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The boy pictured after his arrival for classes. Photo: News.163.com

Poor Chinese boy’s freezing trek to school touches hearts

Photograph of ‘left-behind’ child from western China with his hair covered in ice after hour-long walk to classes in sub-zero temperatures widely shared on social media

A photograph of a boy from a poor family with his hair and eyebrows covered in ice after walking to school for over an hour in freezing temperatures has touched the hearts of people in China.

The picture of the child, Wang Fuman – clad in thin clothing and with ruddy cheeks from the cold – was taken at Zhuanshanbao primary school in a rural area of Zhaotong in Yunnan province.

The boy had just walked 4.5km (2.8 miles) from his home to school when a teacher took his photograph, the news website Thepaper.cn reported.

The picture shows Wang standing in class with classmates behind him laughing. The image was later widely shared on social media in China.

The headmaster of the school was quoted as saying it took the boy over an hour to walk to school each day. “The temperature in the morning was minus nine degrees Celsius,” the headmaster said.

Wang is a “left-behind child”, a term used in China to describe children from poor families whose parents work in cities away from home. He lives with his older sister and grandmother.

Wang said they burned firewood at home, but there was no heating equipment at school. “It is cold going to school, but it’s not hard,” he was quoted as saying.
The gate of the boy’s school, covered in ice. Photo: News.163.com

Wang has never left his village and he dreams of visiting Beijing.

“I want to see how pupils study there,” Wang said. His ambition is to become a police officer “because police can catch bad guys”, the report said.

Wang’s grandmother, Yao Zhaozhi told the news website the family mostly eat vegetables as meat is too expensive.

Many Chinese internet users expressed sympathy for the hardships Wang faces and offered to donate winter clothing.

“I’m crying. Left-behind children are all on their own,” one person commented.

Another said: “What you are suffering now will light up the road of your future.”

The local authorities in Yunnan and a youth development fund have launched a programme to give winter clothes to Wang and other children in the area.

We have had many requests from readers wishing to donate to the family. To find out how to contribute, please email [email protected] 

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