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Widow who saved epileptic boy fears for his future

By Tian Xuefei and Zhou Huiying in Harbin | China Daily | Updated: 2017-12-01 08:23

Dabao became a full member of the family after formal procedures. Yet the happiness was short-lived. At the age of 2, the infant had yet to speak.

He was glassy-eyed and twitched constantly.

An assessment at hospital in Beijing revealed the cause as cortical dysplasia, a congenital condition of brain malformation with attendant epilepsy.

Yang recalled with anguish the day she was informed: "He was so cute when I found him. I never imagined he would grow up sick."

Under pressure from the people around them, Yang's husband and mother started to waver.

"They tried to persuade me to give up Dabao and have my own baby," Yang said.

"But he had been abandoned once. How could I be so cruel as to abandon him again? What he really needed was more love and care."

Finally, her husband relented and agreed that they raise Dabao together.

This brief moment of hesitation aside, Yang's husband was her biggest supporter, right from the days when she became known as the person to go to with an abandoned child.

"At one point we were raising two infants and four children in our 12-square-meter bungalow," she said.

"We even thought about running an orphanage. But it would have been too much, given our limits with space and money."

She sent 13 children to welfare homes, and seven were returned to their parents. "Some of them later came back to visit, and we would get together for a family meal. I never felt regret about the sacrifices I made," Yang said.

Her main fear now is for Dabao's future. Traditional Chinese medicine has proved successful at treating his epilepsy, and since the age of 10 he has been able to speak a few simple words.

Yet since her husband died of cancer in 2006, she has been raising their adopted son alone.

"He asked me to take good care of Dabao before he died," she said. "I promised him I would never abandon our son, no matter what difficulties we face."

Now Yang's wish is to find a special education class that can teach Dabao how to be self-sufficient.

"I'm older now and can't look after him forever," she said.

"I want him to be able to take care of himself after I die."

Contact the writers at zhouhuiying@chinadaily.com.cn

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