The Citizen (KZN)

World’s largest migration

CHINESE NEW YEAR: MILLIONS STREAM OUT OF BIG CITIES TO BE WITH FAMILY FOR HOLIDAYS

- Shijiazhua­ng

Nine billion trips will take place over Spring Festival.

On a crowded train laden with crimson-coloured gifts for loved ones, IT worker Sun Jintao is heading from Beijing to spend the Chinese New Year holiday with his family for the first time in years.

Hundreds of millions of people are streaming out of China’s major cities this week in the world’s largest annual migration, heading home to share meals, pay respects to their elders and deliver blessings for the upcoming year of the dragon.

State news agency Xinhua has said nine billion passenger trips will take place across the country over this year’s Spring Festival holidays.

“I haven’t been home to spend Chinese New Year in three years,” Sun, a 28-year-old Beijing resident, told AFP sitting on his crowded berth in a sleeper coach.

Previous years were overshadow­ed by the Covid pandemic, he said – where strict precaution­s made cross-country travel challengin­g. “It was a bit of a hassle,” Sun explained en route to Handan in Hebei province.

“And last year I went to my partner’s home. This year I have to go home, no matter what.”

As the train pulled out of the station in central Beijing, a magenta sun was just beginning to crop out behind a hazy layer of clouds.

Many passengers who had been unable to book seats – tickets have sold out across the country – weaved between large suitcases in search of spots to spend the journey.

The air in the cabin was filled with aromatic steam from instant noodle bowls and cigarette smoke trailing from standing areas between train coaches, where a few men stood watching the pastoral expanse roll by.

For many people, the upcoming holidays are a rare chance to take time off work, a welcome respite from high pressure life in the city.

Dong Hang, 18, of Handan, said he had moved to Beijing to earn a higher salary.

He said he worked from 4pm until 4am, six days a week, in a barbecue restaurant.

“Beijing is considered a firsttier city, whereas ours is a thirdtier or fourth-tier city, where monthly salaries aren’t very much,” he said.

But this week he’s taking a well-deserved break. “We have an old saying in China: ‘Whether wealthy or poor, we all have to go home to celebrate the New Year’.

“It’s really nice to wrap dumplings together and then have a big family reunion dinner,” he said.

Dong is one of millions of young people who have flocked to China’s largest cities in recent decades.

That makes the annual Spring Festival public holiday a coveted window for families, separated for much of the year, to convene.

“It’s very exciting,” Lian Caiping, a student working as an intern in Beijing, said. “I was so excited last night that I couldn’t sleep, that kind of feeling.”

Beijing Station is forecast to serve over 4.5 million passengers during the Spring Festival period, according to a state media report quoting a railway official.

And the 40-day travel rush was expected to peak yesterday, when 192 000 people were set to traverse through the station, the report said.

Sun said he had struggled to relax the night before from the excitement of going home.

“When I get back I’ll prepare some things for Chinese New Year without stopping to rest, like buying food and drinks,” he said. “I like to cook, so I’ll buy some ingredient­s and show off my skills.”

Sun added he was also looking forward to tasting his mother’s food. “It’s a taste of the hometown, a taste of home”. –

 ?? Pictures: AFP ?? GOING HOME. People at Shijiazhua­ng train station on Tuesday as millions of Chinese are making their way to their home towns to celebrate the Lunar New Year with family on Saturday.
Pictures: AFP GOING HOME. People at Shijiazhua­ng train station on Tuesday as millions of Chinese are making their way to their home towns to celebrate the Lunar New Year with family on Saturday.
 ?? ?? YEAR OF THE DRAGON. A woman poses for a picture on front of a dragon figure made from dry branches in a street in Beijing yesterday.
YEAR OF THE DRAGON. A woman poses for a picture on front of a dragon figure made from dry branches in a street in Beijing yesterday.
 ?? ?? PACKED TRAINS. People on a train from Beijing to Shijiazhua­ng on Tuesday in the world’s largest annual human migration.
PACKED TRAINS. People on a train from Beijing to Shijiazhua­ng on Tuesday in the world’s largest annual human migration.
 ?? ?? FAMILY TIME. People ride a train at Shijiazhua­ng on Tuesday to get home to celebrate the New Year.
FAMILY TIME. People ride a train at Shijiazhua­ng on Tuesday to get home to celebrate the New Year.

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