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Prejudice, rejection hinder remarriage of elderly
(China Daily)
Updated: 2004-05-08 08:32

One quarter of the 1.88 million senior citizens aged over 60 in China's capital have no spouse, the latest statistics show.


Old people sit together in a residential community in Nanjing. Those over 65 years old account for 7 per cent of China's population. [newsphoto/file]
A Beijing-based research centre on ageing has found that 470,000 senior citizens in the city are single, including 440,000 widowed and 30,000 unmarried or divorced people.

The fifth nationwide census in 2000 also found 23.4 per cent of the city's elderly people are widowed while the unmarried and divorced made up 1 per cent of the population.

More females than males were found to be single in their ol aged. Of the 440,000 widowed senior citizens, 318,000 are women and 122,000 are men.

Researchers say marital status directly affects physical and mental health. A spouse becomes more important than ever when one retires and loses many social contacts.

The sudden death of a spouse often causes the widow to die sooner. Researchers have found the death rate among newly widowed elderly to be seven times as high as the normal death rate for senior citizens.

Experts on ageing say a remarriage often improves health among widowed seniors by helping them regain faith in life and feel less lonely.

Many elderly people, particularly those who are healthy and financially independent, need a spouse to keep them company. A sample survey found 54 per cent of the senior citizens in Beijing say it is quite acceptable for a widowed person to remarry.

But researchers say many elderly cannot do so in face of prejudice and rejection.

Du Peng and Yin Bo, two specialists on ageing based in Beijing, found that 50 per cent of senior citizens are confined by traditional beliefs that one should marry only once and a second marriage would be a betrayal to the deceased spouse.

Traditionally, old people in China got plenty of respect as long as they remained faithful to their spouses, even into death.

On the other hand, many Chinese think it is embarrassing to remarry when one is getting on in years. "It's a question of face," said Lu Jie, manager of Milan Spring Wedding Photo, a studio in Beijing's bustling Xidan shopping district.

Lu said no elderly couple planning remarriage ever has entered the studio.

Meanwhile, children's rejection - for fear of losing face or inheritance - was another major obstacle that kept 33 per cent of single senior citizens' from getting married again, said the two researchers.

Still, experts believe more senior citizens will choose to remarry as elderly people are more attentive to the quality of their life and depend less on their children for companionship and support.

"Besides, the younger generation will be more considerate as they get on in years themselves," said Du Peng.

China is moving rapidly toward an ageing society, registering over 130 million elderly, about 10 per cent of the total population, and the figure will keep growing at an annual rate of 3.2 per cent in the next half century.

In an effort to improve their welfare and overall quality of life, the government has actively promoted community service for the elderly, including matchmaking services for the widowed and divorced to tie the knot again.

 
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