Once left behind, he supports children of hometown


To help lead the children onto a better path, Chen set up more than 20 interest groups at the school to cultivate children's talents in a wide range of areas: guitar, Ukulele, calligraphy, painting, dancing and English. He insisted that each child should develop at least one hobby each semester, which is conducive to forming a more outgoing personality.
In April 2017, a chorus was organized at the school. All its members were left-behind children from the third grade to sixth. Wang Yulin, a music professor at Hunan University of Science and Technology in the province's Xiangtan city, directs the chorus.
Three years ago, the left-behind children Wang got to know during a visit to the school deeply impressed him, and he has decided to stay on as a volunteer chorus director ever since. He teaches the children to sing every week as he makes a round trip of more than 400 kilometers between Xiangtan city and Qidong county.
The efforts of Chen and Wang are paying off. Children in the chorus enjoy singing and many are becoming much happier. What's more, the children will represent all their left-behind peers in Hunan to perform at the Meixihu International Culture and Arts Center in Changsha, the provincial capital, in October. They will then head to Beijing for another performance at the National Theater for the Performing Arts.
"We never expected that the children would come this far when we set up the chorus," Chen said, adding that he's very proud of the students.