Post by Raoul Duke on Apr 1, 2005 20:05:50 GMT 7
Note the last paragraph. What the hell, aside from the obvious, is wrong with Canadians?
Chinese yearn to marry foreigners: survey
Thu Mar 31,10:57 AM ET
BEIJING (AFP)- Nearly 63 percent of Chinese citizens would like to marry a foreigner, according to a survey of contemporary Chinese attitudes towards international marriage.
The survey by Chinese web portal sina.com showed 62.7 percent of the 10,381 people questioned favoured marrying someone other than a fellow citizen.
It did not set out the reasons why, although 12.78 percent of respondants said they felt Chinese "worshipped" foreigners and their lifestyle.
About 75 percent said that cultural differences would be their biggest concern when considering such a marriage.
"Every international marriage is challenged by cultural and language differences," Chen Guangyao, an official with the Ministry of Civil Affairs, was cited as saying by the Beijing Morning Post.
"Whether it succeeds or not depends to what extent the bride and groom are ready to handle these differences."
International marriages in China have experienced two distinct periods.
In the 1980s and 1990s some Chinese people married primarily for convenience, either to get visas for overseas studies or to be able to move to a foreign country.
But since the turn of the century, such marriages were more likely to be based on love, said Chen.
Marrying a foreigner is no guarantee of long-lasting happiness, said the paper, citing a separate survey showing that international marriages tend to have high divorce rates.
The survey by the Shanghai municipal government showed 60 percent of marriages between Chinese and Canadians failed.
Chinese yearn to marry foreigners: survey
Thu Mar 31,10:57 AM ET
BEIJING (AFP)- Nearly 63 percent of Chinese citizens would like to marry a foreigner, according to a survey of contemporary Chinese attitudes towards international marriage.
The survey by Chinese web portal sina.com showed 62.7 percent of the 10,381 people questioned favoured marrying someone other than a fellow citizen.
It did not set out the reasons why, although 12.78 percent of respondants said they felt Chinese "worshipped" foreigners and their lifestyle.
About 75 percent said that cultural differences would be their biggest concern when considering such a marriage.
"Every international marriage is challenged by cultural and language differences," Chen Guangyao, an official with the Ministry of Civil Affairs, was cited as saying by the Beijing Morning Post.
"Whether it succeeds or not depends to what extent the bride and groom are ready to handle these differences."
International marriages in China have experienced two distinct periods.
In the 1980s and 1990s some Chinese people married primarily for convenience, either to get visas for overseas studies or to be able to move to a foreign country.
But since the turn of the century, such marriages were more likely to be based on love, said Chen.
Marrying a foreigner is no guarantee of long-lasting happiness, said the paper, citing a separate survey showing that international marriages tend to have high divorce rates.
The survey by the Shanghai municipal government showed 60 percent of marriages between Chinese and Canadians failed.