Cancer patient offered none but cold shoulders on bus By Echo Shan (chinadaily.com.cn) Updated: 2006-02-21 16:45
Zhu Xianglin, a 70-year-old cancer patient, still feels a chill over his
experience during a bus ride to hospital for a regular check-up on February 20.
Though pale and feeble, for over 20 minutes Zhu was offered no seat even after
pleading several times, with cancer diagnosis in hand.
Zhu Xianglin, a
70-year-old cancer patient reacts at his miserable experience during his
bus trip to hospital Monday. [East Morning
Post] | It was bleak outside on Shanghai's
streets that day when Zhu boarded the bus. To his surprise, in such a developed
and financial hub as Shanghai, it would get even colder for him.
Squeezed onto the ever-crowded route 820, Zhu, notably fragile and out of
breath, rested himself on the doorsteps by the bus entrance as every seat was
taken and nobody gave an offer.
"The word 'coldness' comes to my mind when recalling those marble-like faces
on the bus," said Zhu, with a deep sigh.
With 1/3 of his upper right lung cut away some eight months ago, Zhu narrowly
survived the lung cancer that left him with bad health and a smaller purse.
Upon appealing four times of the conductor Hu Xiaodong for a seat, Zhu
still got nothing but indifferent faces and distant eyes.
Even after showing his diagnosis paper, which had registered in black and
white the lung-cutting operation that resulted in 38 stitches on his
chest, the heartbroken Zhu, bearing both physical suffering and mental
anguish, still got cold shoulders of indifference on the bus, from his
compatriots in the city.
Hua Fengdi, Zhu's wife sick with severe rheumatism, sobbed as she later
learned what had happened to her poor hubby on the bus. Her repeated prayers for
a seat for Zhou before he embarked on his bus trip were all in vain, it seemed.
However, the world does have its fair cheer of good people, for after nearly
20 minutes and over a two-kilometer ride, a passenger in his 50s, also on his
feet, roared to a cozily seated and healthy middle school boy, ordering him to
give the seat to Zhu. The frightened the boy then rose to his feet silently.
Finally, Zhu was seated. Three minutes later, after getting his breath back,
a low-voiced "thanks" was squeezed through Zhu's mouth.
From a bus seat scenario, a picture of current China's morality situation
emerges, while in a dim and unpolished fashion.
A recent public survey conducted in Guangdong Province on
social evils rank "people's morality construction" atop the list.
In a ethic-bound nation of China, the statue of Leifeng, a late warn-hearted
young PLA soldier always ready to help, was long erected in the 1990s to boost
social conscience.
While it seems people are forgettable, all are left behind in today's
money-driven society as the catchword "to get rich is glorious" is repeatedly
chanted.
Who come to care about an old cancer patient and bother to offer him a
seat on bus?
Back in 2004, a Shenzhen bus company campaigned on a "seat-offering to the
needy" activity, while "powered" by benefit impulse.
Those who give a seat offer would get in returen a "Loving Heart Card,"
which equals a one-yuan bus ticket.
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