“Teacher, what time is it over there?”
At 10 a.m. on June 2, in the library of Damu Township, Xian’an District, children from Changshou Middle School and Changshou Primary School looked up, staring at the big screen. On the other end of the screen was late-night New York, where Sphinx, a Chinese student living in the United States, was smiling. The 12-hour time difference was like a thread, connecting the green of the Damu Mountains in southern Hubei with the nightscape of Manhattan.
Sphinx holds a master’s degree from Columbia University and now works as an analyst in New York. Using the title “Beyond the Scale of Daily Life,” she took the children on a view of Earth from space, talked about her 30-kilometer walk across Manhattan, and then discussed rice noodle rolls in New York’s Chinatown and hot dry noodles from her hometown of Wuhan. She didn’t lecture or set standard answers, just chatted with the children as if they were younger siblings. After class, Shen Xinlei, a seventh-grader at Changshou Middle School, wrote in a survey: “I look forward to going out and seeing this vast world, even if my starting point is just the mountains.”
Damu Township is one of the most remote townships in Xian’an, with many people working away from home. For a long time, the township’s party committee and government have been thinking about one thing: how to help children in the mountains shift from “passive learning” to “active growth,” and let them know that life has more possibilities.
In December 2025, the township party secretary, Tang Yang, turned his alumni network from Peking University into a cross-border “lecturer supply chain.” A public lecture program called “Soaring Over Damu Mountain” was launched: regularly at the township library, through a cloud classroom combining “online + offline” and “domestic + international,” young people studying and working around the world are invited to share their real experiences and talk with the mountain children about what the “outside world” is really like.
At the first lecture on December 12 last year, Xu Teng, a doctoral student from Tsinghua University, stood before the children and talked about how he “collected trash to make designs” as a child. He told them: “Don’t let your environment limit your imagination. Observe, record, go out—every step is a path to the world.” That same day, Gu Xiaoyan, a student in Australia, connected via the cloud and “blew” the wind of Sydney into the mountain village of southern Hubei.
Since then, one window after another has opened—a doctoral student from Indonesia talked about the Javanese market and the lively atmosphere of Jakarta, an engineer from Tajikistan showed children BYD electric cars on the streets of Dushanbe, a doctor from Turkey discussed the life philosophy of “stop and chat for a while” at a tea stall in Istanbul, and a master’s student from Oxford University honestly admitted that even top universities have a “remote feeling” where you need to take a train to go out and play…
To date, “Soaring Over Damu Mountain” has attracted over 100 primary and secondary school students. The changes are tangible: originally introverted children have become more outgoing and talkative, their perspectives on issues and thinking have broadened, and discussions during breaks have turned into “I want to go there and see.” One teacher remarked: “Before, children thought the world was far away; now some dare to write in their essays that they want to go to Istanbul for tea.”
These real changes are exactly what Damu Township aims for. Township officials often say: “The mountains are still there; we don’t have to move them, but we can help each child first send their gaze over the peak.”
Rural revitalization begins with education. Doing education well means not just building classrooms or upgrading facilities, but more importantly, opening windows one by one, so that children in the mountains have light in their hearts and direction under their feet.
The Damu Mountains still stand tall, but the screen that lights up regularly in the library has already allowed more and more eyes to look toward the broader world beyond the mountains.