In the afternoon, we drove around town a little bit, and walked around the village to play basketball. I noticed how much cleaner this village was compared to villages near our school in Anhui Province. There was less trash thrown into the river and on the streets. And the road was nicely paved and had level concrete. After visiting many villages in our area and seeing all the litter that each village had, I expected all villages in China to be this way. But not here. There seemed to be a few reasons why our villages were so much dirtier. According to Principal Zhang, Anhui is one of the poorer provinces in China and therefore is not governed properly or not adequately funded like other more wealthy provinces. Also, most of the villages in our area are in remote, mountain areas, where it’s hard to govern because of its distance from bigger cities. In turn, the government can not provide more services to these villages, and the idea of not littering and cleaning the environment can’t be well taught. This problem definitely stems from the way the villagers think about their environment and as parents litter, children learn to do the same thing. I just hope that Pingmin’s education will teach our students to value our environment, and in turn, they can go back to their villages and influence the people around them.
It was a good night with great food and cozy sitting space, but still wished I could have gone with a teacher to their more rural village and celebrated with them. Since this village isn’t as rural and more spaced apart, I couldn’t enjoy the real village-like atmosphere I imagined. I wanted to see a sky filled with colors and smoke, and I wanted my ears to be partially deft from firecrackers being set off every 5 seconds. I wanted to eat really traditional local foods and play ma jiang with old men drunk off baijiu. I wanted to see kids running around and being way too dangerously close to the fireworks and watch the New Years Gala on a run-down TV cuddled with villagers in a small room. You know, the "real" experience. Hopefully I will have a chance later to come back and experience this.