Special report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
BEIJING, July 8 (Xinhua) -- Instead of going the
typical route and opting for high-paying jobs with excellent prospects, many new
university graduates in China are deciding to rough it with positions in small
towns hit hard by the May 12 earthquake.
Wen Li, an electronics major at Beijing's elite
Peking University, was one of them. He chucked his offer with a foreign company
based in Chengdu, capital of Sichuan Province, and instead headed for Mianzhu,
one of the worst-hit quake areas.
Three other undergraduates from Renmin University,
Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications and Southwest Jiaotong
University, all first-class institutes, joined him.
They will work at the Dongfang Steam Turbine Works, a
Mianzhu factory that lost nearly 700 workers in the quake. Liu Zhiqian,
publicity official with the factory, said another 1,000 workers were injured,
about a tenth of the total staff.
"We all went to high school in Mianzhu," Wen said.
"Our decision was not just a spur of the moment. We thought about it for quite a
long time. I know that I have to bear the consequences of my decision. Since we
choose to work there, we are bound to work hard."
Long before graduation time, normally in late June,
these "elite" students had secured employment contracts with decent employers.
Breaching such agreements would usually cost either party a fine equal to one
month's salary.
Their employers-to-be showed understanding and let
them go without a fine.
Wen currently had no idea how much he would get paid
at Dongfang, but he remained optimistic. "They have dormitories and a canteen.
That's enough for me."
Liu said the factory welcomed the students. "This
reflects changes in their world value. They used to choose well-paid jobs in
coastal places only. It proves they are now willing to make sacrifices."
These young people were hoping to help the quake
areas through their own efforts.
Wang Bin, a postgraduate student at Shaanxi
Province's top Xi'an Jiaotong University, dumped his job in Hangzhou, capital of
the prosperous coastal Zhejiang Province. He then applied to work at the
Dongfang Steam Turbine Works too.
"The quake-affected areas need people like us. I am
ready to fit into the local society and be a Sichuan resident," he said.
Cao Lili, another undergraduate from Nankai
University of Tianjin Municipality, persuaded her employer to give her one year
off for volunteer work in the relatively underdeveloped areas hit by the quake.
"I was moved by those volunteers in relief work and
would like to follow them," she said.
Other grads chose jobs in quake areas despite
opposition from their family and friends.
Bai Ruirui, a University of Science and Technology
Beijing undergraduate, had received an offer from a state-owned company in
Deyang, one of the worst hit cities, before the earthquake.
But his parents opposed him taking the job, worrying
about the bad conditions in the quake zone. "I talked again and again with them,
convincing them that I will be all right and the rehabilitation will need my
skills," he said.
Yang Peizhi, a postgraduate from Tianjin, had
hesitated at taking a job at Dongfang Electric based in Sichuan.
He was on the train to attend the interview with the company when the quake hit.
"I saw collapsed houses, injured people and cracked roads. I could not forget those eyes that sought help. That's why I finally said yes to the company."