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Plastic surgery could give Hubei man second chance

By Tan Yingzi | China Daily Europe | Updated: 2017-01-22 15:51

A poor couple who took in a badly disfigured baby after he was abandoned two decades ago have used their life savings to pay for his facial surgery, in the hope he will one day find a job.

They are now hoping that well-wishers can help him complete the treatment and give him the chance of a better life.

Li Xianyu, 68, discovered the child she later named Zhao Xuecheng under a bridge in Xiangyang, Hubei province, in 1994.

"It was around Spring Festival and it was snowing," she recalls, adding that she had been on her way home from selling vegetables and heard the soft crying of a baby. She searched a nearby bush and found the child.

 Plastic surgery could give Hubei man second chance

Zhao Xuecheng, whose face was severely burned during his childhood, longs for a normal life. Ran Wen / For China Daily

"His face was totally burned, so much so that I could hardly tell his facial features," she says. "I immediately realized he'd been abandoned."

Li took the child home to her husband, Zhao Liniu. He recalls: "I was afraid the baby would die at any minute due to his severe wounds."

They named him Xuecheng, which means "happening in snow".

After the Spring Festival holiday, the couple took the boy to a hospital but could not afford the cost of plastic surgery, which would have been tens of thousands of yuan. They barely made ends meet by planting and selling vegetables and had little money saved.

So they bought some medicine and fed him milk powder and rice soup. After three months, the scars on the boy's face began to heal.

When he reached the age of 7, he was rejected by schools because of his appearance. Finally, one accepted him but he could not bear the discrimination and bullying and dropped out a year later.

The couple, who only had primary school education themselves, taught him at home. When their vegetable business struggled, they began picking through garbage for recyclables to make money.

Zhao Xuecheng is now 22 but has been unable to find work because of his disfigurement, Li says.

"We are getting old and he has to making a living by himself. All we can do is use our savings, 30,000 yuan ($4,370; 4,085 euros; 3,542), to get him the surgery he needs."

This month, the family arrived at Chongqing's Southwest Hospital affiliated with the Third Military Medical School. The 30,000 yuan covered the cost of the first surgery.

Now their son is out of the hospital and in six months he will have another operation, which is expected to cost more than 80,000 yuan. After the couple's plight was reported by local media, donations began pouring in to help cover the medical bills, Li says.

tanyingzi@chinadaily.com.cn

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