Doomsday 2012: Why Many Chinese Fear the End is Nigh

The World

If the Mayan calendar is to be believed — or rather, a largely discredited interpretation of it — it’s seven days until the Apocalypse.

What to do? Well, some people in many parts of the world are paying heed. In France, there’s a mountain where people are converging to await the arrival of aliens. In Russia, there’s been a run on essential supplies.

But according a survey conducted for Reuters earlier this year, China ranks highest when it comes to end-of-the-world fears. Some 20 percent of those surveyed expected something to happen on December 21, 2012.

Just this week, my housekeeper, Hou Jinrong, asked me if I think it’s true that the world will end next week.

“I heard that December 21, 2012, when winter comes, I heard it’s the end of the world. If the world still exists, there would be no sunlight. So now people in the countryside, every family is rushing to buy candles and store those candles at home,” Hou said.

She added that that includes her own relatives, back in her village in the central province of Henan. She thinks they’re being a little superstitious — but then again …

“I cannot tell them not to do it, because I don’t know whether it’s true,” she said. “If it’s true, they’ll blame me for that.”

You have to give people points for optimism when they think the end of the world would still leave both them and their family members alive and well, and able to continue to rag on each other.

In China, the concern that everything might come to a skidding halt on December 21 came in part from the movie “2012,” which was a smash hit here.

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Doomsday 2012: Why Many Chinese Fear the End is Nigh
By Mary Kay Magistad â?? December 14, 2012 â?? Post a comment
Scene from the movie ‘2012’ (Photo: Sony Pictures)

Scene from the movie ‘2012’ (Photo: Sony Pictures)

If the Mayan calendar is to be believed — or rather, a largely discredited interpretation of it — it’s seven days until the Apocalypse.

What to do? Well, some people in many parts of the world are paying heed. In France, there’s a mountain where people are converging to await the arrival of aliens. In Russia, there’s been a run on essential supplies.

But according a survey conducted for Reuters earlier this year, China ranks highest when it comes to end-of-the-world fears. Some 20 percent of those surveyed expected something to happen on December 21, 2012.

Just this week, my housekeeper, Hou Jinrong, asked me if I think it’s true that the world will end next week.

“I heard that December 21, 2012, when winter comes, I heard it’s the end of the world. If the world still exists, there would be no sunlight. So now people in the countryside, every family is rushing to buy candles and store those candles at home,” Hou said.

She added that that includes her own relatives, back in her village in the central province of Henan. She thinks they’re being a little superstitious — but then again …

“I cannot tell them not to do it, because I don’t know whether it’s true,” she said. “If it’s true, they’ll blame me for that.”

You have to give people points for optimism when they think the end of the world would still leave both them and their family members alive and well, and able to continue to rag on each other.

In China, the concern that everything might come to a skidding halt on December 21 came in part from the movie “2012,” which was a smash hit here.

Add that to the mix in a place where rumors and panic have been known to spread quickly, and where social networking turbocharges that process. There have already been more than 60 million posts on Weibo, China’s version of Twitter, about next week’s scheduled end of days.

Pang Yen Ting, a 17-year-old high school student in Beijing, says her friends are talking about it, and posting stories about it online.

“They just talk about who do you want to spend the last day with?” she said.

Pang says she wants to spend December 21, with her family — just in case.

Just down the street, a young advertising copywriter named Guan Qiang pauses between drags on his cigarette and looks amused when I ask if he thinks the world will end in eight days.

Barely keeping a straight face, he tells me if CCTV — China’s Central Television — didn’t say so, so it can’t be true.

In other words, if CCTV, the government mouthpiece, isn’t calling the end of the world, move on, have another cigarette.

But Guan admits that even some of his friends — educated, urban, young professionals — are laying in provisions.

“A lot of my friends are talking about it. They say there will be three days when it’s going to be really cold, and people will spend three days in darkness.”

After that, he says, it’ll be okay. There’s that mix of optimism and pragmatism again.

Others in China are making more elaborate preparations; one guy used his life savings to build an ark — like Noah.

My housekeeper, Hou Jinrong, is pretty stoic about the whole thing.

“Who knows what will happen? It might be an earthquake, or tsunami, or volcano eruptions. You may die. You may not die,” Hou said. “When I was young, my mom told me the end of the world is going to be scary. A lot of weird things will happen.”

Or not. I ask Hou if she’s scared of what might happen next week, and she laughs.

“What’s the point of being scared?” she said. “I have to get on with my life.”

Still, she’ll have the candles. Just in case.

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