Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Mind Your P's and Q's

An article that Anjali (Nanjing vol.) sent out to all of us. Thought it was funny! Matt just had a class where he gave out candy at the end as a prize. Animals, I tell you! They ripped the bag he bought it in and stormed to podium. No self-control and total disregard for our things. Geez, China, this is why you can't have nice things!

China told to mind its manners

By Mary-Ann Toy, Beijing

February 25, 2006

The residents of Beijing are being urged to be on their best behaviour for the Olympics.

FOR Lu-Chin Mischke, an elegant Chinese woman who lived abroad for many years, life back in China is sometimes one long assault on her sensibilities.

A stroll in one of Beijing's lovely parks or temple complexes is a respite from the city's smog and traffic — until the first ear-splitting hawking up of phlegm lands too close for comfort. Then there's the mindless littering, the mobile phones ringing — and being answered — in cinemas, the flagrant disregard for traffic rules and the failure to queue.

Beijingers have a deserved reputation for being friendly and straightforward, but with the world descending here in 2008 for the Olympics, city leaders and fed-up citizens such as Mrs Mischke are campaigning to ensure their fellow citizens don't disgrace 5000 years of history with ill-timed belching, farting and spitting.

Mrs Mischke, who lived in the US and Japan for more than a decade, set up the not-for-profit Pride Institute last year to improve manners because she was tired of being embarrassed by Chinese lack of etiquette. "I want my kids to grow up and be proud of being Chinese," she says.

Since then she has personally, tactfully, told off more than a hundred offenders and held more than a dozen free seminars for the city's less-well-off to explain why spitting, using mobile phones indiscriminately, bad breath, body odour and treating the motherland as a garbage bin are unacceptable.

Mrs Mischke's seminars are free, helped by a growing number of enthusiastic volunteers. Her motivation is patriotism and the message is self-respect and self-discipline for a better society. She teaches people to make eye contact, smile and be considerate and friendly.

"I do not want people to associate Chinese people as being uncivilised," she says. "We Chinese are very proud of our long history, but where does it say that spitting or bad breath is part of our culture?"

Beijing's municipal government is also intensifying its efforts to improve behaviour through newspaper columns, cartoons and television commercials. The city has hired more than 3000 public transport attendants who will patrol bus stops and the subway to encourage queuing rather than the free-for-all that greets every overcrowded bus or train.

Almost 3 million etiquette handbooks are to be sent to households telling residents to stop belching, slurping or farting, especially while eating in public, or at least, to apologise if they do. And, to Mrs Mischke's horror, millions of "spit bags", left over after the severe acute respiratory syndrome epidemic, are being distributed with instructions on "civilised spitting".

But the biggest headache for Olympics organisers is spectator behaviour. Last year Beijing Mayor Wang Qishan admitted he was worried about how audiences would behave in 2008. Booing, swearing, ignoring play and talking on mobile phones are common. When the World Snooker China Open was held here last year, judges and foreign competitors were taken aback when audiences chatted on phones and took flash pictures during competition.

Shao Shiwei, the Olympic Organising Committee deputy director of media, said it was similar during the China Open tennis championships, with spectators walking around during matches and talking loudly.

An education campaign on audience etiquette followed, but in a city of close to 18 million people, of whom almost 5 million are migrant workers fresh from the countryside, eradicating bad manners is a challenge, he says.

1 comment:

TheUnsinkableMB said...

Two words about Ezra:

Cat leash

He was in Japan not TOO long ago....