Though headway has been made in
bridging the gap between people from urban and rural areas, great
disparities remain on all levels, including the ability to engage
in a healthy cultural life.
One member of the Chinese People's
Political Consultative Conference standing committee said that
living in a city at least allows access to a social security
system, something that hardly exists in rural areas.
Chen Wanzhi continued, "Gaps like
this and the inequality they bring can also impact on people's
cultural lives," before suggesting that more investment is needed,
as well as a trade union to organize migrant workers.
The recent blockbuster A World
Without Thieves is based on the experiences of a young migrant
worker carrying 60,000 yuan (US$7,228) on a train packed with
thieves.
While the image of a warmhearted but
somewhat naive migrant worker may have entertained film fans, it's
likely that most migrant workers are yet to see it.
"Forty yuan (US$4.90) a ticket? I
can't afford it," said Shen Jie, a migrant worker at a construction
site in Dongzhimen, east Beijing.
Shen found it hard to recall when he
last watched a film, or what it was about. "It must be ten years
ago," he said.
Though they are the builders of the
nation's theaters and cinemas, a limited cultural life is common
among China's 120 million migrant workers.
Shen arrived from the eastern
province of Zhejiang in 1991. He says life was better then, and
that money seemed to come more easily. "Now, as more and more
workers are rushing to the capital, it's hard to earn money, and
none of us consider watching films."
For many like Shen, the dream is
earning enough to pay for their children's education so they can
find jobs in the cities and bid farewell to the hardships of rural
life forever. This drives them to work hard and save as much as
possible.
With a monthly salary of less than
500 yuan (US$60), Shen sends as much as he can home. In his small
dormitory, which he shares with seven co-workers, there is one
well-thumbed copy of a magazine published in 1998. Reading
newspapers and taking a stroll in Beijing's streets provide an
evening's entertainment.
A survey last year by local media
found that 80 percent of migrant workers spent their spare time
sleeping and chatting because of fatigue and a lack of disposable
income. 47 percent had to work more than 10 hours a day, with less
than 10 percent working the standard eight hours.
Around 40 percent did not even
possess a book, and nearly 60 percent said they were dissatisfied
with their cultural life.
Pan Zhonghua works on a construction
site near Xidan, a commercial district of Beijing. He said he once
went to a big bookstore with colleagues. "When we went there we put
on good, clean clothes, but people know you are a migrant worker at
first glance." The reception they got discouraged them from going
again.
There are other more pressing
matters dogging the lives of migrant workers, such as salary
arrears, and it is not unusual to hear reports of people not
getting paid after a year of hard toil.
But some government departments are
recognizing that migrant worker's cultural lives are also important
by, for example, holding free screenings of films for them.
(China Daily March 11,
2005)
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