"Music is their language": school gives autistic Chinese youth a voice
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[December 02, 2022]
"Music is their language": school gives autistic Chinese youth a voice
By Tingshu Wang and Josh Arslan
BEIJING (Reuters) - Almost three years of pandemic restrictions have
been hard for 23-year-old Chinese villager Zu Wenbao, but thanks to
Beijing-based Chen's Studio, music has become his saving grace.
Zu is one of the 14 million people in China who have autism spectrum
disorder, a developmental disability caused by differences in the brain.
Despite laws to ensure the integration of people with autism, many in
China know little about the disorder and support remains lacking,
experts say.
Autism has meant Zu was unable to fit in at school or among other young
people in his home village of Bei'an in northeast China's Heilongjiang
Province. All that changed when he started learning music free of charge
at Chen's Studio, which started lessons for people with autism just as
the pandemic began.
Zu, who is non-verbal, joined the five-studio Beijing school in 2020. He
has since learned to play the keyboard, and sings along with the four
other members of the "Star Kids" band their teacher, Chen Shensi, set up
last year for people with autism.
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"Without music, without these lessons, he wouldn't have anything," said
Zu's mother, Zhao Guorong, who travels with her son every Sunday for two
hours on three different buses from their current home on the outskirts
of Beijing so that he can attend class.
"The village youngsters all go to work or school, so without music and
the band, he wouldn't have any peers to socialise with," she added.
"Even though the kids taking music classes are younger than him and half
his size, they all take care of him like he's their brother."
China has passed several laws to ensure inclusion of people with autism,
most recently in September to standardize autism screening, diagnosis
and intervention for young children.
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Zu Wenbao, 23, plays the keyboard during
a practice session with his band Star Kids in Beijing, China July
31, 2022. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
While support has improved over the
past 20 years, millions of children still lack the behavioural
therapy and educational support they need, experts say.
People with autism tend to find it difficult to get jobs, and the
music school's founder Chen hopes he can change that by giving his
students a way to earn a living: the Star Kids band has already
performed several concerts at events held at camp sites on the
outskirts of Beijing.
Chen says he knew very little about autism before he started
teaching a bass player with the disorder in 2020.
When COVID-19 lockdowns and restrictions on movement curtailed his
regular music lessons, Chen started the free-of-charge lessons for
people with autism. "COVID has been hard, and I wanted to do as much
as I can to give them joy through music," he said.
Chen admits he was very frustrated at first with his students
because he had to repeat himself many times. Disciplining the class
was also tough, but eventually, the students started communicating
better with him and each other.
"It's just difficult for them to communicate normally with other
people, let along work in a typical job, but they might be able to
make a living by being an artist," he said.
"To some degree, I think music might be their language."
(Writing by Farah Master; Editing by Miral Fahmy)
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