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BEIJING, Oct. 22 (Xinhuanet) -- As Chinese senior
citizens celebrated the Double Ninth Festival, or "Elderly's Day," Friday, there
is growing appeal that the elderly should be better taken care of.
The life expectancy of Chinese has reached 72 years
today, and how to create a sound environment for the elderly to enjoy their life
still needs painstaking efforts of the whole society, sociologists say.
This is especially true when China's large population
of senior citizens is taken into account.
China has a population of 1.3 billion and 130
million, or 10 percent, of the people are aged above 60, the largest group of
senior citizens in the world. The number is expected to soar to 400 million by
2050.
The Double Ninth Festival, pronounced in Chinese as
"Chong YangJie," falls on the ninth day of the ninth month on the Chinese lunar
calendar. Nine in Chinese has the means "luck"; double nines mean "great luck."
Besides, nine stands for a long time in China, so the day gradually became the
elderly's festival for longevity.
The traditional festival features mountain climbing,
eating of rice cakes, dates and nuts, and enjoying the beauty and fragrance of
chrysanthemum.
Nowadays, governments at various levels organize a
diversity ofactivities for the elderly to observe the festival.
In Yingshan County of Hubei Province, ancestor
worship is the main activity of the day. One thousand senior citizens in Beijing
attended an evening party. The government of Jiangsu Province sentgifts to
10,000 underprivileged senior citizens before the festival. The Shanghai
municipal government mobilized volunteers to take special care of senior
citizens, and at least 10,000 elderly people will benefit from the "caring for
the elderly program."
However, businessmen, who are keen on taking
advantage of everyfestival to make money, reacted far from enthusiastic about
the Elderly's Day.
Zhang Cuijuan, a saleswoman behind the health food
counter in Beijing Guohua Department Store confirmed they had done little in
business promote before the festival.
Many old people complain they have encountered
growing inconveniences in their life, especially when they go to shops andfind
it is difficult to choose the stylish clothing for the elderly.
The Chinese government has put the elderly's affairs
into the country's plan for economic and social development. And encouragedby
the growing elderly's consumption that is predicted at 1 trillion yuan (120
billion US dollars) by 2010, businesses can no long stay idle. An shop chain
named "Red-Setting-Sun Elderly Service Center" has opened outlets in big cities
such as Beijing, Xiamen and Nanchang, aiming at the big market.
Sure, it is good news for senior citizens. Enditem
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