The Diary of Ma Yan (13 page)

In Ma Yan's little house in the village of Zhangjiashu, a photograph of a class of French schoolchildren was hung with pride on the wall next to the family photographs. On the back of the photo the students had written, “Carry on with your schooling. French children are with you.”

Pierre Haski and Ma Yan

As soon as the diary was published as a book, the responses started pouring in. A teacher in the east of France, whose pupils came from a particularly poor background and had real schooling difficulties, wrote to us to say that he regularly read the story of Ma Yan to his students, adding, “Some of them were genuinely touched by Ma Yan's story and expressed a desire to send her something or at least to try and correspond with her.” What resulted were some twenty letters, drawings, and poems addressed to Ma Yan. Each of them had a ballpoint pen taped to it—a response to the diary entry in which she says she hadn't eaten so that she could buy a pen.

Dozens of letters from young French people, moved and indeed disturbed by Ma Yan's story, came to us, and through us went on to Ma Yan. The teenage magazine
L'Actu
voted Ma Yan “best-loved of the year 2002.”

Indeed, the publication of Ma Yan's diary led to a great deal of support for the Association for the Children of Ningxia. The initial handful of members increased to three hundred by the end of the year. Donations allowed it to expand its work. At the beginning of the second school term in February 2003, the association gave out more grants, mostly to students at the middle school in Yuwang and the elementary school in Zhangjiashu. Children who would have had to leave school could now continue their education.

The association has also donated computers and purchased books to create a library at the Yuwang middle school. Additionally, the association has undertaken work to benefit the whole community and is exploring the possibility of digging a well in Zhangjiashu so that the villagers have clean water.

It is difficult to summarize the utter change in Ma Yan's life. A girl who never had enough to eat and seemed doomed to give up school and take up the miserable life of a village peasant is now a celebrity in Europe and to a certain extent in China as well. Thanks to the royalties from her book, she can eat her fill.

A Chinese magazine in December 2002 summed up the impact the book has had on its young heroine: “Ma Yan is happy, but stressed out!” Happy, most definitely, because she and her family have moved out of dire need, have proper winter clothes, and have bought some sheep and also a new television, which sits at the very center of the single room that is still their home. Happy, too, because she knows that the education she values so much is now secure for her. In 2004 she started high school in the city of Wuzhong, three hundred kilometers away from her home village. Ma Yan may attend a university too, if she works well—something that was almost unthinkable for a native of this impoverished village.

But she's also anxious, as the magazine said. First of all because in this village, like anywhere else in the world, success provokes jealousy and hostility. And also because Ma Yan has become a “model,” an example to her comrades, which means she isn't allowed to make mistakes. On top of it all, she's had to assume a status that is challenging for a young peasant girl: it has involved being flown to Beijing to talk on national television. In March 2004 she was flown to Paris for a book fair, and there she was interviewed by media from around the world. The
New York Times
said of her diary, “Thanks to its publication, her family is no longer poor, and 250 Ningxia youngsters, mostly girls,
now have scholarships to continue studying.” The number of scholarships had grown to three hundred and fifty by the end of the year.

Chinese national television interviewed Ma Yan and her mother no less than three times, which gave her story extraordinary impact. Her diary, described as “legendary” by the Chinese media, is now published in China itself. Even Ma Yan's mother has begun to learn how to write.

But this courageous and intelligent young woman has taken on these changes with modesty and generosity. When we visited her in February 2003, she gave us a handwritten letter in which she made a solemn announcement:

I'm an ordinary pupil. I had help from certain friends. Today I want to offer love so that more poor students can enter into the world of knowledge through education. So that they can slowly make their dreams come true. So that they can build a better future for our country, our native land. If everyone offers up a little love, the world will be better. I want to give 25 percent of all my royalties from
The Diary of Ma Yan
to the Association for the Children of Ningxia.

Pierre Haski
Beijing, 2005

Ma Yan and her mother wave farewell.

Find out more about the Association for the
Children of Ningxia at its website:
www.enfantsduningxia.org

 

Or write to the association at:
Enfants du Ningxia
45, rue Notre-Dame de Nazareth
75003 Paris
France

Acknowledgments

Our sincerest thanks go to translator He Yanping, who has also been engaged in aid work for the children of the Ningxia region; to the photographer, Wang Zheng, who was our guide; to Sarah Neiger, who was instrumental in setting up this adventure; and to all those, both in China and Europe, who have supported Ma Yan and the children of Ningxia.

About the Author

M
A
Y
AN
was a teenager living in Ningxia, China, when she wrote these diary entries at age thirteen and fourteen. Thanks to the publication of her diary, over 350 Ningxia children, including Ma Yan, received scholarships to continue their studies through The Association for the Children of Ningxia.

Of her own ambition, Ma Yan said, “I want to study journalism. My purpose is to keep the whole world informed, to report the poverty and real life in this area.” The success of this book gave her the opportunity to study at a university in France.

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Credits

Cover photograph © 2005 by Howard Huang

Cover design by Alison Klapthor

TED & ME
. Copyright © 2012 by Dan Gutman. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

EPub Edition © May 2009 ISBN: 9780061918520

Version 12142012

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*
Students must bring their own materials. The school has no supplies, few teaching aids, and no library.

*
Ma Yan's mother suffered from terrible stomach pains and sometimes spat blood.She was diagnosed with an ulcer and finally treated in 2002. At the time she wrote her diary, Ma Yan and her family did not know what was wrong with Bai Juhua.

*
There is a head student for each subject. The head collects and distributes homework and helps enforce discipline.

*
The villagers joked that as the slope settled lower and lower, the family house, located on a small hill, was moving farther and farther away—just like the island of Taiwan was distancing itself (politically) more and more from mainland China.

*
October 1 marks the start of a week-long holiday celebrating the founding of the People's Republic of China.

*
The reference is to Ma Yan's father, who must have had a dream like the one in a Chinese legend in which a man dreamed that the mountain in front of his house was flattened.

*
Ma Yan's father had been away working on a construction site in Inner Mongolia for the last three months.

*
Bai Juhua's saying means that one's own children are the most important thing to a man or woman.

*
Ma Yan has heard through the rumor mill that she hasn't gotten into the school. She will therefore go back to school in Yuwang.

*
The government has started a program to grow trees.

*
One of Ma Shunji's younger brothers from the family that adopted him.

*
Ma Yan has the week off in celebration of the national holiday.

*
A famous twentieth-century philosopher.

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