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Amazing homeless man in Jilin enjoys reading books!Posted by Joel Martinsen, March 10, 2010 1:19 PM
Update (2010.03.12): The New Culture View followed up on the story with two additional feature articles that culminated in the man's reunion with his family.
The Chinese media continues its infatuation with homeless chic through the profile of a man who spends his nights in a hallway and his days in a bookstore — gasp! — reading books! Late last month, the rugged features and fashion sense of "Brother Sharp" (犀利哥) captivated the Chinese Internet before catching the attention of the mainstream media last week. His national fame reunited him with his family, where one hopes he'll be protected from the prying eyes of the public. Now the New Culture View has picked up the story of another astonishing homeless man. Twenty-four-year-old Zhang Yi (张义) of Changchun, Jilin Province, has been visiting a local bookstore for the past few months to read up on math and science, the same as any ordinary patron. Although the story did not originate online — a student at the Changchun Institute of Technology called in with the eyewitness account translated above — the paper linked Zhang to other cases of Internet-driven celebrity through a headline that echoes a popular online meme: Don't obsess over him; his only love is solving math problems. The Dongguan Times, which used the NCV story on its own front page, took a similar approach: "Shanzhai Brother Sharp" found in Changchun; solves problems in higher mathematics. The Chinese reading public frequently uses bookstores as reading rooms, and Zhang is no exception:
Zhang has a high-school education but appears to have family issues that prevent him from returning home. A reporter followed Zhang to the third-floor landing where he sleeps and pestered him about his life:
Update (2010.03.12): The New Culture View has followed up on the story. A reporter returned to Zhang Yi's hallway and helped him register at the local aid station. It turns out that Zhang' whose real name is Huang Xuran (黄旭冉), was born in 1980, attended graduated from Jilin Teachers' Institute of Engineering and Technology, and had a history of mental illness before his disappearance on April 20, 2009. Huang went out for a walk at 7 that morning and never came back. He made withdrawals from his bank account over the next several days, but that was the last his mother knew — she worried that he had been kidnapped and sent to work in an illegal brick kiln. The paper spoke to some of Huang's former classmates, who described him as a good student who pretty much kept to himself and who was heavily into online gaming during his last year at the school. The March 12 edition reported that Huang has been reunited with his family, nearly a year after he vanished. Links and Sources
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Comments on Amazing homeless man in Jilin enjoys reading books!
nice
Knowledge is power! Whether Xi or Li will be succeeding Hu is hard to guess; but this guy will definitely be succeeding one of them. "Mao zhuxi baozheng!"
How interesting and touching. Wish Zhang Yi the best!
And to think that we used to be able to read in the local bookshops as well...until they stopped that practice. Here I am thinking that this "reading in the bookstore" would be magnified in China, and that they'd put a stop to it due to the potential damage to the stock, but I stand corrected.
Great post!