Headlines | Columnist Service

CHINA: THE ECONOMY GROWS WHILE CULTURAL IDENTITY DISAPPEARS

This column is available for visitors to the IPS website only for reading. Reproduction in print or electronic media is prohibited. Media interested in republishing may contact romacol@ips.org.

XIAN, Nov 23 2011 (IPS) - Xie Jing is 15 years old and belongs to the generation that in 2020, according to predictions, will see China transformed into the major world economic power. But Xie has no political or cultural interest. His generation is very different from previous ones. She lives in her own world, completely globalized, where the North American life style is the main reference point. She dresses herself as a North American teenager, listens to the same music, has the same idols and the same relation with the Internet and virtual world. The governmental newspaper, China Daily published two striking articles. On the 28th of October it revealed that electronic matrimony became very popular amongst youngsters. A game called cybermarriage registered one million participants in the first month. It is calculated that the electronic matrimonies have reached 30 million subscribers, and that 70% of the “married couples” are under 18.

This matrimony has no value. It’s just a game. Although, Qian Yu, a 15 years old boy declared to the newspaper ?I feel very isolated, even when I am amongst my classmates. I cannot tell them what I?m thinking. In online games we talk more than in school, my closest friends are there?. Huang Zhao, an educator in Guanzhou that provides online help to adolescents, declared that: ?The one child generation demonstrates a lower capacity of personal communication, and virtual life seems to satisfy this inner loneliness. They don’t care about their colleagues feelings, everything they do is according to their own emotions?.

The other article, from the 8th of November, reveals the discovery of a group of twenty teenage prostitutes (two of them aged 14), organized by two of the students among the group. What impressed the police is that they didn’t think they were doing something illegal. One of the organizers declared ?I didn’t want to cause any problems to my friends. We all like to do it because our parents don’t give us enough money for our tastes?.

Until 1949, with Mao?s victory, women in China were subjected to men. In the first Qin dynasty in 221 B. C. Confucius implemented the rule that in a harmonious society one should respect their superior: the elderly over the young, the authority over the citizen, the man over the women.

The Maoist revolutionary generation that I met in the World Conference of Students in 1957 was of an impressive austerity. The generation after that was the protagonist of the Cultural Revolution in 1966. During the revolution, it was the students that were the most fanatical destroyers of the old monuments and everything related with the culture of the past. Only with political reform after Mao?s death in 1976 was the celebration of the market and wealth consecrated. And in 1979, in order to control the demographic explosion, the rule of one child per couple was established.

There is a consensus that the differences between the generations of the 80s and the 90s were small. However with the birth of the consumer society, that gap is increasing between the generation of the 90s and the one of the first decade of this century, and that the gap is rapidly progressing.

After the Cultural Revolution, past and history have not yet recovered the lost prestige. It is extremely rare to see people younger than 30 in a Chinese classical music concert.

During my five-week stay in China, I didn’t once hear Chinese music, only western music, basically North American. I asked some of the young Chinese that I encountered, if they believed in the philosophical principles, medical and spiritual culture: the Chi, the internal energy; the Ying and Yang, the two poles that coexist in the human being. For all of them, this was only an ancient superstition.

The government and the party (which is the same) recently established culture as a priority. But the ruler?s generation does not understand the new generation and instead of updating the classical values, is imposing the memorization of the principles of Confucius in school.

It is unavoidable to ask the authorities if they think that by taking this path China will not be able to shape its own identity. They all realize this, but don’t know what to do.

China will be the major world power, and as a matter of fact, it will be integrated in the western world in an unpredicted way.

We must clarify that this is predominantly an urban phenomenon. The gap between cities (where 50,32% of the population lives) and the rural areas continues to grow in an exponential way. Each year, China takes 15 million people out of poverty and thus legitimizes the domination of the Communist Party. But the rural immigrants that lack a residence permit in cities grew to 242 million last year. The majority of them left their children with their grandparents, since without a residence permit, the children cannot go to school in urban areas. It is calculated that the children who were ?left behind? are about 50 million, lacking education and food compared with children of urban areas. This leaves them with major mental and physical disadvantages. For these kids, there is no Internet or access to consumerism. But the cultural identity of this underdeveloped sector cannot be assimilated to western globalization. It is molded by poverty and by old generations, therefore western globalization does not provide a valid response.

A westernized China, will it make the world richer or poorer? (END/COPYRIGHT IPS)

(*) Robert Savio, founder and President Emeritus of the news agency Inter Press Service (IPS).

 
Republish | | Print |

Related Tags