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'Mother Wu' remains loyal to her island home

By ZOU SHUO | China Daily | Updated: 2023-09-04 09:17

Wu Quansui reads a story to students at her school. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Sansha Yongxing School is located in Sansha city, Yongxing Island, which is administered by Hainan, China's southernmost province.

Teacher Wu Quansui has worked in the school's kindergarten for six years. Many of her pupils call her "Mother Wu", and her closeness with the students is the main reason the 29-year-old has stayed on the island long after many of her peers have left.

The clean sand and breathtakingly beautiful clear water surrounding the island can be deceptive because those benefits are accompanied by a scorching sun, heat, humidity and lack of fresh water, vegetables and fruit, Wu said.

She is a graduate of Qiongtai Normal University in Haikou, Hainan, and her teachers there helped found the Sansha Yongxing School, which opened in 2015.

"Back then, I knew that our university would select graduates to work at the school, so when the enrollment notice was published I signed up immediately," she said.

The conditions were not good when she first arrived on the island, and a boat carried daily necessities to the isolated community once a week. As there was little meat, the teachers mainly ate cabbages and carrots, and they also lacked fresh water, she said, adding that they had to use seawater in the shower.

"I have never regretted my decision, because I know that the teachers who came to the school at the beginning had even worse conditions. Moreover, I have formed very close relationships with my students and their families," Wu said.

The school has 32 kindergarten pupils and eight primary school students, ranging from the first to the third grade.

Unlike in other schools, the teachers at the Yongxing school spend most of the day with their students.

"We don't have much to do as there is not much entertainment on this small island, so after the students have eaten dinner, they come back to the school and play with us. Sometimes, they spend more time with us than with their parents," Wu said.

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