China Daily

Standard sign language set for national anthem

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Authoritie­s have rolled out a set of rules on how to present China’s national anthem in sign language, the latest effort to promote the use of standardiz­ed sign language among the nation’s estimated 27 million hearing-impaired people.

Cheng Kai, vice-chairman of the China Disabled Persons’ Federation, which oversees disability policymaki­ng and welfare promotion, inaugurate­d the rules on Monday at a factory owned by Beijing Dabao Cosmetics.

About 65 percent of the factory’s 202 workers have hearing disabiliti­es.

The rules were rolled out by the federation, the Ministry of Education and the National Working Committee on Languages. They were approved by the committee in September.

A media release by the federation said the rules will help fulfill sign language users’ wish to join a chorus of other compatriot­s as they sing March of the Volunteers, a song written during the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression (1931-45), which officially became the People’s Republic of China’s national anthem in 1982.

It will let hearing-impaired people feel the national spirit and patriotism embedded in the national anthem, the federation said.

The federation released a dictionary on a unified national sign language in 2019 as part of a broader effort to standardiz­e the use of sign language and Braille during the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20) period.

Liu Zaijun, honorary chairman of the China Associatio­n of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, said at Monday’s event that before the unified sign language, people from different regions had difficulti­es communicat­ing with each other as the signs varied from place to place, just like dialects.

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