| Shandan Bailie School | ||
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| Part
of the old Shandan Bailie School, c1947 |
The new Shandan Bailie School of Agriculture,Forestry and Animal Husbandry opened in 1987 | |
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The
School's history In July 1945 tragedy struck when George died of Tetanus after stubbing his toe while playing basketball with the boys. He was buried just outside the South Gate of the town and Rewi took over as Headmaster. He named it the Shandan Bailie School after his friend, the American missionary Joseph Bailie, who had very enlightened ideas on education. The timetable allowed for "half-work, half-study". In the mornings half the school was engaged in practical tasks, while the other half had formal lessons. In the afternoons the two halves switched over. An amazing variety of practical skills were taught. There were pottery kilns, paper-making, glass-blowing, spinning and weaving of cotton and wool. There was a leather section, where the hides were scraped, leather polished and dyed and jackets and shoes made. They had a flour mill and they made sugar from beet. There was a farm where they ran sheep sent from supporters in New Zealand. They had a coal mine and a power plant which provided electricity to the whole complex. The students were illiterate peasant boys (and later girls) who were trained to become useful technicians in a backward country which needed their services badly. Rewi gathered around him a number of foreign teachers with particular skills which they could pass on to the students. Quite a few came from New Zealand, including Bob and Barbara Spencer, a doctor and nurse who were sent out by the aid organisation CORSO. They set up the school hospital which was the only one for hundreds of miles and took many outpatients every day who had often travelled great distances. There was a transport section with more than 20 trucks purchased from Gung Ho, which travelled as far away as Chongqing and even the coast, and earned good revenue for the school. The machine shop had a machine-tool section, blacksmith's shop and foundry which used local iron-ore, coal and scrap iron hauled up by truck from Lanzhou. On October 1st 1949 the Peoples Republic of China was proclaimed in Beijing but there was still fighting in the Shandan area between the retreating Nationalists and the Communists. It was a very dangerous period but the teachers and students had a few rifles and guarded their school. When the Communists arrived Rewi handed over the trucks with senior boys and a New Zealand teacher, Max Wilkinson, as drivers to help the victorious PLA (Peoples Liberation Army). By this time the Bailie Schools had trained thousands of young people in the skills which were now urgently in demand and they soon found useful work all over the country. In 1952 the Shandan school was transferred to Lanzhou to become the Bailie Oil School. Shortly afterwards a great earthquake hit the Shandan region and almost every building in Shandan was destroyed. When he was well over 80 years of age he conceived a plan for a new Shandan Bailie School. This time the aim was to meet the present-day needs of the region. West Gansu is still one of the poorest parts of China, largely because the peasants have not been able to keep their farming in balance with nature. Deforestation and overgrazing by goats and sheep have caused erosion and the advance of the desert. Rewi's idea was for a school where the young people could be trained in modern techniques and at the same time, learn to preserve the land. With the support of the Gansu government
and friends from overseas, including the New Zealand China Friendship
Society, a new school was built and opened on April 21st 1987, the 60th
anniversary of Rewi's arrival in China. The NZCFS was represented by a
New Zealand teacher, Tom Newnham, whom Rewi had invited to teach at the
school. The Society has also organised other aid, such as a container of materials in 1987 |
| NEW WOODWORKING SHOP AT SHANDAN BAILLIE SCHOOL | |
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The new woodworking shop has been set up in the old refectory. The power tools were bought and installed last year by Duan Zhaobing and Fred Irvine, woodwork teacher from Hamilton. Now 16 full-time and 25 part-time students are studying woodwork at SBS. |
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A student tries his hand at the circular saw while others look on. Duan Zhaobing took these photos, so he does not appear. |
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Three students put together a school desk. The shop has already made 500 desks with stools for the other schools in Shandan, as well as beds, cabinets and other pieces of furniture.
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Vice-Principal Wang Zigang tries his hand with a Chinese plane. (Note traditional Chinese crosscut saw in foreground)
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Principal Alison Rosanowski welcomes Rewi Alley Scholar Peng Dongjun and National President Bill Willmott to Darfield High School, sister school of the Shandan Bailie School, 5 November 2000. |
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