|
NANNING, March 12 (Xinhuanet) -- A barefoot man in a black scarf and clothes
stood still before a dead 20-meter tree trunk with 20 sharpened swords sticking
out of it.
Suddenly, he jumped onto the tree, grasping two swords and standing on two
others. In less than three minutes he was at the top.
He was performing the "ascending the swords hill," an allegedly lost stunt
of the Yao ethnic group in southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
"I don't agree that the stunt has died out. The Yao people are brave and
many people in my hometown can do it," said Li Chunrong,42, the performer from
Jinxiu County in Guangxi.
It takes three to five years or more to master the skill, said Li Rizhen,
the chairman with JinXiu Federation of Literary and ArtCircles.
"The performers must be brave," Rizhen said. "To avoid injury, they must
accurately grasp the swords and step on the edges. They must climb as steadily
as they can."
Chunrong spent 10 years learning the stunt. Now he is teaching three Yao
youths, including a 9-year-old boy.
He expressed confidence about the stunt's future. "We will passit down
generation after generation by performing to the whole world in the booming
tourism of my county."
The Yao ethnic group, with a 4,000-year history, is known for its
astonishing stunts, including the "ascending the swords hill" and "diving into
the flames sea." Enditem |