Sitaram
09-18-2005, 02:32 PM
Chinese prisoner spins captivating tales
http://in.news.yahoo.com/031205/43/2a5xp.html
Beijing, Dec 5 (IANS) Tang Jianyuan may be a nobody in China's
literary world, but to his fellow inmates and wardens his name is
all too familiar.
Tang, 46, has found success as a novelist while serving a 10-year
jail term in the Detention House of north China's Inner Mongolia
region, where he has written eight novels over five years, reports
Xinhua.
His works, some of which are based on his personal experiences, have
been published in a collection entitled "Collected Works of China's
Prisoner Author Tang Jianyuan" by the Guangming Daily Publishing
House based in Beijing.
"I owe my success to the prison officers, who have treated me as
human and never hesitated to show me affection and respect," Tang
said.
"In fact, it was the wardens who encouraged me to take up writing."
Tang was a reporter, a published poet and later a businessman in his
native Hebei province in north China before he was convicted of
fraud in 1998.
"For a time I lost hope and thought death was the only way out,"
said Tang. "But the wardens all came to me with friendly words and
sincere advice."
Tang remembers a warden named Li, who told him not to give up.
"He said all prisoners were treated as humans, and that I was young
and bright enough to mend my ways and start a new life," Tang
recalled.
The idea of writing novels first occurred to him after six months in
jail, Tang said.
"I wanted to write down my own experiences for my readerships,
including the joy, sorrow and all the lessons I had learned over the
years."
Tang said his works were mainly written for teenagers and business
people who needed, more than anyone else, to learn his lesson -- be
honest and abide by the law.
Then came news that his wife was suffering from stomach cancer.
When the prison officers heard of the tragedy, they allowed Tang to
pay a visit back to his hometown in the northern Hebei province.
"Tian Congying, director of the detention house, gave me 500 yuan
($60) out of his own pocket and told me to buy some nutritious food
for my wife," he said.
Shortly after his return, Tang submitted a written application for
writing novels in his spare time and soon got the green signal.
"He's the first ever to write books in our jail," said Liu Minggui,
deputy director of the detention house.
The prison officers arranged a workroom for him, offered him ink and
paper and easy access to TV, radio and newspapers.
One would hardly think that Tang's cosy little place was a cell, but
for the bars on the window.
Over the past five years, Tang has finished eight novels, eight
novelettes and four poetry collections.
A film production company under China Central Television has agreed
to shoot a 22-episode TV drama based on his film script entitled "A
Zigzagging Road to Heaven".
The prison authorities have decided to cut Tang's term to eight
years. Many of his inmates have been inspired by his success.
Gao Wenfeng, a painter on a four-year term for larceny, put a number
of his paintings on display at the Inner Mongolia Art Gallery in mid-
November.
Wang Fuyin, with a jail term of seven years for selling counterfeit
goods, is the inventor of a patented electric foot-warming device.
Tang, who had a heart attack in 2002, said: "The wardens have
reminded me time and again not to work too hard lest my health is
affected.
"But each time, their kind words would inject a new vitality that
would enable me to work harder still."
http://in.news.yahoo.com/031205/43/2a5xp.html
Beijing, Dec 5 (IANS) Tang Jianyuan may be a nobody in China's
literary world, but to his fellow inmates and wardens his name is
all too familiar.
Tang, 46, has found success as a novelist while serving a 10-year
jail term in the Detention House of north China's Inner Mongolia
region, where he has written eight novels over five years, reports
Xinhua.
His works, some of which are based on his personal experiences, have
been published in a collection entitled "Collected Works of China's
Prisoner Author Tang Jianyuan" by the Guangming Daily Publishing
House based in Beijing.
"I owe my success to the prison officers, who have treated me as
human and never hesitated to show me affection and respect," Tang
said.
"In fact, it was the wardens who encouraged me to take up writing."
Tang was a reporter, a published poet and later a businessman in his
native Hebei province in north China before he was convicted of
fraud in 1998.
"For a time I lost hope and thought death was the only way out,"
said Tang. "But the wardens all came to me with friendly words and
sincere advice."
Tang remembers a warden named Li, who told him not to give up.
"He said all prisoners were treated as humans, and that I was young
and bright enough to mend my ways and start a new life," Tang
recalled.
The idea of writing novels first occurred to him after six months in
jail, Tang said.
"I wanted to write down my own experiences for my readerships,
including the joy, sorrow and all the lessons I had learned over the
years."
Tang said his works were mainly written for teenagers and business
people who needed, more than anyone else, to learn his lesson -- be
honest and abide by the law.
Then came news that his wife was suffering from stomach cancer.
When the prison officers heard of the tragedy, they allowed Tang to
pay a visit back to his hometown in the northern Hebei province.
"Tian Congying, director of the detention house, gave me 500 yuan
($60) out of his own pocket and told me to buy some nutritious food
for my wife," he said.
Shortly after his return, Tang submitted a written application for
writing novels in his spare time and soon got the green signal.
"He's the first ever to write books in our jail," said Liu Minggui,
deputy director of the detention house.
The prison officers arranged a workroom for him, offered him ink and
paper and easy access to TV, radio and newspapers.
One would hardly think that Tang's cosy little place was a cell, but
for the bars on the window.
Over the past five years, Tang has finished eight novels, eight
novelettes and four poetry collections.
A film production company under China Central Television has agreed
to shoot a 22-episode TV drama based on his film script entitled "A
Zigzagging Road to Heaven".
The prison authorities have decided to cut Tang's term to eight
years. Many of his inmates have been inspired by his success.
Gao Wenfeng, a painter on a four-year term for larceny, put a number
of his paintings on display at the Inner Mongolia Art Gallery in mid-
November.
Wang Fuyin, with a jail term of seven years for selling counterfeit
goods, is the inventor of a patented electric foot-warming device.
Tang, who had a heart attack in 2002, said: "The wardens have
reminded me time and again not to work too hard lest my health is
affected.
"But each time, their kind words would inject a new vitality that
would enable me to work harder still."