Cows can fly, dreamer discovers By Zhang Feng (China Daily) Updated: 2005-10-13 05:52
Nie Haisheng dreamt as a boy that he sprouted two big wings and flew in the
sky on the back of a cow.
The dream of the child cowherd came true yesterday albeit in the module of a
high-tech spacecraft as the Shenzhou VI blasted off into the skies.
For a poor boy born in a remote village, to become the focus of a nation,
indeed, the world, is the stuff dreams are made of.
Thousands of kilometres away from the launch site in Northwest China's Gansu
Province, his seriously-ill mother witnessed the exciting moment on television
lying on a hospital bed in his hometown, the city of Zaoyang in Central China's
Hubei Province.
She had borne eight children and fed them by working on a farm with her
husband. She suffered a cerebral haemorrhage last year and cannot speak now.
Nie lived in the village until he was 18 along with his six elder sisters and
a younger brother doing farm work and studying.
Although his family was very poor, his parents tried their best to send him
to school.
However, his father died of illness when he was 14 years old and as the
oldest male in the family, Nie had to drop out of school to support the family.
Fortunately, with the encouragement of teachers and the school, Nie enrolled
again and graduated from high school with good grades.
Like his fellow astronaut Fei Junlong, Nie Haisheng enrolled as a fighter
pilot in 1984; and along with China's first astronaut Yang Liwei, Fei and other
several others, Nie was selected as one of China's first potential astronauts.
Nie, 41 years old and 1.72 metres tall, was also one of the final three
candidates for the Shenzhou V mission two years ago when Yang got the nod ahead
of others.
Yang describes Nie as persistent and dauntless, and at the same time,
prudent. "He doesn't talk much. He is a hard-working and co-operative guy," Yang
was quoted by Xinhua as saying.
(China Daily 10/13/2005 page2)
|