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The
Yaos, with a population of 2.13 million, live in mountain communities
scattered over 130 counties in five south China provinces and
one
autonomous region. About 70 per cent of them live in the Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region, the rest in Hunan, Yunnan, Guangdong,
Guizhou and Jiangxi provinces.
Historically,
the Yaos have had at least 30 names based on their ways of production,
lifestyles, dresses and adornments. The name "Yao"
was officially adopted after the founding of the People's Republic
in 1949.
Half of the
Yaos speak the Yao language belonging to the Chinese-Tibetan
language family, others use Miao or Dong languages. As a result
of close contacts with the Hans and Zhuangs, many Yaos also
have learned to speak Chinese or Zhuang language.
Before 1949,
the Yaos did not have a written language. Ancient Yaos kept
records of important affairs by carving notches on wood or bamboo
slips. Later they used Chinese characters. Hand-written copies
of words of songs are on display in the Jinxiu Yao Autonomous
County in Guangxi. They are believed to be relics of the Ming
Dynasty (1368-1644). Ancient stone tablets engraved with Chinese
characters can be found in a lot of Yao communities.
Most Yaos live
in beautiful, humid mountain valleys densely covered with pines,
firs, Chinese firs, Chinese cinnamons, tung oil trees, bamboos
and tea bushes. The thickly forested Jianghua Yao Autonomous
County in Hunan is renowned as the "home of Chinese firs."
The places inhabited by the Yaos also abound in indigo, edible
funguses, bamboo shoots, sweet grass, mushrooms, honey, dye
yam, jute and medical herbs. The forests are teeming with wild
animals such as boars, bears, monkeys, muntjacs and masked civets.
Rich as they are in natural resources, the Yao mountain areas
are ideal for developing a diversified economy.
History
Called the "savage
Wuling tribes" some 2,000 years ago, the Yao ancestors
lived around Changsha, capital of today's Hunan Province. Two
or three centuries later, they were renamed the "Moyao."
One of China's foremost ancient poets, Du Fu (712-770), once
wrote: "The Moyaos shoot wild geese; with bows made from
mulberry trees." As time went
on, historical accounts about the Yaos increased, showing growing
ties between the Yao and the Han people. In the Song Dynasty
(960-1279), agriculture and handicrafts developed considerably
in the Yao areas, such that forged iron knives, indigo-dyed
cloth and crossbow weaving machines became reputed Yao products.
At that time, the Yaos in Hunan were raising cattle and using
iron farm tools on fields rented from Han landlords.
During the Ming
and Qing dynasties (1368-1911), farm cattle and iron tools spread
among the Yaos in Guangxi and Guangdong, who developed paddy
fields and planted different kinds of crops on hillsides. They
dug ditches and built troughs to draw water from springs for
daily use and irrigation. Sideline occupations such as hunting,
collecting medical herbs, making charcoal and weaving were pursued
side by side with agriculture.
Before 1949, the Yao economy could be divided into
three types:
The first and
most common type, with agriculture as the base and forestry
and other sideline occupations affiliated, was concentrated
in places blessed with fine natural conditions and the greatest
influence of the Hans. Here farming methods and social relations
very much resembled those of the Han and Zhuang ethnic groups.
The second type
was centered on forestry, with agriculture as a sideline. A
few landlords monopolized all the forests and hillside fields,
while the foresters and farmers had to pay taxes and rents no
matter whether they went ploughing, hunting or fishing, built
their houses, buried their dead, collected wild fruits and herbs,
drank from mountain streams or even walked on the mountains.
When the poor opened up wasteland, for instance, they had to
plant saplings between their crops. As soon as the saplings
grew into trees, they were paid to the landlords as rent. These
exactions caused many Yaos to be continually wandering from
place to place.
The third type,
engaged in by a tiny percentage of the Yao population, was the
primitive "slash-and-burn" cultivation. Although most
land was owned by Han and Zhuang landlords, the Yao farmers
had some of their own. In such cases, the land belonged to ancient
communes, each formed by less than 20 families descended from
the same ancestor. The families in a commune worked together
and shared the products equally.
The Yaos practiced
an interesting form of primitive cooperation called "singing-while-digging."
This can still be seen in Guangxi today. At times of spring
ploughing, 20 to 30 households work together for one household
after another until all their fields are ploughed and sown.
While the group is working, a young man stands out in the fields,
beating a drum and leading the singing. Everyone sings after
him.
Today hunting
remains an important part of Yao life. On the one hand, it provides
them with a greater variety of food; on the other, it prevents
their crops and forests from being damaged by too many wild
animals. After hunting, the bag is divided equally among the
hunters. Sometimes portions are given to the children carried
on the elders' backs, but the hunter who caught the animal is
awarded a double portion. Sometimes, part of the bag is put
aside for the aged people back in the villages.
Customs and Habits
The Yaos have
such unique life styles that the various communities are quite
different from each other. According to the Book of the Later
Han Dynasty (25-220), the ancient Yaos "liked five-colored
clothes." Later historical records said that the Yaos were
"barefoot and colorfully dressed."
In modern times,
the Yao costumes maintain their diversity. Men wear jackets
buttond in the middle or to the left, and usually belted. Some
men like trousers long enough to touch their insteps; some prefer
shorts akin to knee breechs. Men's dress is mainly in blue or
black. However, in places such as Nandan County in Guangxi,
most men wear white knee-length knickerbockers. Men in Liannan
County, Guangdong Province, mostly curl their long hair into
a bun, which they wrap with a piece of red cloth and top with
several pheasant feathers.
Women's dress
varies more. Some Yao women fancy short collarless jackets,
cloth belts and skirts either long or short; some choose knee-length
jackets buttoned in the middle, belts with both ends drooping
and either long or short slacks; some have their collars, sleeves
and trouser legs embroidered with beautiful patterns. In addition
to the silver medals decorating their jackets, many Yao women
wear silver bracelets, earrings, necklets and hairpins.
Rice, corn,
sweet potatoes and taros make up their staple food. Common vegetables
include peppers, pumpkins and soybeans. Alcoholic drinks and
tobacco are quite popular. In northern Guangxi, a daily necessity
is "oily tea." The tealeaves are fried in oil, then
boiled into a thick, salty soup and mixed with puffed rice or
soybeans. The oily tea serves as lunch on some occasions. Another
favorite dish is "pickled birds." The cleaned birds
are blended with salt and rice flour, then sealed into airtight
pots. Beef, mutton and other meat are also pickled this way
and considered a banquet delicacy. Many Yaos think it taboo
to eat dog meat. If they do eat it, they do the cooking outside
the house.
A typical Yao
house is a rectangular wood-and-bamboo structure with usually
three rooms -- the sitting room in the middle, the bedrooms
on both sides. A cooking stove is set in a corner of each bedroom.
Some hillside houses are two-storied, the upper story being
the sitting room and bedrooms, the lower story stables.
For those families
who have a bathroom built next to the house, a bath in the evening
is an everyday must, even in severe winters.
The Yaos have
intriguing marriage customs. With antiphonal singing as a major
means of courting, youngsters choose lovers by themselves and
get married with the consent of the parents on both sides. However,
the bridegroom's family used to have to pay a sizeable amount
of silver dollars and pork as betrothal gifts to the bride's
family. Some men who could not afford the gifts had to live
and work in the bride's families and were often looked down
upon.
In old Yao families,
the mother's brothers had a decisive say in crucial family matters
and enjoyed lots of other privileges. In several counties in
Guangxi, for example, the daughters of the father's sisters
were obliged to marry the sons of the mother's brothers. If
other marriage partners were proposed the betrothal gifts had
to be paid to the mother's brothers. This, perhaps, was a remnant
of matrilineal society.
Festivals take
place one after another in the Yao communities, at a rate of
about once a month. Although festive customs alter from place
to place, there are common celebrations such as the Spring Festival,
the Land God Festival, the Pure Brightness Festival, "Danu"
Festival and "Shuawang" Festival. The "Danu"
Festival, celebrated in the Yao Autonomous County of Duan in
Guangxi, is said to commemorate ancient battles. The "Shuawang"
Festival, held every three or five years in the tenth month
by the lunar calendar, provides the young people with a golden
opportunity for courtship.
The Yaos worshipped
a plethora of gods, and their ancestors. Their belief in "Panhu,"
the dog spirit, revealed a vestige of totemism. Yao communities
used to hold lavish rites every few years to chant scriptures
and offer sacrifices to their ancestors and gods. In some communities,
a solemn ceremony was performed when a boy entered manhood.
Legend has it that at the ceremony he had to jump from a three-meter-high
platform, climb a pole tied with sharp knives, walk on hot bricks
and dip a bare hand into boiling oil. Only after going through
these tests could he get married and take part in formal social
activities.
With growing
scientific and cultural knowledge, the Yaos have, on their own
initiative, discarded irrational customs and habits during recent
decades, while preserving healthy ones.
The Yaos cherish
a magnificent oral literary tradition. As mentioned above, singing
forms an indispensable part of their life. When a group of people
are opening up wasteland, one or two selected persons stand
aside, beating drums and singing to enliven the work. Young
males and females often sing in antiphonal tones all through
the night. Extremely rich in content, some of the folk songs
are beautiful love songs, others recount the history of the
Yao people, add to the joyous atmosphere at weddings, synchronize
working movements, tell legends about the creation of heaven
and the earth, ask meaningful questions with each other or tell
humorous stories. In many of them, the words have been passed
down from generation to generation.
Besides drums,
gongs and the suona horn (a woodwind instrument), the long waist
drum, another traditional musical instrument, is unique to the
Yaos. It was said to have been popular early in the Song Dynasty
(1127-1279). The revived waist drum dance has been frequently
performed both in China and abroad since the 1950s.
The Yaos
are expert weavers, dyers and embroiderers. In the Han Dynasty
(206 B.C.-A.D.220), they wove with fabrics made from tree bark
and dyed it with grass seeds. In the Song Dynasty, they developed
delicate designs dyed on white cloth with indigo and beeswax.
The product became famous all over the country later.
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