Zhe Peixian, 41, grew up in a small mountainous village of the Sani
people near the popular tourist resort of the Stone Forest in
Shilin County, Southwest China's Yunnan Province.
The Sani people are a branch of the Yi ethnicity.
The second of a family with five daughters, Zhe Peixian started to
work in the fields in her early teens and learned wrestling with
other boys in the village, as wrestling is a favorite pastime of
Sani men. In middle school, she was selected to compete in the
women's wrestling contest in Kunming, the provincial capital.
She not only won the championship but also began to develop new
ideas about changing the lives of herself and her own village.
"I
always thought of living a new life different from my elders when I
graduated from middle school and returned home," Zhe recalled.
Actions spoke louder than words and she became skilled in every
aspect of farm work. While proving herself a versatile and
hardworking farmhand, Zhe also won the confidence of the
villagers.
At
18, she was put in charge of women's affairs in the village. She
began to browse every newspaper and magazine she could find in
search of information. She led the villagers to obtain and grow
high-yield corn and in transforming their cooking stoves to save
coal and firewood.
In
the middle of the 1980s, she met a leading art teacher in the
province by chance, who showed an interest in the embroidery on her
Sani costume. This inspired her to organize an embroidery group in
the village. "Embroidery has helped raise the economic position of
local women," Zhe said.
After joining the local township administration she has gradually
moved up from the director of women's affairs to chairperson of the
township People's Congress.
The first problem she began to address as township women affairs'
director was that 80 percent of village women were illiterate. "In
some households, the elder brother could be pursuing a postgraduate
degree but his younger sister was illiterate," she recalled.
She started a literacy campaign. Efforts spanning 20 years have
enabled 80 percent of women to learn enough to help them with their
farm work and social activities.
In
January, she was elected as a deputy to the 10th National People's
Congress. "For several generations, the Sani people did not expect
their women would leave the mountains to travel to Beijing and join
discussions of important national affairs," said Wan Rongguang, her
husband.
Zhe knows what she is doing in Beijing. She has written a proposal
about the protection of the ecological environment of the Stone
Forest so that the largest lime stone forest in the world will be
listed in the world register for natural heritage.
(China Daily March 5, 2003)
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