Festival experiences continuity, changes
Share - WeChat
Caring for the living
The change in mindset has had certain effects. In Taosheng village, part of Nanchang, Jiangxi province, Xiong Houzi and 300 others boarded a bus to the cemetery, each smartly dressed and carrying flowers.
The scene stood in sharp contrast to several years ago, when villagers burned sacrifices, usually made of paper.
"We wore our worst clothes, for fear that the fire and smoke would stain or even damage our clothing," Xiong said. Now, after mourning they go hiking, he added.
Li Xiangyuan, the Party chief of Quanzi community in Linyi, Shandong province, said: "Burning paper TVs and cars does no good for the deceased. If you're a good child, take good care of your parents when they are alive."
- Manas in Xinjiang steps up improvement of sheep breeding
- Chinese scientists enable more realistic digital humans by building high-precision 3D facial database
- China to enhance childbirth support
- China's top legislature reviews draft law on national development planning
- People-oriented service for grassroots impact
- What they say

































