Jumat, 05 September 2014

Perjalanan Sekolah Berbahaya Bagian 2: Tiongkok

Berikut ini perjalanan ke sekolah yang berbahaya di pedalaman Tiongkok.

Gulu, China

Anak SD dari desa Gulu mengendarai seekor keledai, dan kakeknya menyertainya. Gulu adalah sebuah desa di pegunungan terpencil Cina yang terletak di taman nasional, daerahnya penuh dengan ngarai, tebing curam dan batu-batu menggantung. Sekolah dasar di desa tersebut mungkin yang paling terpencil di dunia. Sekolah itu terletak di lereng gunung, dan jalur dari dasar ke sekolah memakan waktu lima jam.


Children walk along a narrow mountain road to get to school in Bizhie, Guizhou Province in southwest China. Picture: HAP / Quirky China News / Rex Features

Children who attend school, face many dangers on the way to it, and have to go on the track, with a width of 0.5 meters, with a cliff on one side. Picture: Sipa Press / Rex Features
 

Sumber: http://www.dailyfresher.com/2013/03/extreme-road-to-school.html

BANGO Elementary School is located halfway up the mountain, and every day the students from the nearby village Genguan have to climb up the narrow winding path carved into the mountain. The path cut through the mountain. In some places, its width is less than 0.5 meters, so the children have to walk a chain and press in the mountain, if someone wants to squeeze past. According to the director Xu Liangfan in school is 49 children. Picture: HAP / Quirky China News / Rex Features

Sumber: http://www.dailyfresher.com/2013/03/extreme-road-to-school.html


Gangluo, Sichuan, Tiongkok


Master Li Guilin helps children to climb on one of the five rickety wooden stairs to get to school on a cliff at 2,800 m above sea level, in the area Gangluo, Sichuan Province, China. Children spend in school a week before repeat dangerous journey to get home for the weekend … Picture: Quirky China News / Rex Features



Wooden stairs leading to the school, have been replaced by a metal staircase that makes the climb much easier and safer. Picture: Quirky China News / Rex Features

Miao Jung, Guizhou, Tiongkok

The children are in class Donzhong (which literally means “cave”) – an elementary school in the village of Miao Jung District, Guizhou Province in southwest China. The school was built in a huge, the size of the plane, a natural cave carved into the mountain over thousands of years by wind, water and seismic shifts. Picture: REUTERS / China Daily

Children go to school, using a “bridge” of the chairs after the floods in Changzhou City, Jiangsu Province, China. Picture: Quirky China News / Rex Features
 http://www.dailyfresher.com/2013/03/extreme-road-to-school.html

Duszyanguan, Sichuan, Tiongkok

Zhao Dzhihong and her four-year daughter Ji Yi cross broken bridge during a snowfall to get to school in Dutszyanguan, Sichuan Province, China. The only connection the village Chavan with the outside world is a wooden bridge. However, the bridge was damaged by a flood, and now is in a dangerous state, dangerously skewed to one side. Picture: Quirky China News / Rex Features


 http://www.dailyfresher.com/2013/03/extreme-road-to-school.html

Mache, Hubei, Tiongkok

A woman carries a table, while the little girl is a chair in the school in Macheng, Hubei Province, China, where elementary school students should bring their own tables and chairs. Picture: Imaginechina / Rex Features


Five-year Lou Sealing goes behind his desk with his mother’s bike for the first day of school in Macheng, China. In urban schools educate 5,000 children, but there are only about 2000 tables. Thus, more than 3000 children go to school with their tables and chairs, as their parents’ generation. Some children even use the old tables of their parents. Picture: China Foto Press / Barcroft Media

http://www.dailyfresher.com/2013/03/extreme-road-to-school.html


Students carry their things, going to school out of the house on a mountain trail in Dahua Yao Autonomous County, southwest Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Since the children live in the mountains far away from the village school, the majority of them remain in school for the entire school year and returned home for the summer and other holidays. Picture: KeystoneUSA-ZUMA / Rex Features

http://www.dailyfresher.com/2013/03/extreme-road-to-school.html

Desa Dekun, Guizhou, Tiongkok

To get to school every day, children in a mountain village in China, have to cross hundreds of meters deep valley on shaky, hand-made cable car. Rural residents who live in the village Dekun in Guizhou Province in southwest China, earlier made the journey on foot, and it took 5 hours, but in 2002 the local Hui constructed simple cable car. Picture: Quirky China News / Rex Features

http://www.dailyfresher.com/2013/03/extreme-road-to-school.html

Zhang Jiawan, Tiongkok



Anxious parents of 'Zhang Jiawan' village have no other choice rather to let brave school-children clamber down these dangerous ladders if they want to get an education .. as the school situated in valley below .







The mountain-top village of only 100 residents in Hunan province, southern China is surrounded by sheer drops on every side, which makes it cut off from the outside world.

Sumber: http://www.yettrue.com/2013/04/schoolchildren-scale-sheer-cliffs-on.html

Pili, China

125-Mile Journey To A Boarding School Through The Mountains, Pili, China

 


  Sumber
 






Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar