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This
ethnic minority is distributed across seven banners (counties)
in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and in Nahe County of
Heilongjiang Province, where they live together with Mongolians,
Daurs, Hans and Oroqens.
The Ewenki people
have no written script but a spoken language composed of three
dialects belonging to the Manchu-Tungusic group of the Altai
language family. Mongolian is spoken in the pastoral areas while
the Han language is used in agricultural regions. The Ewenki
Autonomous Banner, nestled in the ranges of the Greater Hinggan
Mountains, is where the Ewenkis live in compact communities.
A total of 19,110 square kilometers in area, it is studded with
more than 600 small and big lakes and 11 springs. The pastureland
here totaling 9,200 square kilometers is watered by the Yimin
and four other rivers, all rising in the Greater Hinggan Mountains.
Nantunzhen,
the seat of the banner government, is a rising city on the grassland.
A communication hub, it is the political, economic and cultural
center of the Ewenki Autonomous Banner.
Large numbers
of livestock and great quantities of knitting wool, milk, wool-tops
and casings are produced in the banner. Some 20-odd of these
products are exported. The yellow oxen bred on the grassland
have won a name for themselves in Southeast Asian countries.
Pelts of a score or so of fur-bearing animals are also produced
locally.
Reeds are in
riot growth and in great abundance along the Huihe River in
the banner. Some 35,000 tons are used annually for making paper.
Lying beneath the grassland are rich deposits of coal, iron,
gold, copper and rock crystal.
History
The forefathers
of the Ewenkis had originally been a people who earned their
living by fishing, hunting and breeding reindeer in the forests
northeast of Lake Baikal and along the Shileke River (upper
reaches of the Heilong River), tracing their ancestry to the
"Shiweis", particularly the "Northern Shiweis"
and "Bo Shiweis" living at the time of Northern Wei
(386-534) on the upper reaches of the Heilong River, and the
"Ju" tribes that bred deer at the time of the Tang
Dynasty (618-907) in the forests of Taiyuan to the northeast
of Lake Baikal. Later, they moved east, with one section coming
to live on the middle reaches of the Heilong River. In history,
the Ewenkis and the Oroqens and Mongolians living in forests
to the east of Lake Baikal and the Heilong River Valley in the
Yuan Dynasty (1280-1368) were known as a "forest people,"
and a people "moving on deer's backs" by the time
of the Ming (1368-1644). When it came to the Qing period (1644-1911)
they were called the "Sulongs" or "Kemunikans"
(another tribal people different from the Sulongs at the time)
who knew how to use deer.
In 1635, the
Kemunikans came under the domination of Manchu rulers after
their conquest of the Lake Baikal area, to be followed around
the years from 1639 to 1640 by their control of the Sulongs
living to the east of Lake Baikal. From the mid-17th century
onwards, aggression by Tsarist Russia had led the Qing government
to remove the Ewenkis to the area along the Ganhe, Nuomin, Ahlun,
Jiqin, Yalu and Namoer -- tributaries of the Nenjiang River.
In 1732, 1,600 Ewenkis were called up in the Buteha area and
ordered together with their family dependents to perform garrison
duties as frontier guards on the Hulunbuir Grassland. Their
descendants are now the inhabitants of the Ewenki Autonomous
Banner.
Economy and Life Style
Immigrations
in the past led to population dispersion which in turn resulted
in great unevenness in the social development of the Ewenki
people dwelling in different places with diverse natural conditions.
As a result, some Ewenkis are nomads; others are farmers or
farmer-hunters. A small number of them are hunters.
The Ewenkis
in the Ewenki Autonomous Banner and the Chenbaerfu Banner lead
a nomadic life, wandering with their herds from place to place
in search of grass and water. They live in yurts.
The Ewenkis
excel in horsemanship. Boys and girls learn to ride on horseback
at six or seven when they go out to pasture cattle with their
parents. Girls are taught to milk cows and take part in horseracing
at around ten, and learn the difficult art of lassoing horses
when they grow a little older.
A "Mikuole"
festival is traditionally observed by Ewenki herdsmen in May
every year. At happy gatherings held everywhere on the grasslands,
men, women and children in their holiday best go from yurt to
yurt to partake wine, fine foods and other delicacies prepared
for the occasion. It is a time for nomads to count new-born
lambs and take stock of their wealth, and for young, sturdy
lads to demonstrate their skills in lassoing horses and branding
or castrating them.
With the institution
of the "eight banner system" way back in the 17th
century, Ewenki nomads were drafted into the army and had the
obligation to pay leopard skins as tributes to the Qing rulers.
This was at a time when they were at the transitional stage
from primitivity to a class society. Helped by the Qing rulers,
an upper stratum of Ewenkis invested with feudal rights then
emerged. The expansion of agriculture and animal husbandry finally
brought the Ewenki nomads to the threshold of a patriarchal
feudal society.
A "nimoer"
mutual-aid group consisting of a few to 10-odd families was
usually formed by the Ewenkis to pasture their herds. People
in the group were members of the same clan, and there was no
exploitation of man by man at first. But in later years each
"nimoer" group came to be dominated by a feudal lord,
who had far more cattle than the other nomads in the group.
In name the pastures belonged to the "nimoer" group,
but in fact it was owned by the feudal chief who had the biggest
herd. The poor nomads in the "nimoer" were at the
beck and call of the feudal chief for whom they had to perform
corvee.
A concentration
of land also took place in areas where the Ewenkis lived as
farmers or farmer-hunters. In areas near mountains, they lived
by hunting, lumbering and making charcoal, with a few going
in for farming. There emerged landlords, some possessing as
many as 300 hectares of land. Here poor Ewenkis became employed
hunters of landlords who supplied guns, ammunition and hunting
horses and took away the bulk of the game bagged.
In the forests
of the Ergunazuo Banner were Ewenki hunters who, having no permanent
homes, wandered from place to place with their reindeer in search
of game. When they stopped in the hunt, these Ewenki hunters
lived in make-shift, umbrella-shaped tents built on 25 to 30
larch poles. In summer these tents were roofed over with birch
bark, and in winter with reindeer hides. When the hunters were
on the move, their tents and
belongings as well as their capture were carried by reindeer,
which lived on moss.
The roving Ewenki
hunters were still in the last stage of the primitive society
on the eve of liberation. Five or six to a dozen families who
were very closely related were grouped under a clan commune,
the chief of which was elected. All in the commune took part
in hunting, and the game bagged was divided equally among the
families. However, changes were already taking place in the
clan commune system at the time of liberation when shot-guns,
reindeer and the much-prized squirrel pelts were coming into
the possession of individual families.
Life Style
The Ewenkis are an honest, warm-hearted and
hospitable people. Guests in the pastoral areas are often treated
to tobacco, milk tea and stewed meat by the Ewenki hosts. Such
delicacies as reindeer meat, venison, elk-nose meat sausages
are generously offered in the hunting areas. When Ewenki hunters
go out on long hunting trips, they leave whatever they cannot
take along -- foodstuffs, clothing and tools in unlocked stores
in the forests. Other hunters who are in want, may help themselves
to the things stored without the permission of their owners.
The things borrowed would be returned to the store owners when
the hunters happen to meet them at any time in future.
Monogamy is generally practiced. In old days
exogamy was strictly observed. Members of the same clan were
not permitted to marry one another, and those going against
this unwritten law would be punished.
An Ewenki wedding is an occasion for dancing
and merry-making. All Ewenki folk dances are simple and unconstrained.
The dancers' foot movements, executed in a forceful and vigorous
style and highly rhythmic, are characteristic of the honest,
courage and optimistic traits of this ethnic minority.
Myths, fables,
ballads and riddles form their oral literature. Embroidery,
carving and painting are among the traditional lines of modeling
arts as commonly seen on utensils decorated with various floral
designs. An adept hand is also shown by the Ewenkis at birch
bark carving and cutting in producing all kinds of fancy beasts
and animals as toys for children.
Most Ewenkis
are animists while those in the pastoral areas are followers
of the Lamaist faith. A few living in the Chenbaerhu area are
believers of the Eastern Orthodox Church.
While believing
in animism, Ewenkis also worship their dead ancestors, and lingering
influences of bear worship is still found among Ewenki hunters.
After killing a bear, the Ewenkis would conduct a series of
rituals at which the bear's head, bones and entrails are bundled
in birch bark or dry grass and hung on a tree to give the beast
a "wind burial." The hunters weep and kowtow while
making offerings of tobacco to the dead animal. In the Chenbaerhu
area every clan has its own totem -- a swan or a duck -- as
an object of veneration. People would toss milk into the air
upon seeing a real swan or duck flying overhead. No killing
of these birds is permitted.
Wind burial
was originally given to the dead. But it has now been replaced
by burial in the ground, thanks to the influence of other ethnic
groups living nearby, then and now.
Dispersed to
live in different places and with many Ewenkis dragged into
the army by the Qing rulers, the Ewenki ethnic group was threatened
by extinction. Of a total number of 1,700 Ewenki troops sent
to suppress a peasant army of other nationalities that rose
against the Qing government in 1695, only some 300 survived
the fighting.
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