
China Influencer Learns Truth After Building Girl's House
A philanthropist with 25 million followers built a $30,000 home for a teen claiming to raise her sisters alone in poverty. The discovery of exaggerated hardships sparked an important conversation about helping those truly in need.
When Chen Jiajun visited 18-year-old Aji in rural Guizhou province, his heart broke at what he saw. Four girls crammed onto one small bed, surviving on pickled cabbage soup, living in a leaky house with no bathroom.
Aji told Chen she was raising two younger sisters and a niece completely alone in the remote mountain village. The online philanthropist, known as Super Btai to his 25 million followers, specializes in exposing scams and supporting vulnerable communities across China.
Chen didn't hesitate. He spent $30,000 building the family a proper house, sharing their story with his massive audience.
Then came the uncomfortable discovery. Some of Aji's hardships had been exaggerated, though the full extent of the discrepancies wasn't detailed in reports.
The situation Chen encountered happens more often than many realize in remote Chinese villages. Philanthropists racing to help can sometimes receive incomplete or embellished stories from people desperate for assistance.

Sunny's Take
What makes this story worth sharing isn't the deception. It's what happened next.
Chen could have publicly shamed Aji or demanded his money back. Instead, he used the moment to educate his followers about the complexities of poverty relief work.
Real charitable work is messy. It requires verification, local partnerships, and understanding that desperation sometimes pushes people to exaggerate. Chen's experience reminds us that helping others takes more than good intentions.
The family still needed help, even if their situation wasn't exactly as first described. Four young women were living in genuinely difficult conditions in one of China's poorest provinces.
Chen's willingness to share both the initial story and the complicated truth shows the evolution happening in online philanthropy. Transparency builds trust, even when things don't go perfectly.
His 25 million followers got an invaluable lesson: sustainable change requires asking hard questions and staying committed even when reality is more complicated than a viral video suggests. That honesty will help more families in the long run than any single house could.
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Based on reporting by South China Morning Post
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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