share time: 2025-12-01 00:34:00
22-year-old Lin Xiaoman had just got her teaching certificate when she received the call about her grandfather's critical illness. On his deathbed, he held her hand and said, "Keep the 'Inclusive School' alive." Hidden in a mountain valley, this primary school—built by her grandfather over a lifetime—accepts left-behind kids, autistic children, and teens with incarcerated parents, all for his belief in "no child left behind." But after taking over, Xiaoman finds the school can't even afford chalk and is facing closure for "not meeting standards." She filmed a video of Xiaoyu, a Down syndrome child, singing "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star," which went viral but drew accusations of "publicity stunts." When "troubled teen" Ajie tore up an autistic child's painting, Xiaoman learned from her grandfather's diary: Ajie's mother, once his student, committed suicide due to discrimination, and her grandfather vowed to "catch every falling child." Just then, Chen Mo—the "bad kid" her grandfather once dragged back from an internet café—returned with 10 million yuan, demanding, "Transfer the kids who hold others back." Xiaoman touched her grandfather's portrait and clenched her normal school badge—some torches must burn even brighter.
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