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Dong Village: Northern Guangxi.

Dong Village: Northern Guangxi.

Write: Cathlene [2011-05-20]
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Back in Time: Visit to a Dong Village

By staff reporter ZHU HONG

For hundreds of years the Dong ethnic group has nestled on the Hunan-Guizhou-Guangxi borders in southern China. With a population of around 2.9 million, it is a relatively large minority but has shared territory in these mountainous regions with the Han, Miao, Zhuang, Yao, Shui and Tujia ethnic groups. Their settlements are difficult for visitors to access and the inconvenience means that amongst the Dong certain kinds of modern challenges are largely unknown. For the same reason, their indigenous culture has been relatively well preserved and remains largely free from threats. For the worldly traveler then, these villages have much to offer.

Song and Dance at the Door

Last September, on tour of some Dong settlements, I journeyed to Gaobu Village. Before entering the gate of this encampment in Tongdao Dong Autonomous County, Hunan Province, I heard voices raised in song and the resonant notes of lusheng, a local reed-pipe musical instrument. Before me lay a primitive village surrounded by mountains thick with forest cover, and C an engineering charmer C a lovely example of the Dong people s distinctive wind-and-rain bridge spanning the waterway nearby.

The wind-and-rain bridge is a kind of roofed road-link serving as the only entrance to this village. We discovered it was blocked by a red silk ribbon. More than ten lovely Dong girls came forward to greet my tour mates and me, extending cups, proffering toasts and singing local songs. Our tour guide explained offering the blocked-gate wine was their grandest reception ceremony for guests. Dong people like straightforward friends, so if the guest drinks the wine heartily, they have made buddies of their Dong hosts. A finicky guest, reluctant to drink but still expecting passage, will have to sing a kind of duet with a local girl, a ditty in an antiphonal style responding to the girl s lines in song. However, if the guest good-naturedly sings, and accepts the girl s toast, but is still reluctant to drink the Dong girl may feel slighted. The guest must at least take a sip of wine to pass the barrier in everyone s good graces.

After drinking the blocked-gate toasts, we ambled across the wind-and-rain bridge to encounter our next surprise C a long-table banquet prepared just for us, with various delicious local dishes including pickled fish and meat, fragrant oiled tea and sweet rice wine. Part of our welcome was the so-called He Long Yan in Chinese, meaning get-together banquet.

The get-together banquet is only held at receptions for distinguished guests or on very important celebrations. The senior head of the village (usually an old man who enjoys the highest prestige there) gives the commencement address, then young men and women invite guests to sing and dance, Dong-style, hand-in-hand around the long table together. After tucking into the feast, the local Dong people and the invitees customarily toast each other. The Dong are known for their hospitality and organize themselves into small groups to make the rounds of singing toasts. If guests can t respond in kind, they must drink. Custom also dictates that a guest must never make an attempt to quit the banquet before it has run its course; in any case, such attempts would be in vain because the Dong people jovially keep a guest at the table and engaged in the festivities. A good guest is not above getting drunk on the ways of the host, and the good host never wants to embarrass a guest, only to show the warmth of the welcome. Not all the guests will have the honor of attending a get-together banquet, so if you are fortunate enough to be invited, I advise you to seize on the opportunity and indulge yourself!

The price for accommodation in Dong villages normally ranges from RMB 10 to 100 for a standard room per night. Visitors to Dong villages should take special note whether a rope knot is hanging on the entrance gate of the village; if so, it indicates that the villagers are holding a grand ceremony honoring their ancestors. In line with the local custom, visitors should get locals approval before entering their village at this time.

Elegant Dong Architecture

We have mentioned the bridge, but Dong architecture is a topic we could explore for a long time. All the Dong villages are constructed on sites with specific natural features C south-facing mountain slopes with a stream winding around them. Every morning, the Dong villages resemble a wonderland rising slowly from the steam of the embracing waterway.

The Dong people s houses are built of fir. From afar, these houses look like an ascending cluster of mushrooms. On first appraisal, the drum tower stands out as the most distinctive architecture worth visiting, one of the hallmarks of a Dong village. The outward appearance of the tower is a polygonal pagoda, generally around 20 meters high and sporting anywhere from three to 15 floors. To signal important meetings, the head of the village will send someone up to beat the huge drum hanging at its uppermost point. Upon hearing the drum, the villagers immediately congregate in front of the tower.

Besides serving as a meeting venue, the drum tower grounds are also an ideal place for villagers to spend their leisure time. Hot summers find them gathering at the tower to cool off; on cold winter days, fire pits draw people round to sit and listen to the elderly telling stories. On festivals or visits from important guests, people gather here for lusheng playing, singing and dancing. So the drum tower is a must for tourists, who can witness cultural activities unfold here and understand more about local folk customs. What should be noted is that visitors must get the approval of local residents if they want to enter or climb up the drum tower.

Back to the wind-and-rain bridge, another signature piece of architecture in Dong villages. This also serves as a place where people meet to sing, dance or indulge in other recreational pursuits, sheltered from rain or sun. At 246.7 meters in length and 12.2 meters across, the Longjin Wind-and-Rain Bridge we visited in Zhijiang County in Hunan Province is the largest of its kind in the world. A complex of corridors and pavilions, it sports seven pagoda-like, multi-tier pavilions with flying eaves. The pillars and beams are decorated with two dragons playing with a ball and a couple of phoenix contented with each other s company. In the corridor we saw some older Dong ladies casually executing beautiful embroidery work. Behind them was a small temple housing the village s first line of spiritual defence C the bridge god.

In addition to an impressive exterior, Dong architecture also features highly skilled craftsmanship. Both towers and bridges are made with sturdy mortise and tenon joints, so that not a single rivet or nail is used. The resulting structures endure for hundreds of years.

According to a local Dong architect named Huang Weiyu, no matter how sophisticated Dong architecture looks, no blueprint is needed. Preparing the materials for construction, Dong architects and builders make marks only they can understand on a split bamboo pole used as the sole measuring tool.

Big Songs for a Big Soul

The Dong Big Song is well-known both at home and abroad for its amazing musical concord polyphonic style, which seems to carry the audience aloft into natural wonderlands. It is said that as the Dong choral tradition developed it folded in daily life and natural surroundings: the chorus of a song may be modeled on flickering cicada wings, bird calls or the burbling of running streams. Gradually the famous Dong Big Song, a multi-part cappella, was formed, with a chorus both deep and bright. Dong Big Song made a big splash at its Paris debut in 1986. Nowadays many visitors come to Dong villages especially for appreciating the Dong Big Song in its proper context. Strolling in a Dong village, you are moving in a melodic soundscape. It seems every villager is a good singer, and to them singing enjoys the same respect as eating. The Dong people have a saying, Foods feed the body, while songs feed the soul.

Dong embroidery is also superb. The headbands and cloth shoes worn by Dong girls are all embroidered with intricate patterns, such as their ethnic totem, dragons and phoenix, or Chinese firs. Locals told me that the ceremonial garments worn by the Dong are made with about six to seven separate embroidery stitches and normally it takes anywhere from several months to a few years to make one dress. The techniques are so complicated that it is impossible to imitate these patterns with modern machines. While there I happened to see Dong girls dyeing cloth with indigo and displaying elaborately embroidered clothes on the walls. Placing their exquisite handicrafts in view is as far as the Dong will go to attract tourists and buyers. The price they set is also very modest. If my experience is of any interest, I spent RMB 15 for a handicraft item, and like the rest of the trip, it was more than worth it.