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Coups de Cœur ANI 2012: Valentin Bianchi

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Stars and Rain

Stars and Rain. April 2010, when I started my story about Victoire, a young autistic woman living in Belgium, questions began to arise naturally on the situation of children with autism in the world. I decided to start research on autism outside of Europe.

I began to get particularly interested in the situation of autism in China. Why China? China is the most populous country in the world and proportionally, the number of autistic children is more important than anywhere else.
The latest official figures show that in 2011 there were more than 500,000 autistic children but recent figures suggest that the actual number is closer to 2 million children.
Autism is recognized only in China since 2006 and according to information collected by the NGO Beijing Stars and Rain, there would now only about twenty doctors across the country, capable of diagnosing children with autism spectrum.
Culturally, China also found it very difficult to accept differences. Moreover, in China, most parents of autistic children or children with disabilities have great difficulty accepting the way others look at the difference of their children.

Following this research, I decided to get in touch with the Stars and Rain NGOs based in Beijing. They allowed me to share their daily lives for several weeks.
The particularity of this NGO is to train parents and supervise children during a cycle of eleven consecutive weeks. Program in which parents will receive learning techniques from the ABA (Applied Behaviour Analysis), to treat behavioral problems suffered by people with autism. The NGO is located in the southeast of Beijing, the Chaoyang District. Created in 1993 by Ms. Tian Huiping, the mother of a young autistic boy, the NGO is working as the first association of autism and behavioral disorders of children. Since then, it as grown steadily .
This work rely almost entirely on private funds and receives regular assistance from private associations and foreign embassies. Although recognized internationally as an NGO, the Chinese government doesn’t yet allow them the title. The assistance from the Chinese government is virtually nonexistent. Government assistance for families of children with behavior problems is a few euros per year.

Once there, I quickly realized the difficulties encountered by the NGO, the school is located far from the center of Beijing, although the infrastructure is better suited than most other similar establishments in the country, those are still far from what we know in Europe and North America.
About 50 families are present in the building Pre School building, children are 4 to 8 years old and are divided into six classes. Families come from all over China and the moms are the majority since most fathers should provide for the family and take over the high cost of this course of eleven weeks. The cost is about € 500, the equivalent of several months’ wages for most parents. The financial situation of each family is taken into account when registering to allow everyone access to this training. The wealthiest families participate more significantly to expenses, allowing families with lesser income to also follow the long-term program.
These families are housed in apartments grouped in a 2km radius around the school.
The NGO also has another branch in a village, the Group Home, for teenagers It has six young surrounded by two specialist teachers and two foreign volunteers. The group of young people doesn’t sleep in this building but are housed in the building of another association, not far away. Unlike in the PreSchool, children do not go every night to their parents but only see them on weekends. During their time at Group Home, teens will learn to integrate into everyday life via usual tasks.

What I did find in all these few weeks spent there along with these families and children is that most of the time, it is the parents that are educated after the three months program. Their perception of their child and how to address them has changed totally. All the fears and fears fades and the parent / child relationship starts in a new light.

The team of the NGO Stars and Rain (XingXingYu in Chinese) and its founder, Tian Huiping, who had been advised to forget and to lock up her son. Created this NGO whose goal, is to help parents understand autism and behavioral disorders and live well without barriers and misconceptionsand helping families to overcome their isolation in their community and thus enjoy life with these wonderful children.

Valentin Bianchi
Valentin Bianchi is a Belgian freelance photojournalist based in Liège, Belgium.
He started his career as a freelance photographer in 2009. His journalistic work focuses on long-term projects and news. He promotes freedom of expression. He is also interested in topics related to minorities and the forgotten.
Having studied architecture and worked in various architecture firms such as Greisch, architecture influences his photographic eye and quite graphic style in photography.
In March 2012, he spent several weeks in Beijing, China to continue his work on autism, a subject that is close to his heart.

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