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'One-day Lei Fengs' defile the spirit of selfless hero
TODAY, Chinese people observe an annual ritual in memory of one of their great sons, Lei Feng, a People's Liberation Army soldier known for his selfless help to others.
It is the time when everyone is supposed to learn from Lei Feng and do some good deeds. It is the time when every Chinese becomes the heir to Lei Feng's Good Samaritan legacy, or indeed, a Lei Feng reincarnate.
But unsolicited services rendered by modern-day "Lei Fengs" aren't always appreciated.
A civil servant friend told me that some senior citizens living in nursing homes have complained openly about an incessant flow of visitors on March 5.
Regardless of whether the elderly people need their services, visitors give them baths and wash their feet repeatedly. Some receive a maximum eight baths on a single day, and are badly exhausted by do-gooders' activities.
What is a day to provide care for the needy has been an occasion for some to showcase their superficial understanding of kindness and Lei Feng's famous motto, "serve the people." And kindness is short-lived. The next day quiet returns to the nursing homes. Visitors stop coming in droves, till March 5 next year.
A commentator wrote on Monday for the Guangming Daily that the practice of "one-day Lei Feng" is more a desecration of the model soldier's spirit than promulgation of it.
While the legend of Lei Feng officially lives on, an unflattering question can be asked: how much of his spirit is really left in us?
Are those who walked past a dying toddler in October 2011, pretending not to see her, and those who seldom slow their cars to yield to pedestrians worthy of Lei Feng's legacy?
It is the time when everyone is supposed to learn from Lei Feng and do some good deeds. It is the time when every Chinese becomes the heir to Lei Feng's Good Samaritan legacy, or indeed, a Lei Feng reincarnate.
But unsolicited services rendered by modern-day "Lei Fengs" aren't always appreciated.
A civil servant friend told me that some senior citizens living in nursing homes have complained openly about an incessant flow of visitors on March 5.
Regardless of whether the elderly people need their services, visitors give them baths and wash their feet repeatedly. Some receive a maximum eight baths on a single day, and are badly exhausted by do-gooders' activities.
What is a day to provide care for the needy has been an occasion for some to showcase their superficial understanding of kindness and Lei Feng's famous motto, "serve the people." And kindness is short-lived. The next day quiet returns to the nursing homes. Visitors stop coming in droves, till March 5 next year.
A commentator wrote on Monday for the Guangming Daily that the practice of "one-day Lei Feng" is more a desecration of the model soldier's spirit than promulgation of it.
While the legend of Lei Feng officially lives on, an unflattering question can be asked: how much of his spirit is really left in us?
Are those who walked past a dying toddler in October 2011, pretending not to see her, and those who seldom slow their cars to yield to pedestrians worthy of Lei Feng's legacy?
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