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How one rural village in mainland China is breaking the cycle of ‘left-behind’ children and leading mothers back home

  • Many parents in rural parts of mainland China have to leave their hometowns – and families – to work in cities, which can affect children’s development
  • With the help of an HSBC-funded programme, a single mother was able to start a business in her Guangdong village and remain with her daughter

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Nine-year-old Liang Yonger loves books, and her favourite activity is reading fairy tales with her mother.

But this girl growing up in Changliu village in Guangdong province knows that is a pleasure many of her friends do not get to enjoy, as they are “left-behind” children. In this rural village, these children are being raised by grandparents or other relatives because their parents have moved away to work in distant cities.

“I don’t think they’re actually happy, because it has been a long time since they have seen their parents,” Yonger says.

She understands their feelings because she was once a left-behind child herself. Her mother, Liang Manchan, had to leave the village to find work that would financially support her family. Yonger was left in the care of her grandparents during that time.

Liang Yonger with her mother, Liang Manchan, who had left their village to find work in the city but decided to return so they could be together every day.
Liang Yonger with her mother, Liang Manchan, who had left their village to find work in the city but decided to return so they could be together every day.

Liang, who is a single mother, recalls: “Every time I came back home, I would see her all dirty, and she often ran outside to play instead of studying. It made my heart ache, and I felt I should come back to take care of her.”

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