As pale pink dawn creeps over the rolling wheat fields of central Henan province on a mild spring morning, 79-year-old Meng Laifa wheels his well-worn tricycle out of his courtyard gate. Tucked in the rear cargo box are three trusted companions: a thick sharpening stone, a small hammer, and a plastic bottle of water. Eight kilometers down a winding country road lies Shanqian Xuzhuang village, the 271st stop for the senior volunteer association Meng has served with for years.
This weekly trip is no casual errand to sell wares or visit relatives. It is a quiet promise Meng and his fellow volunteers have kept for more than a decade. Founded 12 years ago in Xiangcheng county by local resident Song Hongchang, the association began with just 15 members reaching out to isolated, homebound elders. Today, it has grown into a movement of more than 5,000 participants, over 80 percent of whom are seniors over 60 years old—former teachers, retired small business owners, and lifelong farmers who have turned their retirement years into a period of purposeful service.
Calling themselves the “silver-haired corps”, the group operates on a simple yet innovative “old helping old” model that meets the most pressing unmet needs of rural China’s aging population. Healthy, more mobile seniors travel from village to village, delivering hot meals to doorsteps, trimming hair for homebound elders, sharpening tools, distributing free reading glasses, and most importantly, offering companionship to seniors who often live alone while their adult children work in distant cities.
“We don’t think of this as one-sided help,” said one volunteer chopping vegetables for the group’s free communal lunch, a warm chuckle escaping her as she worked. “We gain just as much energy and joy from spending time with them as they gain from our help.” This reciprocal bond offers a vivid, grassroots example of how rural China is adapting to the challenges of an aging population, one small, caring act at a time.
China is now home to more than 300 million people aged 60 and above, marking the country’s entry into a stage of moderate population aging. The strain of this shift is felt most acutely in rural areas, where formal elderly care services remain relatively scarce, and many working-age adults have migrated to urban centers for jobs. The old-helping-old model unlocks an underutilized community resource: active, healthy younger seniors who have abundant time, life experience, and a desire to contribute to their communities. As both current service providers and future beneficiaries of the network, they build a sustainable system of mutual support that fits the unique fabric of rural life.
The road to building this network was not always smooth, Song recalled. In the early days, local residents were suspicious of the unsalaried group, with some accusing the volunteers of running a pyramid scheme. The organization also faced criticism when it failed to publish its financial accounts promptly, eroding initial trust. But with targeted support from local authorities, the association established a Party branch, brought transparent governance to its operations, and gradually won over community confidence.
Today, the 15th of every month is designated a special “practice day”, where the senior volunteers are joined by young members of the Communist Youth League, lecturers from the local retired cadres bureau, and anti-fraud investigators from local police stations. This collaboration has created a powerful synergy between grassroots voluntary action and government support, expanding the scope and impact of the group’s work. All financial transactions—every donation received and every expense paid—are published daily for full public scrutiny, and every volunteer’s service hours are officially recorded to keep operations accountable. “What keeps us moving forward is consistent government backing and clear, solid rules,” Song explained.
One of the association’s most meaningful initiatives grew from a simple, heartfelt encounter back in 2019. During a village visit, Song and his team met an elderly man whose bad teeth left him unable to chew solid food, who said his greatest wish was just to bite into a fresh apple. Sheng Hailiang, a volunteer dentist traveling with the group, stepped forward immediately: “Let me see what I can do.” Within days, Sheng connected with a dental supplier that agreed to craft a set of custom dentures for the man for free. The “Apple Project” was born—named for the elder’s simple wish, the initiative also carries a symbolic meaning of good health and blessing for every participant. To date, the program has provided free dentures for more than 60 low-income rural seniors.
The association’s impact extends far beyond dental care. Its “Love Lunch Mobile Canteen” has traveled nearly 8,000 kilometers across scattered rural villages, serving more than 170,000 hot, nutritious meals to seniors who struggle to cook for themselves. Its reading glasses program has given hundreds of elderly rural residents their first ever pair of prescription glasses, allowing them to read books, newspapers, and handwritten letters from their children again.
This grassroots old-helping-old model is not an isolated case. Across China, thousands of similar silver-haired volunteer groups are emerging across sectors: tens of thousands of retired teachers have returned to classrooms to support underserved rural education, while other senior volunteer teams take on community work from neighborhood dispute mediation to waste sorting and local mutual aid networks. The World Health Organization’s vision of “active aging”—which frames older adults not as a societal burden, but as a valuable social resource—is taking deep root across China’s countryside.
By late afternoon, as the sun dips low and paints the village rooftops gold, the villagers head home after a day of connection and support. The volunteers pack up their tools, wash the last of the lunch dishes, and roll up the event banner. Tomorrow, they will prepare for their next stop: the 272nd village on their ongoing route of care. Meng lifts his sharpening stone back onto his tricycle, turns the crank, and sets off for home, golden sunlight stretching his shadow long across the quiet country road. Across the vast expanse of rural China, thousands of silver-haired volunteers just like Meng are bringing warmth, connection, and strength to the country’s aging society, one small act of service at a time.