Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - 1 1 years ago, the "mom Spring Festival travel rush fever" that touched China was found. Where did the child go?

1 1 years ago, the "mom Spring Festival travel rush fever" that touched China was found. Where did the child go?

This is a search of 1 1 year. 20 10 65438+ 10 30, the first day of China's entry into Spring Festival travel rush. Zhou Ke, a reporter from Xinhua News Agency, took such a photo in Nanchang Railway Station Square: a young mother, with a huge schoolbag on her back, bent over, sweeping the floor with her backpack in her hand, but the baby in her right arm was neat and warm. The young mother who looked up had a rosy face and strong big eyes.

On the same day, this photo entitled "My child, Mom takes you home" was distributed by the tearful editor of the photography department of Xinhua News Agency, which hit people's hearts in the massive photos of the Spring Festival travel rush craze that night and was selected by hundreds of websites and newspapers.

20 1 1 This photo won the annual China photojournalism gold award and the 2 1 China journalism award.

"A shocking but thought-provoking photo!"

"Life is on my shoulders and hope is in my arms."

"After I became a mother, I couldn't understand this picture. I can't help crying when I read it. "

……

In the past 1 1 year, this photo was circulated on the internet and social platforms, and was quoted and forwarded by major media, which became "Spring Festival travel rush's expression of running away". Every time I go to Spring Festival travel rush, people always think of this Chinese mother; Every Mother's Day, netizens will post this photo to celebrate the great maternal love.

1 1 years later, countless inquiries and feedbacks made reporters begin to regret that they "didn't leave their mother's contact information". Among the related information sent by many netizens and followers, Zhou Ke began a long search.

With the information pieced together bit by bit and the photos compared one by one, through everyone's efforts, the outline of my mother became clearer and clearer: Bamuyu Bumu, 32 years old, Yi nationality.

"That photo was when I took my second daughter home." Bamu Youbumu said. Unfortunately, the second daughter died of illness less than half a year after returning to China. Since then, she has never gone out to work. 20 1 1 year, her third child, born 10 days later, also died unfortunately.