China Daily

Don’t knock it — square dancing is a way to keep fit

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THE ORGANIZING committee for the 13th National Games, which will be held in Tianjin from August 27 to September 8, has for the first time included square dancing among the events. Legal Daily comments:

This is the first time the popular entertainm­ent and keep-fit activity has been recognized as a competitiv­e sport.

Many young people regard square dancing as a noisy pastime enjoyed only by senior citizens, and complain that the activity is a nuisance as the elderly dancers hog the public spaces in cities.

But while the square dancing can be noisy and many elderly are attracted to participat­e, that does not justify demonizati­on of the activity, which — even its critics cannot deny — is the most popular form of physical exercise in China today.

That square dancing has been included as an event in the National Games is official recognitio­n of the positive role this uniquely Chinese form of public exercise plays in helping people, especially the elderly, keep physically and mentally fit.

Square dancing can be seen throughout China, in small villages and big cities, with people in their 50s and 60s being the main participan­ts.

Square dancing should not be a cause for generation­al conflicts, and it is also unfair to attribute the wrongdoing­s of some of dancers to all of them.

Local government­s should take the move to include square dancing in the games, which will require drawing up rules and standards, as an opportunit­y to strengthen their management of square dancing in public spaces, designatin­g specific areas for the dancers and setting noise limits.

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