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The
634,700 Shes are scattered in Zhejiang, Jiangxi and Guangdong
provinces. They live in villages of several dozen households or
live along with Hans. Most reside in hilly country 500 to 1,500
meters high. Rivers have carved out their valleys. The climate
is mild and humid, the frost season brief, and the land fertile.
Agricultural products abound: rice, sweet potatoes, wheat, rape,
beans, tobacco and potatoes are just a few.
Timber and bamboo
are important commercial commodities for the Shes; other native
produce include tea, oil tea, dried and cured bamboo shoots,
peanuts, ramie, mushroom, camphor and medicinal herbs. Mineral
resources include coal, iron, gold, copper, alum, graphite,
sulfur, talcum, mica and many other non-ferrous metals.
The She language
is very close to the Hakka dialect of the Hans, and most Shes
speak Chinese instead of their ethnic tongue; a few Guangdong
Shes speak a language similar to the Miao.
How the Shes Live
Shes like to sing. They sing in
the fields as well as on special festival occasions, and every
year Shes participate in several singing festivals. Shes like
to sing duets, but they sing alone as well.
Women wear clothes
with flowers, birds and geometric embroidery. Often they wear
bright-colored sashes or bamboo hats, decorated with pearls
and trimmed with white or red silk lace. Lace is also used to
trim clothing.
In some areas,
women wear shorts year-round. When they do so, they wrap their
legs and wear colorful waist sashes and jackets with lace. They
coil their hair on top of the heads and tie it with red wool
thread. On her wedding day, a She bride will wear a phoenix
coronet held in place by silver hairpins.
The She families
are organized by "ancestral temples" together with
people of the same surname or clan. Each such temple has a chief
responsible for settling internal disputes, administering public
affairs and presiding over sacrificial ceremonies. Within each
temple are the "fangs," under which blood-related
groups live together.
The basic living
and production unit remains the patriarchal family, led by the
eldest man. Still, She women enjoy a higher status than their
Han sisters. In fact, She men often live with their wives' families
and adopt their surnames.
Today, She marital
customs are much like those of the Hans. But before, parent-arranged marriages were common, as
were outright sales of daughters. Brides' dowries usually included
farm tools, bamboo hats and rain capes. The wedding ceremony
was simple. The groom would go to the home of the bride's family
for a feast. Finding the table empty, he would sing out what
he wanted, calling for chopsticks, wine and traditional wedding
food. At the end of the banquet, he would sing again, this time
ordering the dishes to be removed. The cook, in turn, would
return his songs with melodies of his own. The newlyweds would
say prayers to their ancestors and bid farewell to the bride's
relatives. With the groom in front, they would walk to his family's
home, each holding an umbrella and singing in echo. The groom's
parents would welcome them at the front door, completing the
wedding ceremony.
As the feudal
landlord system evolved, parents and matchmakers became more
important in making "correct" marriages; bride prices
became exorbitant, and the poorest peasants were unable to afford
marriage. Because of so many pre-arranged, loveless marriages,
folk singing gatherings became a means for people to spend time
with their lovers -- in defiance of the feudal marriage system.
Centuries ago,
Shes cremated their dead, but by the 1940s earth burial was
common.
Like Hans, Shes
celebrate the Spring Festival, Lantern Festival, Pure Brightness
Festival (in memory of the dead), Dragon Boat-Racing Festival,
Moon Festival and the Double-Ninth Festival. In addition, the
third day of the third lunar month is a holiday on which no
work is done. Ancestor worship is the center of another festival
on the eighth day of the fourth lunar month. Sacrifices are
offered to the "Duobei King" in October, and people
have a day off on the 19th of the second lunar month to mark
the Buddha's attainment of Nirvana.
Traditionally,
every clan was symbolized by a dragon-headed stick, a sign of
the Shes' totemic beliefs. Moreover, Shes used to trace their
ancestry to a legendary "Panhu," who helped an emperor
put down a rebellion and won the love of his princess. Legend
has it that Panhu and the princess had three sons and a daughter,
who became the ancestors of the Shes. Shes used to worship a
painting of their legendary ancestors and make sacrificial offerings
to them every three years.
Shes believed in hosts and spirits. Superstition used
to hamper people's minds and production. Among the old and the
uneducated, it still does.
History
Scholars disagree
about the true origins of the Shes. Are they descendants of
the ancient Yues? Do they share common ancestry with the Yaos?
Most believe that the Shes' ancestors originally lived in the
Phoenix Mountains in Chaozhou, Guangdong Province. They left
their native place to escape the oppression of their feudal
rulers. That's why they called themselves "guests from
the mountains."
In their new
homes, the Shes were ruled by the central government for the
first time in the 7th century, when the Tang court organized
prefectures in Zhangzhou and Tingzhou in Fujian Province. Feudal
patterns among the Shes were well established by the Song Dynasty
(960-1279). At that time, the Shes were planters of rice, tea,
sugar cane and ramie.
By the 14th
century, many Shes had migrated into the mountain areas in eastern
Fujian, southern Zhejiang and northeastern Jiangxi. Although
they worked hard alongside Hans, many were impoverished by feudal
lords who seized large tracts of land. Others had to work as
hired laborers, or fled to find a living. The situation improved
under the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). Some prosperous Shes were
picked to govern the rest in the interests of the Ming court.
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