By Jake Reed
As of now there have been five mass stabbings at schools in China. Every one of the killers seemed intent on
As an ESL teacher in China, I’ve been creating scenarios in my head, mostly nightmarish: It’s a normal day in your kindy class. The kids are their usual hopelessly goofy selves and class proceeds with the usual mix of entertainment and academics. Then the screams start. Both adults and children letting out terrified screams. Curiosity gets the best of you and you head for the source of terror. A scene from the seventh layer of hell awaits you. Blood is sprayed on the walls, children are nursing knife wounds and there’s a man waving a knife as a teacher confronts him. With no way out, the man turns the knife on himself putting a gory end to a day filled with blood.
So far the perpetrators have fit the profile of a man with nothing to lose. All of the people who took the plunge were middle-aged men. All had grievances with a rapidly modernizing society and not finding a place in it. If that’s not enough, you are forced to see you “betters” through the various media outlets on a daily basis. Can this be maddening? Most assuredly. Yet anyone willing to stab people in this fashion, fully aware of the consequences is a unique breed—one that is becoming less unique as the copycat stabbings increase.
One sighted love issues with a woman as his primary motivation to stab children. Another was a teacher on sick leave for mental woes who decided to come back to work early and vent on a primary school. Yes, a doctor and teacher are amongst the “raving lunatics” going on stabbing sprees. This is far from a concrete profile of a madman. Seemingly normal people are being pushed over the edge in the fashion of John Malkovich’s character in “Burn After Reading.”
“F**k! What the F**k!”
So is China paying the butcher’s bill that comes with modernity?
China’s crime rates have been rising steadily over the past 30 years. This happens to mirror their steady economic growth.
So why aren’t the ones with mental issues seeking help? Culture and tradition have a lot to do with that. There’s an element of shame for you and your family if you seek help. In a country where your relationship with your community is important, having a nutter in the family places a stigma on you that may be hard if not impossible to erase.
Another problem is education. A lot of commoners in China have no idea of the mental healthcare options at their disposal and therefore are left in the dark and dangerous world where psychological problems spill out onto the street and, in the recent cases, into schools
What is to be done?
All schools have beefed up security (the author of this piece can personally testify to that). When we enter the premise of the Kindergarten where I teach in the morning, I must wear a nametag and keep it with me at all times. There are now bludgeons visibly hanging on walls in the administration building as well.
In some cases parents have actually been promoted as “guards.” This was an idea to solve the limited manpower of people willing to sit around in front of a school all day. Beyond that, schools have budgets and hiring extra people to sit around all day waiting for an unlikely instance in which a psycho shows up isn’t exactly a priority for spending. The red-armband-wearing parents are seen as a temporary solution to a problem they hope the government will successfully address.
In Beijing communities are becoming even more involved with their communities in hopes of stifling the next attack. Known psychiatric patients as well those with a history of mental illness and erratic behavior are under the public eye.
It’s hard to determine the total number of people who might need psychiatric help,” he said one official from a district where an attack occurred. “The work depends mainly on residential committees. Officials in the committees are more familiar with the conditions of residents.”
Sadly, it’s the “crazy” ones no one ever sees coming that seem to be the ones who get into the schools and do the damage. There seems to be no sure fire way as of yet to stop a man who has nothing to lose and knows he will die after
Coverage has also been less than ideal. The authorities have tried to downplay these incidents. Stories of journalists being turned away by cops seems to be the norm. In the case of the “madness” in Linchang: “Police officers followed journalists around Linchang and kept them away from some areas. One news crew was ejected from a hotel, the A.P. reported. Local and central government officials have tried to clamp down on news coverage of the attacks, and the official news organizations did not report new details of the Linchang killings.”
The incident in Hanzhong further complimented the party’s sentiments:
“CCTV buried the tragedy on its nationally televised 6 p.m. news, leading with the Libyan air crash, and not reporting on the school tragedy until 42 minutes into its broadcast.”
This lets speculation through the door. Could there be more to this than meets the eye? Is the clampdown on public information an attempt to hide something? Either way, the bizarre, brutal nature of these stabbings is sure to decorate the history books regardless of who writes them.
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Jake Reed has been exploring the extremities of the human condition for the last five years and he currently teaches in China.
His personal publication claptrap includes www.Ehow.com, Diplomacy Journal, www.travels.com, blah blah. His current writing project involves a postmodern novel that draws on themes such as nihilism, isolation and alienation in a world where you are told the good guys won.
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