Diez de Octubre School

The Diez de Octubre School (Chinese: 中華三民聯校; pinyin: zhōnghuá sānmín lián xiào; lit. 'Chung Wa-San Min United Colleges'; CDO), is a Peruvian private school headquartered in Lima—in the districts of Breña and San Miguel— and Chiclayo. It was founded in 1924 by a group of women from the Catholic Ladies' Association of the Chinese Colony. The college offers early, primary and secondary education studies.[2]

Diez de Octubre School
中華三民聯校
Main gate in Cieneguilla
Location
Map
See list
Information
MottoHoy buenos, mañana mejores
(Good today, better tomorrow)
Religious affiliation(s)Secular
(formerly Catholic)
Established12 August 1924 (1924-08-12)
Director
See list
  • Breña: Martín Alvarado
  • San Miguel: Luis Tello
  • Chiclayo: Rosa Alarcón
LanguageSpanish, English and Chinese (Cantonese)[1]
Colour(s)Three colours:
  White
  Red
Websitewww.acepdiezdeoctubre.edu.pe

The school, originally funded by the government of the Republic of China,[1] is the first Chinese school in the Americas.[3]

History

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In 1924, a group of ladies from the Catholic Ladies' Association of the Chinese Colony, in their usual social welfare meetings, considered the urgent need to create an educational center for the benefit of the children of the Chinese residents, this being the first Chinese school in the Americas.

The "Chung Wa" school (Chinese: 中華; pinyin: Zhōnghuá), created in 1924, and the "San Min" school (Chinese: 三民; pinyin: Sānmín), created in 1936, served as the basis for the creation of the "Diez de Octubre" school in Breña in 1962.[4] The student population was always increasing and as a result of this, the promoters created the "Confucio" annex in the San Miguel district in 1982, and the "Sun Yat Sen" school in the city of Chiclayo in 2006.

Apart from the educational centers, the school also has a Leisure and Recreation Center, located in the Cieneguilla district, which the classes attend annually. The educator Juan León Lara was the manager and conductor of these works.

The school's three representative colours represent the following:[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Zeng, Xuyun (2021-03-06). "A Chinese school brings family from Taiwan to Peru". Far From China.
  2. ^ Joo de Siu, Teresa (2020). Apuntes de mi vida (PDF) (in Spanish). Cámara de Comercio Peruano China. p. 32.
  3. ^ "Proyecto de Ley: Ley que declara de interés nacional que se reconozca al primer colegio chino de América "CEP Peruano Chino Diez de Octubre – Breña", como Colegio Benemérito de la Tradición Educativa y Cultural China del Perú" (PDF). Congress of Peru. 2019-02-15.
  4. ^ Valladares Chamorro, Odalis Rocío (2012). Inmigrantes chinos en Lima. Teatro, identidad e inserción social. 1870-1930 (PDF) (in Spanish). Lima: Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos. p. 77.
  5. ^ "Sobre Nosotros". Colegio "Diez de Octubre".

12°03′58″S 77°03′37″W / 12.0662°S 77.0603°W / -12.0662; -77.0603