Although still being haunted by the painful memories of the
devastating floods occurring last Friday, survivors, particularly
pupils at a school in northeast China's Heilongjiang
Province, have started to recall the acts of heroism seen
during the rare inundation.
"I was dumbstruck by the fearful torrents and would probably
have been washed away by floodwater if not being dragged to the
roof by my teacher Wang Zhanhong," said Pang Xiangqian, a
fifth-grader at the Central Primary School in Shalan Township of
Ning'an City.
Flash floods caused by mountain torrents hit Pang's school at
around 2:00 PM on June 10, when 351 pupils were in class. The
torrents completely tumbled the school buildings and killed 95
students and four villagers by Thursday.
Ten students were still missing by Thursday afternoon, according
to the rescue headquarters.
In order to rescue students from the sudden calamity, many
teachers at the school smashed classroom windows with arms and
helped students escape from the onrushing waters, which surged by10
centimeters every minute.
"I did not feel pain though my arms were bleeding from breaking
the windows," said teacher Sha Xianjing, who saved more than 20
students in the floods.
Although her bravery was later praised by Chinese State
Councilor Chen Zhili, Sha still felt sorry for failing to save all
students at her class, a due responsibly as she thought.
Busy with coordinating rescue efforts, school principal Xu Dejun
hid worries about his own daughter, missing in the floods, deep in
his heart, and burst into tears when he learned his wife was
hospitalized for not knowing the whereabouts of their daughter
after working some 30 hours in defiance of floods.
In addition to their teachers' bravery, school children, aged 10
on average, also showed courage to face up to a real risk of life
for the first time in their lives.
The 14-year-old Wang Zhenchao, along with other boys in the
class, leant against the classroom door to stem the floodwater from
rushing in too quickly.
Although Wang and his peers later had to retreat from the door
and stand on the windowsill for two hours before being rescued, he
told Xinhua that he was really proud of what he and his classmates
did in the face-to-face encounter with danger.
"Many of my classmates were washed away and we were scared to
tears," recalled student Sun Zhongrui, saying he would never forget
the moment when his classmate Wang Haicheng led them to perk up by
singing a song.
"Wang was later engulfed by floods," said a weeping Sun on
Thursday in Shalan Township.
Around 150 survivor students resumed class Monday morning in a
local middle school, located some two km from the flood-hit primary
school. Teachers from the nearby Mudanjiang City rushed to help
educational efforts and provide psychological guidance.
About 1,300 hectares of farmland were inundated, 55 houses
collapsed and 1,800 villagers' life were affected by the
catastrophe, for which Heilongjiang Provincial governor would ask
for administrative penalties for his "unshirkable
responsibility."
(Xinhua News Agency June 17, 2005)