Festival experiences continuity, changes

Work experience
At a cemetery in Changsha, Hunan province, which is swarming with people, Yang Xue and more than 10 volunteers have been helping visitors and directing traffic.
"We will be working here for 10 days," said the first-year student with the funeral institute of Changsha Social Work College. "Professionally, I feel an attachment to the festival."
The institute, founded in 1995, was the first of its kind in China. Study subjects range from funeral oration and management to embalming.
A few years ago, students were reluctant to talk about their majors, but the situation is changing.
"With the development of society, humanism is increasingly important to customers, and old funeral workers are already outdated," said Su Lihui, a teacher with the institute. "Therefore, our graduates are in demand."
Su said there were more than 900 jobs last year offered to about 200 graduates.
"I had worries before, but the more I learn, the more I feel that taking care of people when they have completed their journey in life is a respectable profession," said another student who transferred to the funeral institute from a business school.
- Qingdao institute offers a new window to study, understand SCO states
- New scenic area in Shenyang opens in time for lotus blooming season
- Shanghai airports offer storage service for prohibited power banks
- Former deputy GM of Sinochem Group under investigation
- Benjamin's journey to the past: A revisit to the Sihang Warehouse Memorial Hall
- Well-preserved 300,000-year-old wooden artifacts found in Yunnan