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Beijing.
Her head was ringing from the blows. Once, twice, three times, her husband
slammed her face into the floor.
Kim Lee
tried to twist her tall but skinny frame out from under his 91-kilogram body.
He kept on pounding. Eight, nine, 10 times — she thought she might black out.
Then, close
to the floor, she glimpsed the neon pink-painted toenails of her 3-year-old
daughter, Lydia. “Stop!” the child cried. “What are you doing? Stop, Daddy,
stop!” She jumped on her father and scratched his arm.
“Damn it!”
he yelled. He loosened his grip on his wife, and she crawled away. It wasn’t
the first time that Li Yang, a Chinese celebrity entrepreneur, had struck her.
But for his American wife, it was going to be the last.
She scooped
up her wailing child, grabbed their passports and a wad of cash and walked out
of their Beijing apartment. In doing so, she opened the door to a torrent of
anguish about domestic violence in her adopted country, inadvertently becoming
a folk hero for China’s battered women.
Domestic
violence everywhere lives in the shadows, and in China it thrives in a secrecy
instilled by tradition that holds family conflicts to be private. It is also
hard to go public in a country where many still consider women subservient to
their husbands, and there is no specific national law against domestic
violence.
At least
one in four women in China is estimated to have been a victim of domestic
violence, surveys show, with the rate in rural areas as high as two out of
every three. The violence takes many forms, from physical and sexual assault to
emotional abuse or economic deprivation.
Lee’s case
has spawned tens of thousands of posts on Chinese Twitter-like sites, along
with protests and talk show debates. It is especially explosive because she is
a foreigner at a time when China is sensitive about how it is understood and
treated by the world.
“A lot of
people said, ‘Oh, is it because Kim is an American and so she’s too
strong-willed, or her personality is too strong?’... Some others have asked
whether she is making a big fuss over a small issue,” says Feng Yuan, founder
and chair of the Anti-Domestic Violence Network in Beijing. “This shows that in
terms of the public perception of domestic violence, we still have a long way
to go.”
The story
of Li Yang and Kim Lee is told in photographs, letters, text messages, police
documents and hospital records, as well as interviews with her in Beijing. Li
refused requests for interviews, but in past interviews on TV and on his
microblog, he has confessed to beating his wife.
They met on
the first day of her first trip to China in 1999. Then a teacher in Miami, she
was visiting a Chinese school to learn about bilingual education.
He was
there to speak about his popular program, “Crazy English,” a radical approach
to learning the language that involved hand gestures and slogans such as
“Conquer English to Make China Stronger!” They married in a Las Vegas chapel in
2005, a few years after their first daughter Lily was born. But with Li away at
workshops much of the time, the relationship grew strained.
One day,
during an argument over money, he slapped her hard, she says. Another time,
arguing about work, he pushed her in front of their colleagues.
In February
2006, while Lee was seven months pregnant with their second child, her husband
promised to accompany her to the hospital but did not show up.
Lee went
home and deleted four chapters of a textbook she had written for him. When he
called, she told him, “I want you to understand what it feels like when you
count on someone to do something and they don’t.”
He hung up.
The next day, while she was baking cupcakes with their daughter, he flew into
the kitchen and knocked a hot pan out of her hand. He grabbed her by the hair,
threw her on the floor and choked her.
He managed
to land a few kicks on her stomach, but she turned on her side to protect the
unborn child. Despite bruises on her legs and body, a sonogram showed the baby
was all right. Li said later he “could not tolerate” threats to his work.
Lee did not
tell her family or friends about the beating. She did tell her sister-in-law,
who dismissed her concerns, saying: “It’s nothing. All men are like that.”
The
expectation that all men are violent — or at least have the right to be violent
— is common in parts of China.
As with
many countries, men historically ruled the family, with authority over women
and girls. Women were supposed to obey their fathers when young, their husbands
when married and their sons when widowed, according to advice attributed to the
ancient sage Confucius. Those who broke family laws could be beaten, with no
questions asked.
There is no
official data on domestic violence in China, and underreporting is common.
However, a recent nationwide survey by the All-China Women’s Federation found
that 25 percent of women reported domestic violence from their spouses, almost
the same as in the United States. Smaller studies report a rate in Chinese
rural areas of up to 65 percent.
“What it
shows is the tip of the iceberg,” Feng says. “How big the iceberg really is, we
don’t know.”
Wei
Tingting is one of about 10 activists who staged a protest over Lee’s plight on
Valentine’s Day on a busy street in Beijing. She and two other women wore
bridal gowns splashed with fake blood and makeup that looked like bruises on
their faces.
Wei, who
grew up in the Chinese countryside in Guangxi province, often saw her father
beating her mother. Her grandfather hit her grandmother, too.
“The
neighbors around us were doing the same. Everyone took it to be a very normal
thing. You beat a woman because the woman is at fault,” the 23-year-old says.
“Some women even think that it is their fault; that’s why they are beaten.”
By 2009,
Lee was plotting her escape. But how? She worked for her husband’s company,
with no independent income and no bank account. She lived in an apartment under
her sister-in-law’s name and relied on cash Li brought home every month.
Then came
the beating that finally drove her out. When he let go, she grabbed Lydia and
walked to the police station. She hesitated at the door, then thought of her
daughter and walked in.
The police
told her they could do nothing unless her husband came also. They brought her
to a hospital, where male staffers examined her, placed stickers on her body
and photographed the bruises on her head, knees, elbows and back.
That night,
Li sent her a message that he had hit her only 10 times, and that a carpet
under her had softened the blows. “I was not that cruel,” he wrote.
He refused
to go to the police station. So she got his attention the best way she knew how
— via the Internet. First, she posted a shot of the bump on her forehead on her
Chinese microblog. The next night, it was a photo of the bruises on her knees.
And then, a frontal shot of the forehead and another of a bleeding ear.
It worked.
“Crazy English” is a household name, and Li had a lot to lose from negative
publicity among the students who fork out thousands of yuan to hear him.
“Kim, could
you cancel that weibo,” Li said in a text message, referring to the microblog.
“It will damage many things. I love you!”
Instead,
the photos went viral. Lee went from having about two dozen followers on her
microblog to more than 20,000 in a few days, and three times as many now.
Her husband
sought to portray the dispute, and the marriage, as a clash between East and
West. He said on TV that he had married Lee to research American child-raising
techniques, turning the relationship into an experiment.
He painted
her as an American woman who thinks family should come before career and
country, who fails to see that family business in China is private and that a
Chinese man hitting his wife should be forgiven.
“I still
think that things that happen at home, well, a family’s shame should not be
aired publicly,” Li said on a talk show. “I thought it could cause huge damage
to me and my career. So I asked her to remove these photos. She refused.”
Culture has
become part of a heated dialogue about the incident. Men have said that while
violence is wrong, it comes from the pressure Chinese husbands face to excel in
their careers and provide for their families. Others have lamented that it took
a foreigner’s indignance to cast light on what is an open secret in China.
In October,
she filed divorce papers. He replied with a text message: “You think you
Americans are smarter??? Let’s see!!! Americans want to win a war in China???”
The case is
before the courts, and she can only wait. Li has claimed in divorce proceedings
that he is not guilty of domestic violence because he did not beat her
frequently over many years.
Last week,
he sent her an angry text message: “In America you should be killed by your
husband with gun. This is real American way. You’re so lucky to be in China!”
Later, he wrote, more succinctly, “Kill you!”
Yet when
asked if she still loves him, she says she is not sure.
“I hate
what he has done to me and our family ... but I cannot say that I hate him,”
she says. “Maybe the better question is not do you love him, but does love mean
accepting and forgiving someone’s violence?
“For me, it
does not.”
Associated Press
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