Middle Aged Aunties Rehearse ‘Anti-Japanese’ Dance at Raffles City Beijing

Middle Aged Aunties Rehearse ‘Anti-Japanese’ Dance at Raffles City Beijing
Jul 03, 2014 By eChinacities.com


More Photos >>

Public square dancing just got political, as a group of middle aged women were spotted rehearsing a dance of a particularly sensitive nature.

A video was posted online depicting the ladies marching in unison to ‘Tunnel Warfare’, a song about the Japanese invasion, before launching into their choreography complete with toy rifles. The piece de resistance is the forced surrender of a costumed Japanese soldier at the end.

Netizen’s reactions were mixed, unsurprising given the distinct unpopularity of middle aged dancing ladies and their loud music. One netizen commented: “It doesn’t matter what dance they do, as long as they keep it down and don’t bother people”, whilst others were less friendly, suggesting that the middle aged dancers “have mental problems.”

You can watch the video here.

Source: ecns

Warning:The use of any news and articles published on eChinacities.com without written permission from eChinacities.com constitutes copyright infringement, and legal action can be taken.

Keywords: ‘Anti-Japanese’ Dance at Raffles City Beijing

5 Comments

All comments are subject to moderation by eChinacities.com staff. Because we wish to encourage healthy and productive dialogue we ask that all comments remain polite, free of profanity or name calling, and relevant to the original post and subsequent discussion. Comments will not be deleted because of the viewpoints they express, only if the mode of expression itself is inappropriate.

Basque

Idiots

Jul 13, 2014 04:18 Report Abuse

Guest345928

Yeah the Yanks are the same. War mongering crazy bastards!

Jul 05, 2014 09:52 Report Abuse

carlstar

Chinese people just make it too easy to be anti Chinese.

Jul 03, 2014 19:22 Report Abuse

DrMonkey

When you couldn't win by yourself, you make stories where you win, complete with costumes and plastic toys. Ah Qi spirit, 100 years after Lu Xun wrote about it.

Jul 03, 2014 18:37 Report Abuse

DrMonkey

Haha, that would be Maginot Day, the day that famous defensive line was finally worth something :)

Jul 03, 2014 19:57 Report Abuse