Redian新闻
>
As COVID Surges, China’s Families Face a Lunar New Year Dilemma

As COVID Surges, China’s Families Face a Lunar New Year Dilemma

社会

For the first time in years, people across China are free to return to their rural hometowns to celebrate the Lunar New Year holiday. Many fear they’ll bring COVID-19 with them.

By Ni Dandan and Li Wei

For decades, the Lunar New Year holiday has only meant one thing for Wen Guoqiang: a family reunion at his mother’s house in east China’s Jiangsu province.

The 63-year-old and his four siblings live in cities across eastern China these days, but the trip back to their hometown has always been sacred.

The family, however, has been forced to break with tradition this year. With COVID-19 spreading like wildfire in China, they felt gathering over the holiday would be too dangerous.

“It was a hard decision to make,” Wen told Sixth Tone. “It’s the first time the reunion has been canceled since I can remember.” 

Families across China are facing the same dilemma ahead of the Lunar New Year, which falls on Sunday.

This year’s holiday is taking place amid unprecedented uncertainty. Just weeks ago, China abandoned its strict “zero-COVID” policy, and ordered local authorities to get rid of restrictions on intercity travel.

For millions of people, this means they’re now free to visit their hometowns over the Spring Festival for the first time in years. But many are hesitating over whether to do so, fearing they might accidentally expose elderly relatives to the virus.

COVID-19 has spread explosively across China in recent weeks. Many cities believe their outbreaks have already peaked, as the majority of residents have been infected. Hospitals have struggled to cope with a surge of patients in critical condition, and nearly 60,000 deaths have already been confirmed.

Yet experts fear the holiday will bring greater risks. The virus has taken longer to reach China’s less-developed rural areas, but that is changing as large numbers of city dwellers travel back to their hometowns.

Patients receive intravenous medication and oxygen therapy at a health center in Shanghai, Jan. 13, 2023. Alex Plavevski/EPA via IC

Xu Zuping, a physician at a hospital serving a number of villages outside central Shanghai, has seen firsthand how family reunions can cause waves of infections in the countryside.

“Many old people living in villages could have escaped being infected, or at least could have avoided being infected in the first wave,” said Xu, who spoke with Sixth Tone using a pseudonym for privacy reasons. “But when their children went back to see them, they inevitably brought the virus to the villages.”

China’s villages are particularly vulnerable during outbreaks: They often have high elderly populations, low vaccination rates, and a severe lack of health care resources. Local people, meanwhile, are less likely to follow public health guidelines, according to Xu.

“Villagers are unwilling to wear masks, let alone wear masks properly,” said Xu. “It wasn’t until their neighbors died one after another that they started to realize how serious the issue is.”

The issue of whether people should avoid visiting their elderly relatives over the holiday has become a heated debate on Chinese social media in recent days. Many argue that family reunions are unethical during such a major public health crisis.

The story of one young woman from north China’s Hebei province in particular has attracted huge attention. The woman began trending on microblogging platform Weibo earlier this month, after posting that she had unwittingly given her grandmother COVID-19 — an infection that proved fatal. Her parents were blaming her for the death, she said.

“My mom kept crying. No one in the family is willing to talk to me,” she wrote, in a post that was later removed from the platform.

While many commenters tried to comfort the woman, others criticized her for being selfish and failing to prioritize her grandmother’s health. The danger COVID-19 poses to seniors was being underestimated, they said.

Concerns about the virus appear to be having a real impact on the chunyun — China’s annual travel rush around the Lunar New Year holiday, which is often described as the largest human migration in the world.

China’s state transport authority estimates that 2.1 billion trips will be made during this year’s chunyun. That’s nearly double the total in 2022, when “zero-COVID” was still in force, but only 70% of the figure recorded in 2019.

Passengers wearing face masks wait to board a high-speed train at Guangzhou South Railway Station, Guangdong province, Jan. 15, 2023. Vernon Yuen/NurPhoto via VCG

Wen said he agonized for weeks before calling off his family reunion in rural Jiangsu province. He knew his mother, who recently turned 90, would be devastated.

“It’s a moment my mom looks forward to all year, to see all the children,” said Wen. “Most of them only return home once a year.”

But Wen started to worry in late December, when two of his siblings got infected. At first, he wasn’t sure how serious a disease COVID was — some said it was just like a cold. He soon realized, however, that it was not to be taken lightly.

In early January, Wen heard that one of his distant relatives had died of pneumonia after contracting the virus. His family said that the funeral had been delayed for weeks because so many others had died. It was then that he decided it was too risky to have 30 guests visiting his elderly mother over the holiday.

“My mom was extremely unhappy when she heard my decision,” said Wen. “She insisted that the reunion should be held as usual and that she isn’t afraid of getting infected. But we are afraid.”

A woman rushes to board a train in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, Jan. 15, 2023. Chen Jimin/CNS via IC

Other Chinese seniors, however, are proactively shielding. Ma Huili, a 37-year-old who lives in Shanghai, said she had originally planned to visit her parents over the Spring Festival, but they had refused to see her.

Ma’s parents — who are from east China’s Zhejiang province — are both in their 70s and have underlying health conditions: Her mother has a chronic lung condition and her father suffered a stroke two years ago. When cases began spiking in Shanghai in December, they made it clear that Ma should stay away for a few weeks at least. 

“My mom said she wanted to live longer — instead of a family gathering, she prefers to spend the week normally, with my father at home,” said Ma. “I was surprised by their attitude, but I didn’t try to argue with them. If we accidentally infected them, I would blame myself and I don’t think they’d ever forgive me … Reunions can be arranged at another time, when it’s much safer.”

Feng Haorao, a 45-year-old who lives in Jiangsu province, is still unsure whether he should visit his relatives in central China. He worries that he’ll face criticism whatever decision he makes.

“If I unfortunately infect my parents or in-laws, I would definitely feel guilty. But they’re the people I’m closest to and they’d surely forgive me,” Feng said. “But what if I infect my uncles? And if I return home but don’t pay them a visit … it could bring other troubles and my filial piety would be questioned.”

With days left before the holiday, Feng is leaning toward staying at home in Jiangsu. He also didn’t visit his family during last year’s holiday due to similar concerns: He travels often for business, and worries he’s at a high risk of catching COVID. Still, he feels guilty for disappointing his parents — who are both in their 70s — once again.

“We hired a maid to take care of them at home,” he said. “But they still feel lonely. Even though I give them a video call every day, they talk on and on for an hour each time.”

But Feng said he will definitely visit his parents soon, maybe even as early as March if the outbreak eases. “We’ll soon get our lives back,” he said. “Hope is right there around the corner.” 

Editor: Dominic Morgan.

(Header image: Tourists walk past red lanterns in Fuzhou, Jiangxi province, Jan. 16, 2023. VCG)


Download the new Sixth Tone app at the App Store or Google Play

APK file for Android:

https://image4.sixthtone.com/pkg/sixthtone.apk
(Copy URL and open in browser)



微信扫码关注该文公众号作者

戳这里提交新闻线索和高质量文章给我们。
相关阅读
阶级斗争, 一抓就灵?到底是“Chinese New Year”,还是“Lunar New Year”?南达科他州州长称中国有“2000年灭美计划”(a 2000 year plan) ,两国网友群嘲For China’s Students, the COVID Wave Comes at the Cruelest TimeBuyer Beware: What Irked China’s Consumers in 2022?Nature:George Church 团队改造可防止任何已知病毒感染的大肠杆菌,或可提供一种生物体防病毒感染通用策略Post-COVID, China’s Taoist Temples Are Still Finding Their WayChildren’s Slime Toys Under Scrutiny Over Toxic Chemical【本周折扣汇总】Unineed/资生堂/Lululemon半价!Selfridges 2折起!Myprotein 3折!China’s Space Station to Welcome Largest Crew On BoardChinese Cities Allow Spring Festival Fireworks Amid COVID BluesFor Chinese Wine Lovers, It’s a Whole New WorldChina’s Office Workers Get Smaller New Year Bonus, Survey ShowsStaying Negative: New Covid Policies Bring Memes Aplenty‘It’s Insane’: China’s Doctors Struggle to Cope Amid COVID SurgeTheory 这件深蓝色的double face 外套折扣不错,颜色挺好看的匈牙利布达佩斯,黎明时刻Cut Children’s Access to Vulgar Memes: State Media CommentaryChina’s Inbound Travelers Confused Over QuarantineMedical English for ChinaHappy Lunar New Year from LEAP!恢复—3恢复—2In China, a Dark New Black Market Emerges: Fake COVID Medication《最后的诗歌》:35: 当我第一次去集市Chinese 还是 Lunar New Year?韩国、越南掀起农历新年“文化战争”China’s Sluggish Inbound Travel Will Recover in 2023: Report阴谋与矮化:中国新年还是阴历新年?Chinese new year or lunar new year?As Cities Ride the Surge, How Rural Can Brace for Covid ImpactShanghai Expands Health System Capacity Amid COVID Surge【放开你的心】 Red Face Know MeRecovered From COVID, Young Chinese Gripped by Snow FeverChina’s University Students Dance Like Nobody’s Watching早报 | Celine新款手袋定价逼近Chanel;lululemon开设中国首个独栋沿街门店;LV在上海开设全球首个家居店Chinese Women Cheer Michelle Yeoh’s Oscar Win"𝙇𝙚𝙖𝙙 𝙏𝙝𝙚 𝘾𝙝𝙖𝙧𝙜𝙚"广告#创译挑战【Church Park 2023排位+现房】【NEU/NEC/Berklee】【Summer和9月入住的同学要抓紧了】China’s Cyber Cleanup Targets COVID Rumors, Online Influencers2019 HMS total new offers 208,小亚57,小中可能9Brand New Apple SERIES 7 Blue Aluminum CaseAbyss 45mm
logo
联系我们隐私协议©2024 redian.news
Redian新闻
Redian.news刊载任何文章,不代表同意其说法或描述,仅为提供更多信息,也不构成任何建议。文章信息的合法性及真实性由其作者负责,与Redian.news及其运营公司无关。欢迎投稿,如发现稿件侵权,或作者不愿在本网发表文章,请版权拥有者通知本网处理。