Twenty years a Great Wall guardian

DM Monitoring

YINCHUAN: As night fell in the Helan Mountain, Li Shixiang lit a mosquito-repellent coil, opened a book on the Great Wall and made notes using the headlights of his car alongside a section of the ancient wall he was reading about.
“It feels like we are guarding each other,” Li said. He would spend the night in his car as he usually did.
The 45-year-old man lives in Haiyuan County in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, known as a “Museum of the Great Wall.” Ningxia has a total of over 1,500 km of the Great Wall built during multiple dynasties, with the most ancient section already 2,000 years old.
Born near the ruins of an ancient city, Li spent a lot of time there, playing with bronze coins and broken arrows after school. He said that the fun the cultural relics had brought him was unforgettable.
Li dropped out of a local college about 20 years ago and painted wall advertisings for a living.
When he was traveling and painting advertisements in rural areas, he noticed a lot of Great Wall sections and smoke towers that were left unrecorded and unprotected. He felt an urge to do something.
“The Great Wall symbolizes the Chinese nation as it conveys spirits such as solidarity, courage and peace,” Li said. “I have a responsibility to get to know it and better protect it.”
Not academically trained, Li has his own researching method. He firstly draws a scope where wall relics might exist based on related books and documents, and then searches on the satellite map.
If a promising location appears, he rides his motorbike or drives a car there immediately, with just a pen, a notebook, a tape measure, a cellphone and some food.
Most frequently, he drove all the way to one site only to find nothing. But there have also been surprises. In 2019, after five hours of driving, he found the relics of an ancient city in the desert of the neighboring Gansu Province.
“There was not a single footprint around. I was so excited that I cried and forgot my tiredness,” Li said.
He has explored almost all of the areas of the Great Wall in China — Beijing, Shaanxi, Hebei and Inner Mongolia. He has driven over 300,000 km, taken tens of thousands of photos and his writings have filled over 300 notebooks.
Over the years, he encountered wolves, fell into icy water, and once narrowly fell from a cliff. His eyes got hurt, and his toe was snapped. But all the pain was nothing compared to the pain he felt seeing sections of the Great Wall destroyed.
“Whether the ‘culprits’ were plants, wind, rain, animals or people, the sight of damaged Great Wall sections made me feel as if my own flesh had been gouged out,” he said.
Fortunately, the country has been pouring efforts into the protection of the Great Wall. He himself was also hired as a Great Wall keeper by the local government in 2016, and his work has been acknowledged by the cultural relics protection department.
In August, China issued a plan for the construction of the Great Wall national cultural park, which would integrate cultural relics and resources of 15 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities along the Great Wall for better protection and preservation.