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Our holiday spirit shines through
Having
been brought up in Hong Kong, I never felt anything too special about
Chinese New Year. When I was a kid, the only thing I looked forward to
was the extra pocket money I got from the hong bao, or red envelopes. To
get that, I had to follow my parents on a tiring trek to visit relatives
living in different areas in the city. What a bore.
The last time I went home for the occasion was in 2003, and I chose to
fly on Chinese New Year's day to avoid the crowd. The ticketing agent
kept asking if I'd want to fly home a day earlier so that I could have
New Year's Eve dinner with my family. She looked a little aghast when I
told her that was not important.
But the pictures of tens of thousands of migrant workers stranded at the
railway stations of Guangzhou, Shanghai and Beijing during the snowstorm
woke me up, much like the Ghost of Christmas Present in Charles Dickens'
immortal novel, and showed me that Chinese New Year is not all humbug.
The look of anxiety and anguish on those faces upon realizing that they
might not be able to arrive home in time for the New Year's Eve dinner
demonstrated vividly the strong family ties that have served as the
bedrock of Chinese society, which is facing unprecedented challenges as
the country marches resolutely down the road of modernization.
Many migrant workers, some of whom had been waiting for days at railway
stations, are probably going to miss their family reunions this year
because of the unusually foul weather. But their show of restraint and
fortitude in the past several weeks - a time spent crammed together at
railway stations, in bitterly cold weather - was nothing short of a true
manifestation of the Chinese New Year spirit, the embodiment of harmony
and tolerance.
That same spirit also shined through the thousands of people of all
ranks who have been working tirelessly and selflessly to clear the
ice-locked railway tracks and highways and repair the broken electricity
cables in the vast regions stricken by the relentless snowstorm. And we
shall not forget those who have sacrificed their lives while combating
the snowstorm so that we could go home for the new year.
The newspapers in recent weeks have been filled with stories of
courageous deeds performed by common people called upon to face a severe
test of their stamina and endurance. There was the story of a group of
young men on Liangzi island, near Wuhan, hacking a 15-km passageway
across a frozen lake with pikes to allow delivery boats to bring a much
needed supply of food and fuel for their 3,000 or so fellow inhabitants.
A Shenzhen hotel has opened up to 60 rooms to accommodate stranded
passengers for free. In Wuhan, a group of hotels issued an open
invitation to citizens whose homes have been affected by the constant
disruptions in the water supply to shower in their unoccupied rooms.
To be sure, there have been reports about bureaucratic indifference and
incompetence in dealing with disgruntled passengers at different railway
stations and airports. Profiteering by unscrupulous merchants is evident
in some of the cities and towns hardest hit by the snowstorm. But not
even the unusually foul weather could dampen the Chinese New Year
spirit. On the contrary, it has only brought it forth in greater
intensity than ever before.
Ask Fu Song, a high school student in Tongzi county, Guizhou province.
He walked 20 km to his home village for the family reunion, braving a
treacherous snow-bound mountain road where no bus driver dared to go.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily news exchange item |