1、1The Water Watchers of Peizhai VillageAt the entrance of Peizhai Village, next to a Chinese national flag, is a wide road extending to the other end of the village. The left side of the road is lined with twostory townhouses, and on the right is a square bigger than a soccer field, featuring an exhi
2、bition center, a cultural performance area and basketball courts. A decade ago, over 100 families living in the village still inhabited ramshackle mud-brick houses and drank water from a hand-cranked well. When strolling around the village during the day, you will only see seniors sunbathing and chi
3、ldren playing in small groups because working-age people are busy tending greenhouse vegetables and flowers, running shops on the villages commercial street, or working at Chunjiang Group, in which every villager holds a stake. The Good Life At 8: 00 a.m., Zhang Guixian, a member of the village comm
4、ittee, picks up her mop in gloved hands as usual to begin cleaning the five public washrooms in the village. She visits each of them twice a day to ensure they stay tidy. Even more 2importantly, Zhang monitors the water supply. After cleaning, Zhang drives an electric motorcycle to a 530-meter-deep
5、well where she pumps water into two storage tanks on the back of a hill. From there, the water flows to the townhouses and the commercial street through underground pipes. When the automatic water pump malfunctions, as it has done periodically, Zhang spends hours at the well pumping the water manual
6、ly. The water monitor also handles pipe maintenance. When a leak sprouted behind a sweet potato noodle shop, Zhang received an ur- gent call from her colleague Jia Dan. That day, the village was holding a sweet potato noodle festival, which had attracted merchants from near and far. A leaky pipe and
7、 limited access to water would surely put a damper on the villages sweet potato noodle business. Zhang immediately phoned a plumber and rushed to the site. It was already dark when the pipe was finally repaired. After seeing off the plumber, Zhang began to prepare dinner for her two granddaughters.
8、On her way home, Zhang bought some hot porridge, steamed stuffed buns and milk tea, favorites of her granddaughters. As she set the food down in the kitchen, she reminisced about cooking over a fire in the old days. “I used to burn coal and choke on the smoke, ” she recalled. “But 3now natural gas h
9、as replaced it. Cooking has become more convenient and affordable.” A couple of minutes after Zhang started cooking, the inviting smell of fried carrots and green peppers filled the air throughout the house. Zhangs two granddaughters sat at a tea table in the living room, the elder watching a cartoo
10、n on TV while playing with stickers and the younger swiping at a smartphone game and sipping milk tea. Zhang enjoys the girls company, even more so because her husband passed away over a decade ago and her two daughters married into nearby villages. Her son and daughter-in-law seem to be perpetually
11、 working. In the evening, Zhang sometimes listens to the news on a radio on a shelf above her bed. Further down on the shelf are several green papayas that emit a mild fragrance. Because she always leads a frugal life, some brand-new cotton-padded jackets and a pair of silver earrings that Zhang wea
12、rs at times are particularly eye-catching. “My daughter bought them for me when we went shopping downtown, ” Zhang explains with a wrinkled grin. Nowadays, her salary from the village committee and rent from a shop on the commercial street add up to more than 10,000 yuan a year, and the dividends fr
13、om Chunjiang Group 4further enhance her earnings. “A good life is a job and ample income, isnt it?” she asks rhetorically. Building a Happy Family Alongside 60-year-old Zhang Guixian, 30-year-old Jia Dan also monitors Peizhais water supply. During the summer months, Jia rises at six oclock in the mo
14、rning to go jogging and pump the water. Jias job in the village committee also includes cleaning an office building and the exhibition center and processing formalities such as medical insurance reimbursement for villagers. “Most villagers are not familiar with the government offices in the town, so
15、 the village committee helps them with things, ” notes Jia. In recent days, Jia and Zhang have been busy shopping for tableware for Peizhai Xishihui, a village-run dining hall that caters to villagers wedding and funeral banquet needshugely important events in rural Chinese tradition. “In the past,
16、the villagers usually rented tents to host banquets, which were cold in winter and hot in summer, ” Jia reveals. Since the dining hall opened in 2010, the villagers have been able to rent the spacious and wellequipped hall for only a few hundred yuan. Jia decided to work in the village so she could
17、better take 5care of her kids. She has a 3-year-old son and a 5-year-old daughter with her husband Pei Zhuanshan, who works as a salesman at Chunjiang Cement Plant. Every morning, Jia sends the kids to kindergarten before heading to work. “Sometimes I feel sorry for my kids, ” Jia admits. “I dont ha
18、ve very much time with them, especially my son. The villagers urgent problems didnt stop just because I gave birth, so I have never had much time with him.” Jia once dreamed of becoming a police officer or soldier when she was young, but serving as a capable village committee member or a family supp
19、orter is just as noble a position. In their spare time, Jia and her husband take their kids to the village playground or watch animation with them at home. Occasionally, the whole family drives to downtown Xinxiang for a fancy meal in a restaurant. On their parents birthdays, the couple will prepare
20、 a grand meal as well as a birthday cake. Mother-Daughter Dynamic In winter, the villages water pipes tend to freeze and the pump breaks down too often. Zhang Guixian and Jia Dan always tackle emerging problems together. “A pump malfunction once kept us there until 11 oclock at night, ” Jia says of
21、her worst experience on the job. “It would have been 6terrifying if I was alone. Fortunately, Auntie Zhang was right there with me.” Jia and Zhang are the only two female members of the village committee. Jia is from Xuchang, a city in central Henan Province, and Zhang hails from Shandong, a provinc
22、e bordering Henan. Chinese tradition holds that a married woman should visit the family on her side on the second day of the lunar year. However, Jia and Zhang take turns visiting their respective families so one can stay in the village to look after the water supply. “Auntie Zhang never slacks in w
23、ork and always does the toughest jobs, ” says Jia of Zhangs dedication. Years of backbreaking work have taken a toll on her body. Every day, she takes a total of eight painkillers to fight a bone spur and other aches. The pain is worthwhile to Zhang: “It is hard work, but everyone in my village now
24、has stable access to drinking water.” Jia first joined the village committee to oversee birth control, and immediately regretted her lack of work experience, considering the wide range of tasks that demanded her attention. Zhang comforted her with good advice such as, “Dont rush. Haste makes waste.”
25、 7Many in the village liken the relationship between the two women to that between mother and daughter. “Jia is really a great friend, ” Zhang remarks. “She was the first person to buy me a hamburger.” Although the pair has become close, they still disagree on some issues related to work. But, as Jia says, they “never quarrel.” Rather, each one “just speaks out her respective idea and they discuss which is more feasible.” “Walking on the right path is even more important for young people, ” Jia adds. “A good life is earned with hard work and a calm mind.”
Copyright © 2018-2021 Wenke99.com All rights reserved
工信部备案号:浙ICP备20026746号-2
公安局备案号:浙公网安备33038302330469号
本站为C2C交文档易平台,即用户上传的文档直接卖给下载用户,本站只是网络服务中间平台,所有原创文档下载所得归上传人所有,若您发现上传作品侵犯了您的权利,请立刻联系网站客服并提供证据,平台将在3个工作日内予以改正。