BEIJING, Feb. 28 (Xinhua) -- Chinese State Councilor
Chen Zhili has called for greater efforts to promote the country's intangible
cultural heritage, including Peking Opera and Mongolian Pastoral Songs.
Chen made the remarks at the qualification
certificate award ceremony for 88 practitioners at the Great Hall of the People
on Thursday.
They were among the 551 enlisted by the Ministry of
Culture as official practitioners to carry forward the country's intangible
cultural heritage.
Last June, a group of 226 artists were announced as
intangible cultural heritage practitioners.
According to the Ministry of Culture, artists had to
undergo a series of procedures, including recommendation by local cultural
departments, assessment by an expert panel, public review and re-examination.
Artists in financial difficulties are entitled to
government subsidies.
The State Council, China's Cabinet, has included 518
items in 10 categories, such as folk literature, folk music and dance,
traditional opera, ballad singing, cross-talk, acrobatics, folk arts,
traditional crafts, traditional medicine and folk customs, as intangible
cultural heritage.
Four items from China have been listed by UNESCO as
world intangible cultural heritage. They are the 500-year-old Kunqu Opera, known
for its graceful movements and poetic lyrics; the 3,000-year-old guqin
seven-string zither; the Twelve Mukams, a 12-part suite of ancient Uygur music;
and Mongolian Pastoral Songs.