After years of fighting, including two failed attempts to launch lawsuits against the city's planning committee to seek compensation for the home that was taken from her family during the chaotic period, she has gotten no where with her case at Beijing No.2 Intermediate People's Court.
"I finally went to the court to check the records myself and I found that the court had labeled my case as a 'No Reply,'" she said. Countless inquiries and several letters to related government departments have also left her without answers, she added.
Still, Hua continues to reach out to residents in similar situations, who also hold paperwork proving themselves as the original owners of the homes they lost during the revolutionary days, guiding them on legal courses of action to take - though she yet to succeed in helping anyone see their properties (if remaining) returned to them or receive government compensation for what was taken from them years ago.
Fighting for private owners
Hua said that the best approach to saving the old residences in the city is to make sure that local residents are informed about their legal rights so they aren't "bullied" into acting against their will.
She said that many people in the past left their city homes to start over again in the suburbs on instruction from the government because they believed that they had no other choice. But because "they do," she continues to visit old courtyards to let people know of their options.
Her efforts have been recognized by local residents as the reason why hutong communities Jiudaowan and Dongsibatiao, both in Dongcheng, remain standing today.
Zheng Xicheng, a 75-year-old painter who still lives in Jiudaowan Hutong, said that he was inspired by Hua to fight harder for his home when the government started taking down old homes in his area in 2002, moving residents out to beyond the Fifth Ring Road.
"Hua told us that our home belonged to us and that it wasn't up to anyone in the government to tear it down without our consent; we didn't know that before," he told the Global Times.
Zheng who later got involved with Hua's efforts, said that while more than half of the homes near his neighborhood are now gone, if it weren't for her, "maybe the entire city would have been flattened."
While Hua said that she is willing to fight for the cause she believes in - until forever if need be - she laughs at the irony of the thought, and prays that day won't come soon as "there isn't much left."
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