Explainer: Why You're About to Get a 3-Day Weekend
By Ryan Kilpatrick
The Explainer is where we explain an aspect of Chinese life. Simple. So now you know.
It may seem like the most socialist red letter day in the calendar, but May 1 International Workers' Day, celebrated as a holiday in China, does not have its roots in the Middle Kingdom, nor the Communist Bloc. Instead it can be traced back to 1886 - and the American mid-west.
As Chicago police tried to break up a peaceful rally on May 4 to support workers striking for an eight-hour day, a dynamite bomb was thrown into their ranks. The explosion and ensuing gunfire killed seven police officers and at least four civilians, while scores more were injured.
Four labor activists and anarchists were later hanged for the bombing despite the absence of any credible evidence. (What was lacking in evidence, however, was more than made up for with in public hysteria, packed juries and biased, partisan judges.)
The miscarriage of justice was a boon for the labor movement, however. The Knights of Labor doubled their membership within a year, and the struggle for a shorter working day was renewed on a national level.
In 1889, the Second International convened in Paris and declared May 1 International Workers' Day to commemorate the 'Haymarket Martyrs,' and took the eight-hour-day campaign worldwide.
Contemporary prints decrying the execution of the Haymarket Martyrs.
By setting the date three days earlier than the event itself, the socialist movement was taking a leaf out of the church's book, co-opting a pre-existing and ancient pagan festival celebrated across Europe to welcome summer. On the Chinese calendar, Lixia (literally "start of summer") fulfills the same purpose and typically falls on the same week as May Day. This year, it's on May 6.
Chinese first celebrated International Workers' Day in 1920, when Communist Party co-founders Chen Duxiu and Li Dazhao held May 1 assemblies with students and labor unions and in Shanghai and Beijing, respectively. In December 1949, the newly founded People's Republic declared a one-day holiday on May 1 every year.
From 1999 to 2008, May 1 was elevated to a 'Golden Week' holiday lasting a full seven days, but is now just a three-day long weekend. That is how, for the past 65 years, China has honored four Americans in a rebranded pagan ritual proclaimed in Paris.
Nevertheless, even with the collapse of the Soviet bloc and global communism, International Workers' Day still remains true to its name. In every continent of the world, it is celebrated to an extent far greater than America's current Labor Day on the first Monday of September.
Countries celebrating International Workers' Day on May 1 are in dark blue; in pale blue are countries with another holiday on May 1 and countries that celebrate Labor Day on another date are in pink. In red are countries with no holiday on May 1 and no Labor Day.
Fittingly, just as May 1 is China's favorite American holiday, Labor Day is America's favorite Canadian holiday. Labour Day had been marked north of the border since the Toronto Typographical Union's successful strike for a 58-hour working week in 1872, before their southern neighbors took a shine to the celebration.
In 1894, US president Grover Cleveland adopted the Canadian Labour Day as a rebuff to May 1, already co-opted by the Socialist movement and gaining momentum daily.
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