Although the Spring Festival is the most important family reunion
holiday for Chinese people, many migrant workers chose to celebrate
the holiday in bustling cities where they work.
Just like Shanghai citizens, migrant workers Hua Yun and husband
went to the Jing'an Temple in downtown Shanghai on the first day of
China's Rooster Year, burning incense and praying in front of
Buddha for a good salary and a smooth life in the coming year.
Although the
Spring Festival is the most important family reunion holiday
for Chinese people, Hua, 28, born in Yingshang County, east China's
Anhui
Province, chose to celebrate the holiday in bustling Shanghai,
where she has worked for eight years.
"I have become accustomed to the life in Shanghai. I enjoy the
comfortable living conditions here and, more importantly, the city
has started to give migrant workers a more fair and friendly
atmosphere to let us merge in the true city life," said Hua.
Hua, whose monthly salary is US$120, lives in a 28 square meter
apartment in the Taoyuancun Community, a suburb of the city. The
other 1,500 residents in the community are also migrant workers.
Half of them chose to spend the Spring Festival in Shanghai rather
than going back home.
Pan Bingqing, 16 and born in Huangyan County of Zhejiang
Province, is one of Hua's neighbors. Pan grew up in Shanghai and
can speak fluent Shanghai dialect. "Except that I had no Shanghai
permanent household registry document, my life was no different
with other young Shanghai girls," Pan said.
There are three million migrant workers currently living and
working in Shanghai and two thirds of them have social security
insurance, which previously only urban residents could have.
There were 140 million migrant workers in China in 2004. The
Chinese government started to put more attention on safeguarding
the legitimate rights and interests of migrant workers. The
landmark event was Premier Wen Jiabao helping a migrant worker
collect defaulted salary in 2003. Since then a campaign to help all
migrant workers retrieve defaulted salaries was launched
nationwide, and China's legislature is considering a regulation to
ensure migrant workers get paid on time.
Except for getting their salaries on time, migrant workers have
begun to get more social respect. In Hangzhou, another booming city
in east China, the municipal government prepared a feast on New
Year's Eve for more than 1,000 migrant workers who could not go
back home for family reunions.
A migrant worker surnamed Lu from Houzhou County, east China's
Anhui Province appeared excited when invited to the feast. "I've
worked in Hangzhou for several years, and this is the first time
I've been treated to a feast by the city authorities."
In Haikou, capital of south China's Hainan Province, the
municipal government opened its library for free during the Spring
Festival for migrant workers.
Luo Qiping, from southwest China's Guizhou
Province and working at a construction site near the city's
library, spent the Spring Festival holiday reading there.
"I don't have too much money to pursue other entertainment.
Therefore reading newspapers in the library is the best choice for
me to spend the holiday. Through newspapers, I learned that
dramatic changes were underway in my hometown and learned how to
use legal means to safeguard my legitimate rights," Luo said.
(Xinhua News Agency February 12, 2005)
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