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DUKAS_12049450_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(8) UGANDA-GULU-DENIS OPOKA-FAMILY
(091117) -- GULU, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Denis Opoka (1st R) and his brother and sister carry water home at Ajulu village, in Gulu district, northern Uganda, on Oct. 20, 2009.
Denis Opoka, 14 years old, his younger sister Innocent Apio, nine years old, and his 12-year-old brother Samuel Owen live at Ajulu village, Patiko sub-county in the war-ravaged Gulu district, about 350 kilometers off Kampala, capital of Uganda. Denis Opoka runs the family after they lost their parents to the Lord Resistance Army, a Ugandan rebel group.
Living in their mud-built hut in Ajulu village, Opoka always tries to come up with a way to keep them fed and educated. They opened several small patches of farmland around the hut, planting maize, sweet potato and bean. The harvest, however, could barely sustain them after drought ruined the first season early this year. From time to time, the Opoka would work in the neighbor's garden in exchange for a little money to buy soap, candle or salt.
Opoka is sitting in Primary Seven, for the second year, after he failed to raise about 150,000 Ugandan shillings (about 85 U.S. dollars) as extraordinary fees for Senior One last year though he passed the exams with an equivalent of B. The siblings are luckier to get education at a nearby school, Ajulu Model Primary School only five minutes walk from their home.
Unfortunately, a paraffin-lit lamp, the only thing that can extend their study time after sunset, was stolen recently, leaving them depending on candles borrowed from a neighbor, so Opoka has to check the homework of his siblings before sunset.
Opoka's dream is to join a vocational technical institute so that he can get a job to pay school fees for his brother and sister. (Xinhua/Tian Ye) (axy)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049447_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(19) UGANDA-GULU-DENIS OPOKA-FAMILY
(091117) -- GULU, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Innocent Apio waits for her two brothers after school in front of their hut at Ajulu village, in Gulu district, northern Uganda, on Oct. 20, 2009.
Denis Opoka, 14 years old, his younger sister Innocent Apio, nine years old, and his 12-year-old brother Samuel Owen live at Ajulu village, Patiko sub-county in the war-ravaged Gulu district, about 350 kilometers off Kampala, capital of Uganda. Denis Opoka runs the family after they lost their parents to the Lord Resistance Army, a Ugandan rebel group.
Living in their mud-built hut in Ajulu village, Opoka always tries to come up with a way to keep them fed and educated. They opened several small patches of farmland around the hut, planting maize, sweet potato and bean. The harvest, however, could barely sustain them after drought ruined the first season early this year. From time to time, the Opoka would work in the neighbor's garden in exchange for a little money to buy soap, candle or salt.
Opoka is sitting in Primary Seven, for the second year, after he failed to raise about 150,000 Ugandan shillings (about 85 U.S. dollars) as extraordinary fees for Senior One last year though he passed the exams with an equivalent of B. The siblings are luckier to get education at a nearby school, Ajulu Model Primary School only five minutes walk from their home.
Unfortunately, a paraffin-lit lamp, the only thing that can extend their study time after sunset, was stolen recently, leaving them depending on candles borrowed from a neighbor, so Opoka has to check the homework of his siblings before sunset.
Opoka's dream is to join a vocational technical institute so that he can get a job to pay school fees for his brother and sister. (Xinhua/Tian Ye) (axy)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049444_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(13) UGANDA-GULU-DENIS OPOKA-FAMILY
(091117) -- GULU, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Denis Opoka (C) and his brother and sister have meal at Ajulu village, in Gulu district, northern Uganda, on Oct. 20, 2009.
Denis Opoka, 14 years old, his younger sister Innocent Apio, nine years old, and his 12-year-old brother Samuel Owen live at Ajulu village, Patiko sub-county in the war-ravaged Gulu district, about 350 kilometers off Kampala, capital of Uganda. Denis Opoka runs the family after they lost their parents to the Lord Resistance Army, a Ugandan rebel group.
Living in their mud-built hut in Ajulu village, Opoka always tries to come up with a way to keep them fed and educated. They opened several small patches of farmland around the hut, planting maize, sweet potato and bean. The harvest, however, could barely sustain them after drought ruined the first season early this year. From time to time, the Opoka would work in the neighbor's garden in exchange for a little money to buy soap, candle or salt.
Opoka is sitting in Primary Seven, for the second year, after he failed to raise about 150,000 Ugandan shillings (about 85 U.S. dollars) as extraordinary fees for Senior One last year though he passed the exams with an equivalent of B. The siblings are luckier to get education at a nearby school, Ajulu Model Primary School only five minutes walk from their home.
Unfortunately, a paraffin-lit lamp, the only thing that can extend their study time after sunset, was stolen recently, leaving them depending on candles borrowed from a neighbor, so Opoka has to check the homework of his siblings before sunset.
Opoka's dream is to join a vocational technical institute so that he can get a job to pay school fees for his brother and sister. (Xinhua/Tian Ye) (axy)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049441_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(7) UGANDA-GULU-DENIS OPOKA-FAMILY
(091117) -- GULU, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Innocent Apio helps to prepare for dinner at Ajulu village, in Gulu district, northern Uganda, on Oct. 20, 2009.
Denis Opoka, 14 years old, his younger sister Innocent Apio, nine years old, and his 12-year-old brother Samuel Owen live at Ajulu village, Patiko sub-county in the war-ravaged Gulu district, about 350 kilometers off Kampala, capital of Uganda. Denis Opoka runs the family after they lost their parents to the Lord Resistance Army, a Ugandan rebel group.
Living in their mud-built hut in Ajulu village, Opoka always tries to come up with a way to keep them fed and educated. They opened several small patches of farmland around the hut, planting maize, sweet potato and bean. The harvest, however, could barely sustain them after drought ruined the first season early this year. From time to time, the Opoka would work in the neighbor's garden in exchange for a little money to buy soap, candle or salt.
Opoka is sitting in Primary Seven, for the second year, after he failed to raise about 150,000 Ugandan shillings (about 85 U.S. dollars) as extraordinary fees for Senior One last year though he passed the exams with an equivalent of B. The siblings are luckier to get education at a nearby school, Ajulu Model Primary School only five minutes walk from their home.
Unfortunately, a paraffin-lit lamp, the only thing that can extend their study time after sunset, was stolen recently, leaving them depending on candles borrowed from a neighbor, so Opoka has to check the homework of his siblings before sunset.
Opoka's dream is to join a vocational technical institute so that he can get a job to pay school fees for his brother and sister. (Xinhua/Tian Ye) (axy)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049464_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(16)MIDEAST-GAZA-MONA KHADER
(091117) -- GAZA STRIP, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Mona Khader's cousin plays at the debris near the tent, in which Mona lives in the Gaza Strip, on Oct. 29, 2009.
The 5-year-old girl Mona has been living in the tent of 17 square meters for four months with her parents and four sisters in the Gaza Strip. The house of the Khaders, a two-story building with a garden, was totally destroyed during Israel's military offensives against the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip last winter. The Khaders have been squeezing in the tent, which was set up with the help of UN organizations near the debris of their house.
Life here is really tough, especially for the young girls. The small tent is divided into two parts by a plastic sheet, the inner part of which is the girls' bedroom as well as study. They have to endure the heat in summer and the coldness in winter in the tent. What's worse, the roof of the shabby tent leaks when it rains, although Mona's father tries his best to cover the roof with plastic sheets.
In order to go home as early as she can to look after her youngest sisters, Mona takes a shortcut to the tent through the debris after school every day. And then she will study or play at the desk with her sisters. The most favorite game of the introverted girl is to build houses at the sand pile near the debris, as if she tries to retrieve their house ruined during the Israeli military operations.
As the only breadwinner of the family of seven persons, Mona's father has tried sorts of arduous work since the end of the operations. He even took the dangerous job of digging underground tunnels and got hurt when the tunnel collapsed. Even so, he endeavors to let his daughters lead a happy life and have a pleasant childhood. (Xinhua/Hua Chunyu) (wjd)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049463_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(14)MIDEAST-GAZA-MONA KHADER
(091117) -- GAZA STRIP, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Mona Khader does her homework with her sisters in the tent, in which they live in the Gaza Strip, on Oct. 29, 2009.
The 5-year-old girl Mona has been living in the tent of 17 square meters for four months with her parents and four sisters in the Gaza Strip. The house of the Khaders, a two-story building with a garden, was totally destroyed during Israel's military offensives against the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip last winter. The Khaders have been squeezing in the tent, which was set up with the help of UN organizations near the debris of their house.
Life here is really tough, especially for the young girls. The small tent is divided into two parts by a plastic sheet, the inner part of which is the girls' bedroom as well as study. They have to endure the heat in summer and the coldness in winter in the tent. What's worse, the roof of the shabby tent leaks when it rains, although Mona's father tries his best to cover the roof with plastic sheets.
In order to go home as early as she can to look after her youngest sisters, Mona takes a shortcut to the tent through the debris after school every day. And then she will study or play at the desk with her sisters. The most favorite game of the introverted girl is to build houses at the sand pile near the debris, as if she tries to retrieve their house ruined during the Israeli military operations.
As the only breadwinner of the family of seven persons, Mona's father has tried sorts of arduous work since the end of the operations. He even took the dangerous job of digging underground tunnels and got hurt when the tunnel collapsed. Even so, he endeavors to let his daughters lead a happy life and have a pleasant childhood. (Xinhua/Hua Chunyu) (wjd)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049460_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(8)MIDEAST-GAZA-MONA KHADER
(091117) -- GAZA STRIP, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Mona Khader looks after her youngest sister Kholoud in the tent, in which she lives in the Gaza Strip, on Oct. 29, 2009.
The 5-year-old girl Mona has been living in the tent of 17 square meters for four months with her parents and four sisters in the Gaza Strip. The house of the Khaders, a two-story building with a garden, was totally destroyed during Israel's military offensives against the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip last winter. The Khaders have been squeezing in the tent, which was set up with the help of UN organizations near the debris of their house.
Life here is really tough, especially for the young girls. The small tent is divided into two parts by a plastic sheet, the inner part of which is the girls' bedroom as well as study. They have to endure the heat in summer and the coldness in winter in the tent. What's worse, the roof of the shabby tent leaks when it rains, although Mona's father tries his best to cover the roof with plastic sheets.
In order to go home as early as she can to look after her youngest sisters, Mona takes a shortcut to the tent through the debris after school every day. And then she will study or play at the desk with her sisters. The most favorite game of the introverted girl is to build houses at the sand pile near the debris, as if she tries to retrieve their house ruined during the Israeli military operations.
As the only breadwinner of the family of seven persons, Mona's father has tried sorts of arduous work since the end of the operations. He even took the dangerous job of digging underground tunnels and got hurt when the tunnel collapsed. Even so, he endeavors to let his daughters lead a happy life and have a pleasant childhood. (Xinhua/Hua Chunyu) (wjd)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049458_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(5)MIDEAST-GAZA-MONA KHADER
(091117) -- GAZA STRIP, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Mona Khader's cousins play at the debris near the tent, in which Mona lives in the Gaza Strip, on Oct. 29, 2009.
The 5-year-old girl Mona has been living in the tent of 17 square meters for four months with her parents and four sisters in the Gaza Strip. The house of the Khaders, a two-story building with a garden, was totally destroyed during Israel's military offensives against the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip last winter. The Khaders have been squeezing in the tent, which was set up with the help of UN organizations near the debris of their house.
Life here is really tough, especially for the young girls. The small tent is divided into two parts by a plastic sheet, the inner part of which is the girls' bedroom as well as study. They have to endure the heat in summer and the coldness in winter in the tent. What's worse, the roof of the shabby tent leaks when it rains, although Mona's father tries his best to cover the roof with plastic sheets.
In order to go home as early as she can to look after her youngest sisters, Mona takes a shortcut to the tent through the debris after school every day. And then she will study or play at the desk with her sisters. The most favorite game of the introverted girl is to build houses at the sand pile near the debris, as if she tries to retrieve their house ruined during the Israeli military operations.
As the only breadwinner of the family of seven persons, Mona's father has tried sorts of arduous work since the end of the operations. He even took the dangerous job of digging underground tunnels and got hurt when the tunnel collapsed. Even so, he endeavors to let his daughters lead a happy life and have a pleasant childhood. (Xinhua/Hua Chunyu) (wjd)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049456_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(1)MIDEAST-GAZA-MONA KHADER
(091117) -- GAZA STRIP, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Mona Khader poses for a photo near the tent, in which she lives in the Gaza Strip, on Oct. 29, 2009.
The 5-year-old girl Mona has been living in the tent of 17 square meters for four months with her parents and four sisters in the Gaza Strip. The house of the Khaders, a two-story building with a garden, was totally destroyed during Israel's military offensives against the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip last winter. The Khaders have been squeezing in the tent, which was set up with the help of UN organizations near the debris of their house.
Life here is really tough, especially for the young girls. The small tent is divided into two parts by a plastic sheet, the inner part of which is the girls' bedroom as well as study. They have to endure the heat in summer and the coldness in winter in the tent. What's worse, the roof of the shabby tent leaks when it rains, although Mona's father tries his best to cover the roof with plastic sheets.
In order to go home as early as she can to look after her youngest sisters, Mona takes a shortcut to the tent through the debris after school every day. And then she will study or play at the desk with her sisters. The most favorite game of the introverted girl is to build houses at the sand pile near the debris, as if she tries to retrieve their house ruined during the Israeli military operations.
As the only breadwinner of the family of seven persons, Mona's father has tried sorts of arduous work since the end of the operations. He even took the dangerous job of digging underground tunnels and got hurt when the tunnel collapsed. Even so, he endeavors to let his daughters lead a happy life and have a pleasant childhood. (Xinhua/Hua Chunyu) (wjd)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049455_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(2)MIDEAST-GAZA-MONA KHADER
(091117) -- GAZA STRIP, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Mona Khader poses for a photo outside the tent, in which she lives in the Gaza Strip, on Oct. 29, 2009.
The 5-year-old girl Mona has been living in the tent of 17 square meters for four months with her parents and four sisters in the Gaza Strip. The house of the Khaders, a two-story building with a garden, was totally destroyed during Israel's military offensives against the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip last winter. The Khaders have been squeezing in the tent, which was set up with the help of UN organizations near the debris of their house.
Life here is really tough, especially for the young girls. The small tent is divided into two parts by a plastic sheet, the inner part of which is the girls' bedroom as well as study. They have to endure the heat in summer and the coldness in winter in the tent. What's worse, the roof of the shabby tent leaks when it rains, although Mona's father tries his best to cover the roof with plastic sheets.
In order to go home as early as she can to look after her youngest sisters, Mona takes a shortcut to the tent through the debris after school every day. And then she will study or play at the desk with her sisters. The most favorite game of the introverted girl is to build houses at the sand pile near the debris, as if she tries to retrieve their house ruined during the Israeli military operations.
As the only breadwinner of the family of seven persons, Mona's father has tried sorts of arduous work since the end of the operations. He even took the dangerous job of digging underground tunnels and got hurt when the tunnel collapsed. Even so, he endeavors to let his daughters lead a happy life and have a pleasant childhood. (Xinhua/Hua Chunyu) (wjd)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049501_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(5)CHINA-TIANJIN-ZHANG ZHENG'EN (CN)
(091117) -- TIANJIN, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Zhang Zheng'en (L) plays with his friends during the class break on Oct. 28, 2009.
Seven-year-old Zhang Zheng'en is a grade-two pupil at Kunminglu School in north China's Tianjin Municipality. Before he was 2-year-old, Zhang's parents began to teach him to learn the Chinese characters. Gradually, he could read by himself and the boundless range of books including Astronomy, Geography, animals and plants has broaden his eyes.
Little Zheng'en likes to ask "why". When he saw somebody fixing an automobile, he would ask about the principle of automobile; When he came across the electrician of the residential area, he would inquire about the principle of voltage. Most adults complained that he has too many questions; therefore, his mother suggested him to consult those questions in a Library because his questions were considerably professional.
Among various kinds of books in the library, electric books are Zhang Zheng'en's favorite. He tried to make some whimsically electric invention. Whenever he learned new electric knowledge, he would like to share with others.
Zhang Zheng'en likes to go to the Science and Technology Museum because there are numberless items to play with and boundless of questions to figure out. Sometimes, he voluntarily explain for the tourists enthusiastically. Although he has been to the Science and Technology Museum for many times, he still has new questions and gains new achievement.
At the age of five, his father took him to Heping Children's Palace of Tianjin. His wish to enter for an electricity training class was turned down because only beyond grade-two pupils are accepted. He was so disappointed though, Teacher Zhang from the electricity training class chatted with him and, to his surprise, he was qualified which was an exception. Within the last two years, he has finished the primary level, middle level and advanced level of the training class in the Children's Palace
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049498_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(11)CHINA-TIANJIN-ZHANG ZHENG'EN (CN)
(091117) -- TIANJIN, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Zhang Zheng'en plays his own composing tunes fluently on Oct. 21, 2009. His piano teacher thought he was gifted but he didn't like to play the original tunes which led to his giveup halfway.
Seven-year-old Zhang Zheng'en is a grade-two pupil at Kunminglu School in north China's Tianjin Municipality. Before he was 2-year-old, Zhang's parents began to teach him to learn the Chinese characters. Gradually, he could read by himself and the boundless range of books including Astronomy, Geography, animals and plants has broaden his eyes.
Little Zheng'en likes to ask "why". When he saw somebody fixing an automobile, he would ask about the principle of automobile; When he came across the electrician of the residential area, he would inquire about the principle of voltage. Most adults complained that he has too many questions; therefore, his mother suggested him to consult those questions in a Library because his questions were considerably professional.
Among various kinds of books in the library, electric books are Zhang Zheng'en's favorite. He tried to make some whimsically electric invention. Whenever he learned new electric knowledge, he would like to share with others.
Zhang Zheng'en likes to go to the Science and Technology Museum because there are numberless items to play with and boundless of questions to figure out. Sometimes, he voluntarily explain for the tourists enthusiastically. Although he has been to the Science and Technology Museum for many times, he still has new questions and gains new achievement.
At the age of five, his father took him to Heping Children's Palace of Tianjin. His wish to enter for an electricity training class was turned down because only beyond grade-two pupils are accepted. He was so disappointed though, Teacher Zhang from the electricity training class chatted with him and, to his surprise, he was qualified which was an exception. Within the last two years, he ha
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049495_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(18)CHINA-TIANJIN-ZHANG ZHENG'EN (CN)
(091117) -- TIANJIN, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Zhang Zheng'en is drawing a circuit diagram designed by himself on Oct. 30, 2009.
Seven-year-old Zhang Zheng'en is a grade-two pupil at Kunminglu School in north China's Tianjin Municipality. Before he was 2-year-old, Zhang's parents began to teach him to learn the Chinese characters. Gradually, he could read by himself and the boundless range of books including Astronomy, Geography, animals and plants has broaden his eyes.
Little Zheng'en likes to ask "why". When he saw somebody fixing an automobile, he would ask about the principle of automobile; When he came across the electrician of the residential area, he would inquire about the principle of voltage. Most adults complained that he has too many questions; therefore, his mother suggested him to consult those questions in a Library because his questions were considerably professional.
Among various kinds of books in the library, electric books are Zhang Zheng'en's favorite. He tried to make some whimsically electric invention. Whenever he learned new electric knowledge, he would like to share with others.
Zhang Zheng'en likes to go to the Science and Technology Museum because there are numberless items to play with and boundless of questions to figure out. Sometimes, he voluntarily explain for the tourists enthusiastically. Although he has been to the Science and Technology Museum for many times, he still has new questions and gains new achievement.
At the age of five, his father took him to Heping Children's Palace of Tianjin. His wish to enter for an electricity training class was turned down because only beyond grade-two pupils are accepted. He was so disappointed though, Teacher Zhang from the electricity training class chatted with him and, to his surprise, he was qualified which was an exception. Within the last two years, he has finished the primary level, middle level and advanced level of the training class in the Children's Palace.
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049494_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(1)CHINA-TIANJIN-ZHANG ZHENG'EN (CN)
(091117) -- TIANJIN, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- "I know the principle of electric iron and I've never been burned." Zhang Zheng'en says, quite confident of his work, on Oct. 30, 2009.
Seven-year-old Zhang Zheng'en is a grade-two pupil at Kunminglu School in north China's Tianjin Municipality. Before he was 2-year-old, Zhang's parents began to teach him to learn the Chinese characters. Gradually, he could read by himself and the boundless range of books including Astronomy, Geography, animals and plants has broaden his eyes.
Little Zheng'en likes to ask "why". When he saw somebody fixing an automobile, he would ask about the principle of automobile; When he came across the electrician of the residential area, he would inquire about the principle of voltage. Most adults complained that he has too many questions; therefore, his mother suggested him to consult those questions in a Library because his questions were considerably professional.
Among various kinds of books in the library, electric books are Zhang Zheng'en's favorite. He tried to make some whimsically electric invention. Whenever he learned new electric knowledge, he would like to share with others.
Zhang Zheng'en likes to go to the Science and Technology Museum because there are numberless items to play with and boundless of questions to figure out. Sometimes, he voluntarily explain for the tourists enthusiastically. Although he has been to the Science and Technology Museum for many times, he still has new questions and gains new achievement.
At the age of five, his father took him to Heping Children's Palace of Tianjin. His wish to enter for an electricity training class was turned down because only beyond grade-two pupils are accepted. He was so disappointed though, Teacher Zhang from the electricity training class chatted with him and, to his surprise, he was qualified which was an exception. Within the last two years, he has finished the primary level, middle level and advanced
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_12049487_EYE
(UNIVERSAL CHILDREN'S DAY)(13)CHINA-TIANJIN-ZHANG ZHENG'EN (CN)
(091117) -- TIANJIN, Nov. 17, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Zhang Zheng'en watches his teacher writing on the blackboard on Oct. 28, 2009.
Seven-year-old Zhang Zheng'en is a grade-two pupil at Kunminglu School in north China's Tianjin Municipality. Before he was 2-year-old, Zhang's parents began to teach him to learn the Chinese characters. Gradually, he could read by himself and the boundless range of books including Astronomy, Geography, animals and plants has broaden his eyes.
Little Zheng'en likes to ask "why". When he saw somebody fixing an automobile, he would ask about the principle of automobile; When he came across the electrician of the residential area, he would inquire about the principle of voltage. Most adults complained that he has too many questions; therefore, his mother suggested him to consult those questions in a Library because his questions were considerably professional.
Among various kinds of books in the library, electric books are Zhang Zheng'en's favorite. He tried to make some whimsically electric invention. Whenever he learned new electric knowledge, he would like to share with others.
Zhang Zheng'en likes to go to the Science and Technology Museum because there are numberless items to play with and boundless of questions to figure out. Sometimes, he voluntarily explain for the tourists enthusiastically. Although he has been to the Science and Technology Museum for many times, he still has new questions and gains new achievement.
At the age of five, his father took him to Heping Children's Palace of Tianjin. His wish to enter for an electricity training class was turned down because only beyond grade-two pupils are accepted. He was so disappointed though, Teacher Zhang from the electricity training class chatted with him and, to his surprise, he was qualified which was an exception. Within the last two years, he has finished the primary level, middle level and advanced level of the training class in the Children's Palace.
DUKAS/EYEVINE