Changing Qinghai

Updated: 2014-05-04 08:08

By Erik Nilsson (China Daily)

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Changing Qinghai

Increased government and nonprofit investment is transforming the lives of nomadic yak herders in Yushu prefecture's remote grasslands. Erik Nilsson chronicles the improvements over three years.

Qumalai county's children are the nomadic community's first generation to attend school. Until a few years ago, illiterate parents in the secluded swathe of Qinghai province's Yushu Tibetan autonomous prefecture believed children should herd yaks to feed the family rather than study. That outlook has inverted. Most herders now believe children should study so they don't have to herd. The average altitude of 4,300 meters, isolation and insufficient infrastructure make life tough. But since the government and nonprofits have increased investment in Quma River's scattered settlements in recent years - especially in schools - herders now place their hopes for a better future on their children's education.

 Changing Qinghai

A boy plays on a pile of rocks as strong winds sweep snow from the peak of a mountain in Yege township.Nomads here endure cold weather year-round. Photos by Erik Nilsson / China Daily

 Changing Qinghai

Children play at Yege Primary School in Qinghai's Yushu.

 Changing Qinghai

A child jumps over a puddle in front of the seven tents 76 Yege Primary School students called their dorms in July 2011.The government has since built new dorms for the children in the isolated nomadic community Yushu prefecture.

 Changing Qinghai

A girl makes her bowl a "hat" for a boy. Fruits and vegetables were rare in the nomadic community - where an average elevation of 4,300 meters makes planting impossible - until produce started coming to the school via the county seat from Qinghai province's capital Xining, in 2013.

 Changing Qinghai

While Yege township's residents increasingly use cars and motorcycles for transportation, many nomads in Qinghai province's Yushu prefecture ride horses and yaks, especially when crossing mountains while herding.

(China Daily 05/04/2014 page6)