Social Life >Emotion and Family
Left-over Children
Left-over children are children that live with only a single parent, extended family, or even friends of their parents. This is caused by a variety of factors, such as parental financial situations or social factor forcing parents and elders to work far from home.
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Avène and Elle China Hand the Gift of Education to Abandoned Children in Jiangsu

Jessabelle Vidal On Dec. 1, Avene, the French skin care brand owned by the Pierre Fabre Group, and Elle China, a French fashion magazine, raised and donated 300,000 yuan ($43,384) with the help of China Children and Teenager’s Fund for 225 students from three elementary schools in Jiangsu Province. Avene and Elle China have been working together for three years to raise and donate money for left-behind children. Those children were needy either because their legal guardians have passed away or the guardians do not have the ability to raise them. Those parents have no choice but to leave their children to the care of their grandparents. Based on a report by All-China Women’s Federation in 2015, there are more than 60 million abandoned children who are suffering all kinds of predicament during their younger years because of the absence of their parent’s love and affection. In 2014, Avene and Elle China, with the help of Couluers de Chine, went to Mountain Damiao in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region where they helped educate children in the region. In 2015, they showered love and sunshine to the homeless children in Beijing Guang’ai School. "Though in the past three years we have had three different themes, our focus is still the education problems for children," Francis Canet, general manager of Pierre Fabre China, told the Global Times. "These left-over children who don't have care from their parents need care from the whole society." Xiao Xue, the chief content officer of Elle China, said: "Our team visited students at each of the three schools for this year's project. We listen to their teachers' introduction and their own problems as well. Except for the donation that we made, what we can do is limited. "What they really need is more care and for their parents to return home and be with them. Each time we go, everyone on the team and in the office has been touched by videos that our team has brought back, and many of them offer to help." Canet said that on behalf of Elle China and Avene, he extends special appreciation to French Ambassador to China M. Maurice Gourdault-Montagne, for his support and acknowledgment of the charity gala, which was held at the ambassador's residence. He also said the biggest challenge facing them is how to reshape the children's personalities and to help them regain confidence, in turn making them feel like valuable members of society.

What Every Christian Should Know About Halloween

By Gerhard Pfandl Each year on Oct. 31, millions of people celebrate Halloween by dressing up as witches, devils, and demons. Besides parties for adults, the day has become an occasion for children to go from house to house, often in costumes, demanding “trick or treat.” The name Halloween derives from the Roman Catholic holiday All Saints’ Day, The Feast of All Saints, or All Hallows’ Day (hallow means “to make holy” or “consider something sacred”), celebrated on Nov. 1. All Saints’ Day commemorates the saints who have not been assigned a special day in the calendar of the Roman Catholic Church. The day before All Saints’ Day was called All Hallows’ Eve, from which Halloween is derived. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, the origin of Halloween goes back to a festival of the Druids, an order of pagan priests in ancient Gaul and Britain, in pre-Christian times: “In ancient Britain and Ireland, the Celtic festival of Samhain was observed on Oct. 31, at the end of summer. This date was also the eve of the new year in both Celtic and Anglo-Saxon times and was the occasion for one of the ancient fire festivals when huge bonfires were set on hilltops to frighten away evil spirits. The date was connected with the return of the herds from pasture, and laws and land tenures were renewed. The souls of the dead were supposed to revisit their homes on this day, and the autumnal festival acquired sinister significance, with ghosts, witches, hobgoblins, black cats, fairies, and demons of all kinds said to be roaming about. It was the time to placate the supernatural powers controlling the process of nature. The Celtic festival of Samhain, which signaled the commencement of winter, consisted of the eve of the feast and the day itself (Oct. 31 and Nov. 1). It remained popular among the Celtic people even after the Christianization of Britain in the fifth century. The Christian church in Britain adapted the feast of Samhain by adding the Christian celebration of All Saints’ Day to the festival. Until the eighth century, the Feast of All Saints was celebrated on May 13. It seems that because the British custom to celebrate All Saints’ Day on Nov. 1 had spread to other countries, Pope Gregory IV (827-844) transferred the feast of May 13 to Nov. 1. The New Catholic Encyclopedia claims the reason was, “because provisions were inadequate for the numerous pilgrims coming to Rome in May,” but it acknowledges that some believe “the November feast originated in Gaul and was immediately adopted in Rome.” The customs of Samhain survived in the Celtic areas of Great Britain: Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. In time they lost much of their religious significance and the eve of All Hallows’ Day became a secular festival, “although many traditionally Celtic ideas continued to be associated with the evening. Divination activities remained a popular practice. Adults, dressed in fantastic disguises and masks, imitated supernatural beings and visited homes where occupants would offer tributes of food and drink to them,” Leonard N. Primiano wrote in a section titled “Halloween” in The Encyclopedia of Religion. Irish and Scottish immigrants introduced All Hallows’ Eve observances to the United States, and after the massive immigration of the Irish during the potato famine (1845-1852), Halloween became a national festival. The custom for children to go trick or treating from door to door also goes back to the ancient Druid priests, who would go from house to house demanding food for their own consumption as well as for offerings to their deities. If the people in a home would not provide them with food, they would speak a demonic curse over the home, and, history claims, someone in the family would die within the year. The Druids would carry with them a large turnip, which they had hollowed out on the inside and carved a face on the front, to represent the demonic spirit they depended upon for their power and knowledge. The turnip lighted by a candle from within was used as a lantern for the Druids as they went from house to house at night. When this practice came to America in the 18th and 19th centuries, turnips weren’t that prominent, and the pumpkin was soon substituted for the turnips. Although the Seventh-day Adventist Church has not taken an official position specifically against Halloween, the church’s opposition to the occult and the demonic preclude any support for this type of festival. Halloween and its customs have no roots in Scripture or in the Christian church. They are firmly rooted in the occult and in pagan practices. These connections, however, are today forgotten or made light of. Nevertheless, any practice derived from the occult is incompatible with the teachings of Scripture (Leviticus 20:6). Since many people no longer believe in the existence of a personal devil and his demons, they feel there is no harm in making fun of these “religious relics of the past.” The children are taught that there are no such beings as witches and evil spirits and that it is fun to dress up as ghosts or goblins. The modern denial of the existence of Satan and demonic forces is clearly contrary to Scripture. From Genesis to Revelation, the Bible affirms the existence of Satan and demonic spirit beings (Genesis 3:1; Job 1:6; Matthew 8:31; Revelation 12:9). In the education of children, it is important that we do not plant false ideas in their minds. The Bible says, “Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it” (Proverbs 22:6, NKJV). To teach them that there is no harm in imitating evil spirits is contrary to God’s will. God in the Old Testament warned Israel not to dabble in the occult. “There shall not be found among you … one who practices witchcraft, or a soothsayer, or one who interprets omens, or a sorcerer, or one who conjures spells, or a medium, or a spiritist, or one who calls upon the dead. For all who do these things are an abomination to the Lord” (Deuteronomy 18:10-12). Since the occult is today more active than ever, this counsel is still valid today. Participation in Halloween customs may seem innocent fun for children and adults, but it is one more way Satan can use to deceive people into thinking there is no harm in playing a little bit with the world of spirits and demons. While Adventist Church cofounder Ellen G. White never mentioned Halloween, she warned many times against dabbling in spiritualism. “There are many who shrink with horror from the thought of consulting spirit mediums, but who are attracted by more pleasing forms of spiritism,” she said in Evangelism, p. 606. Seventh-day Adventists recognize that spiritualism has many faces. Some of them may seem harmless and even fun. Nevertheless, they lead children and adults away from God’s truth, and can become stepping stones to further entanglement with the occult.

Avène and Elle China help fulfill dreams for left-over children

The night of December 1 has been unforgettable, not only for Francis Canet, the general manager of Pierre Fabre China and Xiao Xue, the chief content officer of French fashion magazine Elle China, but for 225 students from three elementary schools in Jiangsu Province. At the charity gala, the two sides donated 300,000 yuan ($43,384) to the children with the help of China Children and Teenagers' Fund. It is the third year that Avène and Elle China have worked together for the growth and education of Chinese children. Left-over children are children whose parents have moved into big cities for work to support their family, and leave their children in the care of their grandparents. In 2014, Avène and Elle China walked into Mountain Damiao in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region together and with the support of Couleurs de Chine, they helped build the dream of learning for the children in that area. In 2015, Avène and Elle China brought love and sunshine to homeless children in Beijing Guang'ai School. "Though in the past three years we have had three different themes, our focus is still the education problems for children," Canet told the Global Times. "Because we know children are the tomorrow of Chinese society. These left-over children who don't have care from their parents need care from the whole society." According to a report by All-China Women's Federation in 2015, there are more than 60 million left-over children in China. Those children are suffering all kinds of difficulties during their childhood because of the lack of their parents' company and care. "Our team visited students at each of the three schools for this year's project. We listen to their teachers' introduction and their own problems as well. Except for the donation that we made, what we can do is limited. What they really need is more care and for their parents to return home and be with them," said Xiao Xue, who continuously leads the content team of Elle China to visit these schools and children they helped. "Each time we go, everyone on the team and in the office has been touched by videos that our team has brought back, and many of them offer to help." Talking about their three-year long collaboration and the future, both Canet and Xiao Xue shared their opinions towards how to give feedback to society and their willingness to continue this charity work. "First of all, we are all French brands and we share a lot in our principles of values. Doing charity work comes from the essence of our brands. What's more, China offers us a great stage for our development. Elle has been in China for 28 years, and Avène has been here for 12 years as well. It is time for us to give back to society. We hope to ask for more concern and care for those children," Canet added. He also said that on behalf of Elle China and Avène, he hoped to express special thanks to the French Ambassador to China M. Maurice Gourdault-Montagne, for his support and acknowledgment of the charity gala, which was held at the ambassador's residence.

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1 Their parents have gone to the city to do odd jobs, while the left-over children stay with their grandparents in their village.

2 As of May, there are 61 million "left-behind children" in China, as estimated by the All China Women's Federation.

3 There are 74 students in the primary school Yang works at, and 44, or 60 percent, are "left-behind children".