In Chinese culture, the act of 下跪 is deeply symbolic and is not performed lightly. It represents a significant power dynamic and a complete lowering of one's own status before another person, a deity, or an ancestor.
Historically, commoners were required to kneel (and often kowtow, or 叩头 kòutóu) before the emperor and high-ranking officials. This reinforced the rigid social hierarchy of imperial China. Today, this practice is gone, but the cultural weight remains.
A key point of comparison is with the Western act of “taking a knee.” In the West, particularly in the US, “taking a knee” has become a symbol of protest and defiance against authority or injustice. In stark contrast, 下跪 in Chinese culture is almost always an act of submission to authority, a plea for help, or a gesture of profound respect. It is an appeal, not a challenge.
The act is tied to several core Chinese values:
孝 (xiào) - Filial Piety: In extreme situations, a child might kneel to their parents to beg for forgiveness or show ultimate remorse, a gesture that underscores the deep respect owed to one's elders.
尊敬 (zūnjìng) - Respect: People kneel before statues in temples or at the graves of their ancestors to show the highest form of respect and reverence.
面子 (miànzi) - “Face”/Social Standing: Forcing someone to kneel is a profound humiliation. Kneeling voluntarily is a huge loss of face, done only when the goal (e.g., saving a loved one's life, securing a critical apology) is more important than one's own social standing.
While the act is less common in daily life than in historical dramas, it still appears in specific, powerful contexts.
Marriage Proposals: Influenced by Western customs, a man getting down on one knee (单膝下跪, dān xī xià guì) to propose is now a common and expected romantic gesture. This is one of the few positive and joyful modern uses.
Serious Apologies & Pleading: In situations of extreme desperation or wrongdoing, a person might 下跪 to beg for forgiveness or help. You might see this in news reports, where a person kneels in front of a hospital to beg for funds for a sick relative, or in TV dramas where a character makes a grave mistake.
Worship and Ancestral Veneration: During festivals like Qingming (Tomb-Sweeping Day) or at Buddhist or Taoist temples, it is common practice for people to kneel as a sign of respect for ancestors and deities.
Figurative Submission: The term can be used figuratively to mean “caving in” or “surrendering” to pressure, difficulty, or an opponent.