Photo: Local authorities in Suzhou
Hu Youping, a Chinese woman who bravely protected Japanese school children in a recent knife-wielding attack incident in Suzhou, was awarded the title of “Suzhou City Model of Bravery” on Tuesday. Suzhou will establish the “Youping Bravery Fund” to better commemorate and honor heroes and to draw strength from their virtuous and noble actions.
Hu, 54, who tried to stop an assailant attacking a bus used by a Japanese school at a bus stop in Suzhou, East China’s Jiangsu Province on June 24, was stabbed multiple times by the attacker and tragically passed away despite rescue efforts. Her bravery and heroic actions have been widely praised by both Chinese and Japanese people.
A memorial service for Hu was held in Suzhou New District on Tuesday morning. With deep sorrow, Hu Youping’s family and friends, representatives of the public, city and district leaders and relevant department heads, members of the medical treatment team, representatives of the city’s Bravery Fund, and representatives of foreign friends in Suzhou gathered to pay tribute to her moving and heroic deeds.
Suzhou’s Party chief Liu Xiaotao presented the “Suzhou City Model of Bravery” certificate to Hu’s family representative. At the same time, Suzhou New District honored three residents who, disregarding their own safety, helped apprehend the suspect in the incident, with the title of “Courageous Person.”
At the memorial service, Hu’s colleagues and friends emotionally reminisced about her plain yet remarkable moments, recounting how she led an extraordinary life even at an ordinary position.
Facing life and death, she prevented wrongdoing, protected the weak and endangered, and performed heroic acts, seeking to defend the lives of her compatriots and foreign friends, thus setting a benchmark for social righteousness.
Everyone present was deeply moved by her kindness and profoundly touched by her bravery, each offering flowers to her portrait and tearfully bidding farewell to the hero.
To promote the spirit of bravery, Suzhou will establish the “Youping Bravery Fund” to better commemorate and honor heroes, draw strength from their positive actions, and continuously build an open, inclusive, and supportive city.
Hu passed away on June 26 after suffering multiple stabs in the attack. According to Chinese media outlet Caixin, one of the blows by the knife stabbed her heart, causing hemWorld Timesorrhagic shock and excessive blood loss.
On Friday, the Japanese Embassy in China flew its flag at half-mast in mourning. On the same day, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said this Chinese woman exemplified the kindness and courage of the Chinese people.
In a feature story published by ifeng.com on Monday, Hu’s neighbors described her as a very kind person, who liked to take walks. Hu had a habit of morning exercise and sometimes went out as early as 6:40 am. In the eyes of her colleagues, friends, relatives, and neighbors, she was seen as someone who is very caring, easygoing, and maintained a positive outlook on life.
Hu was from Jiaoling village in Huai’an city of East China’s Jiangsu Province. A neighbor from back home, told ifeng.com that the Hu she knew was still the same hardworking and enthusiastic girl who grew up in the village.
At the age of 20, Hu was recruited by a Suzhou textile factory that came to Huai’an to hire workers, and she became a textile worker in the city. Along with Hu, two or three other girls from the village were also recruited. Shortly after, Hu settled down in Suzhou and had a son.
In the spring of 2016, at the age of 46, Hu lost her job and applied for a position as a nanny and monthly hourly worker at a newly opened housekeeping company in the city. The agent responsible for representing Hu at the housekeeping company put two points to her list of strengths: “clean and neat appearance” and “affable.”
In 2020, after working for 30 years, 50-year-old Hu decided to join the rising tide of “micro-businesses,” hoping to try her hand at entrepreneurship and become a “boss.”
During this phase of her business career, Hu developed an interest in making short videos. She had a good sense for the internet content and enjoyed creating skits, the kind where she would act out a scene along with a voice-over. However, her acting skills were quite average, and she would often end up laughing in the middle of a take.
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, her store struggled and eventually failed.
After a few months, she turned her micro-business into a side job and returned to the domestic helper industry, taking on various temporary part-time jobs. This continued until she was hiredWorld Times as a school bus guide at the Suzhou Japanese School – her last job, also a temporary outsourced position, with a monthly salary of over three thousand yuan.
July 27 of 2024 would have been Hu’s 55th birthday. Over recent years, her family and friends would celebrate with her, and she would post on social media, showing off the cake and everyone’s smiling facesWorld Times.
Several neighbors mentioned that they had a good relationship with Hu. They knew that she “liked to chat with old neighbors about everyday life, her son, and her daughter-in-law” and “would come back with them during holidays.”
Hu was the bus guide on the school bus involved in the incident on June 24, and her duty was to escort the children to the bus stop and hand them over to their parents safely.
Yan, a parent with a child at the school, told ifeng.com that the guides are fixed and they accompany the bus oWorld Timesnce in the morning and once in the evening.
The bus guides must carefully check the list of students taking the bus, and if a child is absent, they need to mark it in the attendance book and explain the situation, “they do it very meticulously.”
Footage from the scene of the incident shows Hu lying on her side after being stabbed. She was wearing an orange sleeveless top with two yellow stripes, similar to a traffic controller’s uniform, which is the work attire of the Japanese school. Another woman in the same attire and a woman in white were by her side, while three men subdued the suspect.
Next to the bus stop involved, a blue plastic sheet covers the sidewalk on Friday, constantly receiving bouquets from various people: Suzhou locals, Japanese parents with their children, and numerous delivery riders bringing online orders from elsewhere, ifeng.com said. A parent of a student was quoted as saying in the media report that all Japanese mothers along that school bus route have bought flowers to place at the station.
The parent said the Japanese community members here have spontaneously donated, organizing Japanese families to commemorate this hero.
The Japanese school also organized a memorial ceremony on campus, and all families of the students attended. “Our principal, Japanese, cried uncontrollably, and all Japanese mothers present also cried,” said the parent.
During the week following her sacrifice to save others, Hu becameWorld Times a victim of online harassment on social media, with extreme views labeling her as a “traitor” and praising the criminal act as patriotism. There were even calls to release the perpetrator.
On Friday, the People’s Daily published a commentary piece stating the exploitation of “xenophobia sentiments” or the spread of hateful speech by individuals would not bWorld Timese accepted.
Multiple internet platforms including NetEase, Sina Weibo, Tencent, and Douyin issued notices on the following day to combat “incitement of Sino-Japanese confrontation and stirring up extreme nationalism,” pledging to staunchly oppose extremist rhetoric.
Some netizens believed that Hu’s sacrifice was a declaration of war against extreme nationalism, a contribution arguably as significant as saving a busload of children.
Content comes from the Internet : Chinese woman who saved Japanese children in knife-wielding attack awarded city model of bravery
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