.jpg)
Though I have celebrated 春节 (Chinese New Year) in China before, this was the first time I got to witness the sheer bedlam that (literally) explodes over the streets from about 11 o'clock on New Year's Eve to about half-past midnight on New Year's Day. The pervasive, unregulated, and totally desultory use of fireworks is a wonder to those of us from cultures in which the enjoyment of pyrotechnics is governed not only by municipal codes, but by common sense as well. Considering that they've had literally over a millennium1 to perfect the art of explosive powders, you'd think the Chinese would have developed and implemented more safety features for their most famous invention after pasta. It's nothing short of astonishing that the Middle Kingdom boasts one-and-a-third billion inhabitants, considering the massive population casualties it must have suffered at the deadly (yet beautiful) hands of these combustible delights.
To illustrate my point, I will take you through the evening prior to 春节 and selectively describe the spectacle that unfolded before me. But first, to give you an appreciation of the atmosphere of this special day, I'll need to start a little before that night. During the two to three weeks leading up to the Big Event, entire sections of street—and we're talking long swaths of sidewalk, sometimes composed of six or seven vendors lined up together—become devoted to the sale of these explosive goodies. What is available at these makeshift stands? Basically every variety of firecracker known to man, from the little toy poppers that explode when thrown on the ground, to sparklers, to the massive, high altitude Disneyland-type fireworks that are launched into the air [pictured in the first two photos of this post.] Minimum age to purchase any of these (potentially lethal) devices? None. This super abundance of firecrackers ensures that everyone can stockpile as many as he/she might need to bring in the new year with a bang.
.jpg)
As we watched the display, I noticed another dangerous aspect of the use of fireworks here: the aforementioned large, professional-type fireworks can be set off by literally anyone; no license or special training is required. This means that they sometimes fail to gain sufficient altitude to clear three story buildings, which results in colorful sparks of fire whizzing between the heads of spectators. Sometimes these large fireworks are improperly angled prior to ignition, so they ascend at a perilous 60° or 70°angle, rather than perpendicularly to the ground.
.jpg)
We kept walking and I saw some high school students lighting small explosive devices, then hurling them as fast as they could across the street, where more often than not a group of pedestrians was walking: grenades. Grenades were being thrown in every direction without regard for the positioning of bystanders who may have been hit/maimed/blinded/injured in some other yet-unconceived way. It didn't matter where the fireworks landed, so long as that place was sufficiently far from the thrower to preclude his own injury. I guess it's really just a manifestation of the driving mentality here: if you don't want to have an accident, look out for things that might hit you; you needn't look out for those you might injure.
.jpg)
If you think I'm making this stuff up or that I tend toward hyperbole (and I do, but this posting is not an manifestation of that tendency), you can check out what a more established, reputable news provider has to say. Here's an email update I got recently from The Economist:
...But not everyone is delighted with these combustible toys. During the new year's celebrations, emergency medical workers put extra dispatchers on duty, sent 100 ambulances on special patrol and added staff to hospital emergency rooms. The state media reported that some 270 people were injured and one 25-year-old man was killed. Sanitation workers also had their hands full: 16,000 workers set about cleaning up 900 tonnes of tattered red paper, spent casings and other firecracker debris from the streets.
For more from the Economist on the newly commenced Year of the Pig, click here.

I'm not into superstition, but according to Chinese tradition the Year of the Pig ushers in a period of prosperity and good luck. Without a single accident on a night fraught with more dangers than a Tanzanian operating room, it looks (so far) to be living up to its reputation. The Year of the Pig might just make a believer out of me yet.
1From Wikipedia's "Fireworks" entry:
"Fireworks originated in China (206 BC–AD 220) and produced a loud sound (known in Chinese as 'Bian pao') that was intended to frighten evil spirits. In the Northern and Southern Dynasties (AD 420–581) the firecrackers were used not only to dispel evil but also to pray for happiness and prosperity.
The discovery of gunpowder and the subsequent invention of true fireworks is also owed to the Chinese. Taoist monks played with the basic components of gunpowder to create fireworks in their spare time. Eventually, the art and science of firework making developed into an independent profession of its own. In ancient China, pyrotechnicians (firework-masters) were well-respected for their knowledge and skill to mount dazzling displays of light and sound. Some scholars say fireworks were developed in the Sui and Tang Dynasties (581–907), but others argue there were no fireworks until the Northern Song Dynasty (10th century)."
1 comment:
seeing those fireworks makes me want to visit China... It looks like you're having a good time there.
Post a Comment