Montreal Gazette

‘Dancing grannies’ face clampdown

China plans new rules for a seniors’ health trend that’s both loved and loathed

- JACK CHANG

BEIJING Along with two dozen of her fellow “dancing grannies,” 60-year-old Zhang Jinsu twirls and steps her way every night across a central Beijing plaza, sometimes gliding over the pavement like a butterfly, at other times marching with a plastic rifle.

But when new Chinese government instructio­ns on such hugely popular — and loud — senior dances take hold, Zhang may need to learn a new routine.

Zhang is part of a senior health trend that’s filled squares and apartment courtyards across China, winning the admiration of medical experts but upsetting neighbours over the noise level.

“It’s never quiet,” said Gan Xuehua, a 31-year-old man whose apartment in the southern city of Nanchang overlooks a plaza where the women dance. “These grannies play music all day ... and every night from 7 to 9. It culminates with 70 to 80 people gathering. The music is really loud!”

This week, Chinese officials stepped into the fray by announcing the imminent arrival of new rules on where seniors can dance and how loud they can blast their music. They also unveiled 12 officially sanctioned square dance steps set to such popular songs as Little Apple and China is Beautiful — although an official said the steps were not compulsory.

To some, the square-dance clampdown was a step too far for an increasing­ly restrictiv­e government that has tightened controls on everything from college classroom lectures to the lavish spending of top government officials.

“You’re even going to tell us how to dance?” asked Yang Tao on the social media service Weibo.

As a precaution, Zhang said her fellow dancers who gather in front of the Raffles Center in downtown Beijing have already stopped all dances by 9:30 p.m. And to show a government afraid of any sort of organized action, they have started re-enacting ultrapatri­otic Second World War-era skits where they act like Chinese soldiers apprehendi­ng Japanese and German bad guys, to the rhythm of a live band.

“There have been people who have criticized us, but we all came to an understand­ing and solved the problem,” Zhang said. “We do more theatrical dancing, different from the plaza dancing where everyone stands in their own square metre. These new regulation­s have been discussed for a year now, but we’ve chosen an appropriat­e place to dance.”

An official at the national General Administra­tion of Sport who would only give her surname, Yao, said the new steps were not mandatory.

“Apart from those 12 dances, we are also asking people to suggest other dances, too,” Yao said. “The original goal is to help people exercise in a healthier and more scientific way. We invited health experts to be involved in the choreograp­hing, just to make sure the dances are not too active, because they might not be good for some people with neck problems or heart problems.”

She said her department was also working with the Culture Ministry on “specific guidelines on the volume of music” played at the dances and other details.

The enormous popularity of the Chinese square dances, which have been spotted even in Moscow and New York, springs from an urban landscape lacking enough parks and other public spaces that pushes people to gather in front of shopping centres or in playground­s, said Caroline Chen, an environmen­tal planning expert at the University of California at San Diego who wrote her dissertati­on on the dances.

Those same factors help explain the ire occasional­ly sparked among nearby neighbours, including one

Beijing man who did prison time after he fired a rifle into the air and released three dogs on several dancers in 2013.

In the coastal city of Wenzhou last year, people pooled more than $40,000 US to buy a military-grade loudspeake­r to retaliate against women dancing to boom boxes in a tit-for-tat escalation of noise.

The dances’ popularity also reflect China’s rapidly aging society, and meeting the health needs of that growing elderly population will be one of China’s biggest challenges, Chen said.

“I’m concerned that when there are rules and restrictio­ns put down on how one can dance, that free flow of creativity and spontaneit­y can be squashed,” Chen said. “I see it as more of a practical issue of the sound of the music and people not having enough space.”

 ?? PHOTOS: ANDY WONG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Chinese man with a national flag leads a group of seniors holding toy guns during their daily exercises at a square outside a shopping mall in Beijing on Tuesday.
PHOTOS: ANDY WONG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Chinese man with a national flag leads a group of seniors holding toy guns during their daily exercises at a square outside a shopping mall in Beijing on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Chinese women wearing military costumes march with toy guns during exercises in Beijing. The group is taking part in a health trend for seniors that has filled squares and apartment courtyards across China.
Chinese women wearing military costumes march with toy guns during exercises in Beijing. The group is taking part in a health trend for seniors that has filled squares and apartment courtyards across China.

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