The outbreak of war in 1914 led France to recruit Chinese workers for factory work and heavy manual labor. The
Chinese Labor Corps in France eventually brought more than 130,000 workers, mostly from
North China villages. In June 1915, Li and his Paris friends took this opportunity to provide schooling and training. The Work-Study program was renewed, though on a different basis, bringing less educated workers rather than students. By March 1916 their Paris group, the Société Franco-Chinoise d'Education () was directly involved in recruiting and training these workers. The Société had well-placed French backers, mostly on the political left, including
Alphonse Aulard, the first president of the Société, a professor of French history at the
Sorbonne;
Marius Moutet, vice-president and a socialist member of the National Assembly from Lyon; and
Édouard Herriot, mayor of Lyon. They pressed the French government to give the Chinese workers technical education as well as factory work. Li wrote extensive articles in the
Chinese Labor Journal (Huagong zazhi), which introduced readers to Western science, arts, fiction, and current events. By 1917, the Society had established feeder schools in Beijing, Baoding, and Changxingdian, in North China. Students in Hunan wanted to found a preparatory school, but the provincial government at Changsha refused to help. A delegation went to Beijing in February 1918 to consult with Li and Cai. The financial support they obtained from the Beijing government attracted even more students from Hunan, including
Mao Zedong. While Mao raised funds for the movement, he did not himself study abroad pursuant to it. and
Xu Teli, then in his early 40s, the future commissar of education at Yan'an in 1937. Deng arrived in France on October 19, 1920, but within three months the Sichuan Association which sponsored his trip ran out of money. Deng then worked at Schneider & Co., France's largest ordnance manufacturer, in
Creusot, a southern city. Deng was surprised to see white people treat Chinese like slaves in Shanghai and other ports along the way. Although he and many of his Chinese colleagues had considered themselves economically well off in China, they now worked long hours in poor conditions while they saw French families living in luxury unknown in China. Deng learned how to use an industrial welder, a skill which proved useful when he was deposed from power during the
Cultural Revolution and sent to work in a factory. ==The Lyon incident and the decline of the program==