The good news: There may be more new holidays. The bad news:
Some current holidays may be shortened.
In the near future, people will probably have days off on traditional Chinese festivals such as the Mid-Autumn Festival and the Pure Brightness Festival (Tomb Sweeping
Festival), said a sociology professor who is a member of a
think-tank to the central government.
But the three seven-day "golden week" national holidays, Labour
Day (May 1), National Day (October 1), and the Chinese New Year may be shortened so that the
total number of holiday days will remain the same, said Zhai
Zhenwu, a professor at the Renmin University of China,
yesterday. This cutback would be necessary to prevent the
loss of too many working days.
"The changes will probably take place starting in 2008," he
said. "The National Development and Reform Commission is in the
process of drafting the policy."
Experts insist such arrangements are crucial to help preserve
traditions. "If people still work during some traditional
festivals, the younger generation will forget the significance of
the days and abandon related customs, which are an essential part
of the nation's intangible cultural heritage," said Liang Yanjun, a
professor at Tianjin Institute of Finance and Economy at an earlier
session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference.
A call by scholars for days off on traditional festivals started
as early as 2004.
Ji Baocheng, president of the Renmin University of China and a
deputy to the National People's Congress, has long advocated making
four traditional festivals national holidays. They are the Dragon Boat Festival, the Mid-Autumn Festival,
the Pure Brightness Festival and Chinese New Year's Eve.
The Lantern Festival, on the 15th day of the first
month of the lunar calendar, is the fifth traditional festival
waiting to be chosen as a national holiday.
(China Daily March 2, 2007)