Chinese Workers' Day 1997
by Al Stone, L.Ac. |
I asked my host what the workers do on their day off. He said "they rest." Of course, I found that to be wholly untrue. Those who have salaried office jobs rest, those who own their own business or are paid by the hour, continue to work on what I can only assume is China's equivalent of the USA's July Fourth, Mexico's Cinco De Mayo, Afghanastan's Fleedgib 'de chracticz. Construction all around our house continued, even though we were looking forward to a break in the racket.
This program felt like a cross between a Bob Hope USO special and the Academy Awards. And it was all for the workers of the Yellow River. The program sought to romanticize the work and the workers of the river in much the same way as USA's programs seek to deify entertainment personalities.
Behind the set were a few huge trucks used for pushing dirt around the banks of the sand bar.
At first, I thought this program was kind of stupid. Just as stupid to me as all the entertainment awards programs that we live with in the USA, and the industry that many of us can't ignore in Southern California. Everybody in the audience there on the Yellow River knew that their work was not at all glamorous. And here were these singers, dancers, comedians, all sent to add glory to an otherwise filthy job. How could anybody buy this, I wondered?
But then, I compared it to what we, in the USA romanticize, the entertainment industry, or professional sports. How we take job descriptions that may be lofty in their metaphoric intent, but are damned unnecessary for the basic needs of daily life and turn them into the most coveted and worshipped of all social positions.
I'm glad that the Chinese government, or whoever the sponsor of this program is, set out to romanticize the river workers. Perhaps it is wrong to romanticize anything, but if you're going to have a gala television extravaganza with big stars in shimmering gowns, then let it be all be for the men and women in the trenches. Let them know how special their contribution to the greater society really is. I liked the idea after I compared it to the stupid things that we worship in our culture. It reminded me of a song by Alabama called "40 hour week". Listen to it sometime, if you get the chance.
Acupuncture.com |