SHENZHEN, June 27 — A five‑year‑old boy in Shenzhen accidentally set fire to nearly US$30,000 (RM120,230) worth of mobile phones at home, but it was his father’s unexpectedly calm reaction that captured the attention of millions on mainland social media.
According to the South China Morning Post, the child had been playing near a power strip in a room that doubled as his father’s phone‑repair workshop when he noticed sparks from a short circuit. Intrigued, he used the sparks to light a tissue, triggering a blaze that quickly spread and destroyed almost 30 smartphones, more than half of them iPhones. The family’s business was uninsured, leaving the father, surnamed Peng, to absorb the loss.
Peng, who had been asleep in a nearby room, said his son quietly shut the bedroom door to prevent smoke from entering and even turned on the air‑conditioner before fleeing to another room. He woke only when he smelled smoke and managed to extinguish the fire, though part of the living room and workshop had already been charred.
Instead of scolding the boy, Peng turned the moment into a lesson. He asked his son whether he was “happy” with what had happened — prompting the child to shake his head — and then taught him a Chinese idiom about the consequences of “playing with fire”. The boy later tried to make amends by offering his pocket money and had earlier rescued his father’s cigarettes from the burning room.
Peng told local media he felt “frightened, touched and amused” by the incident, recalling how he himself had feared harsh punishment as a child and did not want to repeat that pattern with the next generation.
The story has since gone viral on Chinese social platforms, with related discussions drawing more than 50 million views. Many praised Peng’s restraint, calling it an example of patient parenting and a reminder that costly mistakes can still become meaningful teaching moments.