21-Year-Old Chinese Man Quits College Exam to Support Seven Siblings After Parents Have Six Children
Sun Pan from Hunan province sells pork to support family including disabled sister and infant brother with Down syndrome
Auf einen Blick
- Sun Pan, a 21-year-old from Shaoyang, Hunan province, abandoned his chance to retake China's college entrance exam to work selling pork and support his six younger siblings.
- His family includes an 18-year-old sister with a disabled arm from a childhood fall, an infant brother born this year with Down syndrome, and grandparents including a paralyzed grandfather.
- The story captured national attention in April.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
This story reflects broader social issues in rural China including large family sizes, economic pressures on young people, and the challenges faced by families with disabled members. The gaokao is China's critical college entrance examination that determines future educational and career opportunities.
A 21-year-old man from central China, whose greatest wish is for his parents to stop having more children, sells pork to support his six younger siblings. In April, Sun Pan, from Shaoyang in Hunan province, captured national attention for shouldering family responsibilities as the eldest son. According to the mainland media outlet Jimu News, his 18-year-old second sister suffered a childhood fall that disabled his right arm and his youngest brother, born this year, was diagnosed with Down syndrome. His other younger siblings are still in school. The household also includes his grandparents, though his grandfather is paralysed. After failing the gaokao, China's vital college entrance examination, Sun gave up the chance to retake it and instead took on the family burden.
Offene Fragen
- Why do the parents continue to have more children despite the financial burden?
- What support systems exist for families in this situation?
- Will Sun Pan have opportunities to resume his education later?




