubines or whatever numerical place in Muslim societies.
Ultimately poverty drives women to prostitution, to concubine arrangement. The only time a woman should be judged is when she abandons her children for a richer man.

ZL says
the problem with this girl (assuming it’s not fake) is that she does not just wanna survive but also to live a luxury life. Why a rich man’s mistress? Why not a hard-working engineer’s WIFE? why not an computer programmer’s WIFE? ….. If u just wanna ’survive’, there are plenty of middle class single Chinese men who are willing to take care of you (and maybe your family as well) while saving your dignity!
gree in nursing. She is now happily working as a nurse in a small town….so I guess ppl are really different, aren’t they?

GuoBao says:
I can’t believe some of you guys replies. People who scold this girl should be beaten long and hard with a spiked baton. I have lived a life in luxury compared to people like her but if I had experienced what she had I would do anything to survive,, just hopefully not anything illegal.
China should change radically towards a more socialist way of thinking within 5 years, this raging capitalism is making rich people way too rich and the rest caught up in a hopeless undignified way of “living”.
Raise the goddamn tax rates on incomes above 4-5000 yuan. Let people who earn more than 10.000 yuan a month pay 30 percent tax, get a logical business tax going.
In some countries people pay very high taxes and feel good about it coz we know that the money will be spent to help our poorer countrymen, supply free healthcare and education and a lot of other things that is good for the people and the country.
Who wants to see money like that going into corrupt officials pockets? or businessmen who already are making millions of yuan every year? Wake up China,, limitless capitalism is not the way to go.

kelvin says:
In China is developing rapidly, although saw some achievements, but there are still many people are poor. There are many children have no new clothes, do not have enough to eat.

Full article:
http://www.chinasmack.com/stories/peasant-girl-my-life-is-miserable-because-i-am-poor/