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Boy who lost a leg in China’s 2008 Sichuan earthquake now dances to inspire

  • Xie Haifeng’s story is one of luck and resilience and he has made it his mission to help others through adversity
  • Professional dancer owes part of his success to the city of Hong Kong and one of its doctors who helped survivors through recovery

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When the rumbling began, Xie Haifeng thought someone was shaking his bed. Perhaps one of the other 800 children in the school dormitory was being naughty. Or maybe it was a small quake. Then came the unmistakable sound of screams.

Xie, then a 15-year-old pupil at Muyi Town Middle School in the southwestern Chinese province of Sichuan, started running. He fell as the dorm building collapsed around him. When he tried to stand up, he realised something was missing. His left leg was gone.

What Xie thought was a small quake turned out to be one of the most devastating disasters in modern Chinese history. The Sichuan earthquake of May 2008 left at least 87,000 people dead and shook the country to its core. It was less than three month before Beijing would host its first Olympic Games, an opportunity to show the world its strength and ambition.
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How creative therapies help bereaved Hongkongers process unspoken grief

Success of movie The Last Dance has thrust into spotlight how residents process death of loved ones, with one NGO project manager warning painful feelings often get suppressed

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Whenever Hongkonger Christina Lau Siu-mui misses her mother who died of cancer about a year ago, she goes to her study and opens a small wooden box.

On the underside of the lid is a scene Lau painted of a tranquil sky with clouds. On the base of the box, there is a vibrant meadow filled with colourful wildflowers.

“I was picturing a peaceful scene where I lie on a meadow and look up at the blue sky, where I imagine my mom is now … as I close the box, it feels like I’m with my mom again,” the 63-year-old retired translator said.

“Art has allowed me to express feelings that words cannot capture.”

Lau crafted the box as part of her expressive art therapy sessions at the HKCCCU Kwong Yum Care Home, where her mother had stayed before she died. According to Lau, the sessions taught her how to grieve and give voice to her feelings.

“When I lost my father 30 years ago, I was overwhelmed with work and childcare, I did not process what was happening inside … and felt a strong sense of regret,” she recalled. “But by mourning my mother this time, I have reconciled with those feelings … It was a relief for me.”

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