China Daily Global Edition (USA)
Surnames should adhere to tradition and social norms
A COUPLE IN JINAN, capital of Shandong province, wanted to register their daughter with a surname different from that of either of them. The local police rejected their request and a court also later ruled against it. Hebnews.cn comments:
The Supreme People’s Court published the case as a guide to all courts across China. The reason it gave was that citizens should follow traditional Chinese culture and ethics when registering a name for their children.
That does not mean a child can only have the surname of either his mother or father. The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, the nation’s top legislature, issued a judicial explanation in November 2014 that made clear three conditions under which another surname was permitted: First, selecting a surname of another immediate family member, such as the maternal grandmother; second, selecting the name of the adopter in case of adoption; third, other conditions not contrary to traditions.
According to the Supreme People’s Court, the move by the parents does not fall under “other conditions”. In China, the surname of a person tells which family a person comes from. More important, it is deeply associated with the order of society.
If one’s surname could be changed at will, that would not only deal a blow to the family lineage, but also challenge the normal order of society and traditional culture.
Some say we live in a different age. True, but that only makes holding on to our traditional culture even more important.