Spring Festival custom 'twisted'

Updated: 2014-02-17 08:35

By Chen Mengwei (China Daily)

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A Chinese language teacher at Xizhongjie Primary School in Beijing's Dongcheng district, who only gave her surname, Xu, has seen a huge growth in the use of the envelopes given to children in the 6-12 age group as well as the cash they contain.

"When I taught my first class three decades ago, there were barely any given. Later in the 1990s, my students were happy with 5 yuan or sometimes 10 yuan," said Xu. "At the turn of the century, the children might have 100 or 200 yuan, but never beyond 1,000 yuan."

However, starting from 2008, none of her students would come back to school from winter vacation with less than 1,000 yuan, Xu recalled. "Then, three years ago, I saw my first student with more than 10,000 yuan."

This year, Xu had a student claiming he received 50,000 yuan.

Of course, this does not apply to all students.

Xiang Pengyu, 13, always receives 2,000 yuan, no more, no less, since the first time he opened an envelope in third grade.

"With the envelope in my hands, I can feel my parents' love," Xiang said. "It's not about the money. It is the thought."

His father, Xiang Dong , 46, a Sichuan-born chiropractor at Beijing Massage Hospital, is careful about the 2,000 yuan limit.

"We are an ordinary family. With a reasonable amount in the envelope, my son will form a sense of what to expect and what not to. His mother and I will not let him suffer, but we will not over indulge him."

For that reason, Xiang's father refused all offers from people outside his family to give money to Xiang.

"I don't want to waste time and money sending it back and forth," he said.

As a result, Xiang only gets the lucky money from his parents and four relatives.

For China Daily

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