![]() “I want to be able to see my parents again while they are still here.” “So many years have passed, I don’t know if anyone in my family is looking for me,” Li said in a video posted to the Chinese video platform Douyin. His childhood practice of drawing it daily paid off: the sketch shows a remarkable level of detail including winding paths, houses and highways – even a label showing where the water buffalo lived. So he drew a map from memory of his home village and shared it online. The recent success stories inspired Li to take another shot at finding his parents. His parents’ desperate nationwide search to find him inspired a movie – and, last summer, his discovery and their widely publicized reunion. One high-profile case was Guo Xinzhen, who was abducted in 1997 as a 2-year-old. In recent years, technology, social media, and police departments dedicated to the issue have helped a number of now-adult abductees to reunite with their birth families. This family's 24-year search for their abducted son inspired a movie. This demand drove a black market for infant boys, and pushed many families to give infant girls up for adoption. Many Chinese families – especially those in rural areas – traditionally viewed boys as more able to provide and continue the family line. For decades, those who had a second child were given heavy fines, or made to abort pregnancies. As a child, whenever he was homesick or sad, he would draw a picture of his village – eventually drawing it at least once a day, he told The Paper.Ĭhild abduction has long been rampant in China, a problem experts say was exacerbated by the country’s former one-child policy, which has been relaxed in recent years. He remembered the rice paddies and ponds near his house, and where bamboo shoots grew in the nearby mountain. He didn’t remember his birth name, his parents’ names or the name of his village.īut he did remember what his home village looked like: where trees grew, cows grazed, roads turned and rivers flowed. ![]() ![]() He was taken to live with another family in central Henan province, where he grew up, according to state-run news outlet The Paper.Įven as a young child, Li realized he had been taken far from home – but he had no way of returning even as he grew older, he told The Paper. Li Jingwei was only 4 years old when he was kidnapped by a man he knew from his family’s village in southwestern Yunnan province in 1988. A man who was abducted as a child in China more than 30 years ago has been reunited with his parents – thanks to social media, online sleuths and a crude map drawn from memory. ![]()
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