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January 8, 2014

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Activities ease pain of left-behind women

In Lianchi Village of Yongren County, Yunnan Province, 43-year-old Li Fumei is dancing with other women in a circle at the village square.

Li’s husband is a migrant worker in neighboring Guangdong Province. Her only son is a driver in Fujian Province.

Li’s husband and son only come home once every year during the Spring Festival. The rest of the time, Li stays home alone taking care of her father-in-law.

Lianchi Village has a total of 1,020 households, with an average of two people from each household working as migrant workers. The left-behind are all women, children or seniors.

To seek better-paying jobs, more and more married men in the village, unhappy with their small farming income at home, make the exodus to cities after the Spring Festival, leaving their loved ones behind.

The wives who stay in the countryside not only bear the loneliness but also toil to keep their homes running.

To improve the lives of these left-behind women, the Lianchi Village committee has built a cultural square and set up an art troupe to organize dancing and singing activities for those left at home. “When I was home by myself, I sometimes felt lonely. Now I often come to the square to dance and sing with others. I love singing and dancing, plus chatting with other people makes me feel better,” Li Fumei said.

China now has nearly 50 million left-behind women in rural areas, according to the All-China Women’s Federation.

Research conducted by the China Agricultural University also showed that left-behind women have taken up more than 85 percent of both farm work and household chores.

In recent years, the Chinese government, along with non-governmental organizations, has made many attempts to help alleviate the loneliness and stress of left-behind women.

According to a decision approved at the Third Plenary Session of the 18th CPC Central Committee last month, the government pledged to improve a care service network for rural children left behind by their parents as well as for women and the elderly in rural areas.

Since 2010, the federation began to build “homes for women” nationwide to provide women with a place to organize entertainment activities, give psychological guidance and offer legal consultation to protect their rights. Now there are a total of 745,000 “homes for women” across China.

They also provide loans to women who are willing and able to start their own businesses.

 




 

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