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FUZHOU, April 6 (Xinhuanet) -- Staring at the
sprawling graveyards built halfway up the hill near his village in Putian of
Fujian Province, Lin Yatai had complicated feelings since he knew many of the
tombs will not be used by their owners alive.
The local government has ordered
the removal of the lavish graves, which were built by local people while they
were still alive, to save scarce farmland by encouraging cremation and banning
burial.
As the once-a-year occasion Qingming Festival, or
Tomb Sweepingfestival, falls on Sunday this year, millions of Chinese pay
respect to their dead ancestors by cleaning their graves, burning incense and
offering food and drink for the deceased in ritual held for millennia in this
world's most populous country.
In recent years, the ceremonies have become
increasingly lavishas many Chinese peasants are doing what ancient emperors did
centuries ago -- building a luxurious tomb for themselves and family members
when they are still alive.
"They believe having a good Feng Shui (geomantic
omen) in theirtombs will help bring good luck and wreath to their offspring,"
said Shi Yilong, an anthropology professor with Xiamen University.
Local people usually have to pay about 10,000 to
20,000 yuan (about 1,200 to 2,400 US dollars) to build such marble and granite
tombs, said a coffin store owner surnamed Xu at Honglu Town of theprovince's
Fuqing City.
"It might cost even more if the tombs use material
like white marble," Xu said, adding the extravagant tombs have become the latest
token of wealth and influence among local people.
In China, some people favor building tombs even if it
takes more space. This tradition is being increasingly challenged as tombs are
taking up valuable arable land with the expansion of theaging population and a
declining amount of farmland.
Yan Yiyong, deputy director of Fujian Provincial
Department of Civil Affairs, said competition for land between the living and
the dead is still a serious problem in the province despite repeated government
bans.
Sociologists say building tombs for people alive has
taken up too much farmland, brought down too many trees and destroyed the
vegetation, thus posing a challenge to China's ecological environment, as the
country has to feed about one fifth of the world's population on about 7 percent
of the world's arable land.
"Building graves for people alive is against our
basic policy of protecting the farmland and the environment," said Li Huifang,
deputy director of Chinese Folklore Society.
"We have to give up building such tombs as it is a
matter whether our descendants could survive in future," he said. Enditem
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