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A tale of three qiang villages

By Li Yang in Aba | China Daily | Updated: 2016-06-09 07:48

 A tale of three qiang villages

The last qiangdiao fortification tower in Dasi village in the Aba Tibetan and Qiang autonomous prefecture, Sichuan province, survived a 7.8-magnitude earthquake in 2008. Li Yang / China Daily

Luo Jinyong, director of the Hanchuan Museum in Aba and a Qiang culture expert, says: "When compared with the government cultural protection project, the Dasi model is more sustainable and effective.

"The Qiang have the same ancestors as the Han, who later became the largest ethnic group in China.

"So, for most Han tourists, visiting an ancient Qiang village is like calling on their ancestral brothers, who have maintained some semblance of an ancient lifestyle."

The Qiang believe that everything in nature has a soul. They worship white quartz stones and place the snow-white stones on their houses to protect the family.

Luo says there are two explanations for the white-stone worship - one is that their ancestors made fire using it; and the other is that the ethnic group won a life-and-death struggle with it when the enemy mistook the white stone for snowballs.

A three-hour drive from Dasi along a meandering mountain path will take you to three Qiang villages in neighboring counties. A'er, one of the villages, is known for its traditional stunts.

Zhu Guangliang, an 81-year-old tribal chief in A'er, can pierce both his cheeks with a long steel needle, without bleeding.

Some villagers can lick or walk with bare feet over red-hot iron bars without hurting themselves.

Speaking of these stunts, Zhu says: "These things were regarded as superstition during the cultural revolution (1966-76), and nobody wanted to learn how to do them.

"But now they (these stunts) are very popular with tourists, and the government protects them."

Taoping Qiang village in neighboring Lixian county was one of the first spots to be developed by the government in late 1990s as a tourist attraction. and is known as "a living Qiang architecture museum".

The 98 houses in the village perched on a mountain slope above a river are connected through a roof, a water supply network and corridors.

The village was built over a period of about 100 years, and looks like a castle from across the river.

The people living there have rules on how the water is to be used. For example, there is a time in the day to wash vegetables and a time to wash clothes.

The Yang Family Residence in the center of Taoping is the largest one in the village. It has dozens of rooms spread over three floors. The good-quality wood used instead of rock in the construction of the house shows the wealth of the family.

Also, the fact that the Yang family can adjust the water flow that comes through the underground water network below the residence - something the other families in the village cannot do - indicates the family's status in the community, says Yang Dengfu, 60, owner of the house. But Yang is nor very aware of his ancestors' history.

The remote Zengtou Qiang village is an exception when it comes to education.

The mountain village has produced a number of scholars and senior-level civil servants in its 3,000-year history.

In its current avatar, the dilapidated old village comprises 90 houses on the mountain, but there is also a new village of about 150 homes down the mountain.

There used to be four large temples and many stone tablets in the village. But most of them were destroyed in the 1960s and 1970s.

Guocheng, the former Party chief of Zengtou, who is now in his late 70s, attributes the village's educational success to its fengshui and the protection of various gods from the mountain, river and heaven.

"The village is old. But I am still very young," he says.

Now, Zhou hopes the village can attract more tourists, so that the young villagers understand that the past has value for their future.

 

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