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Deputies pose for a group photo after
the 7th meeting of the first session of the 11th NPC yesterday in
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BEIJING, March 18 -- The country's top official
overseeing intangible cultural heritage has tangible reasons for redoubling
protection efforts.
Every time Vice-Minister of Culture Zhou Heping hears
about a folklore artist or a master craftsman who passes away before passing
down their arts, he feels "sorrowfully pitiable".
The Ministry of Culture recently proclaimed 551
artists as "inheritors" of intangible cultural heritage, including those of
Peking Opera and Mongolian pastoral song - the second batch following 226
designated last June.
"But in between, some 'masters' died before they were
conferred the inheritor titles and so did the arts which only they mastered,"
Zhou said during a webchat session on China Daily's website with columnist
Raymond Zhou last week.
"This is extremely regrettable."
Intangible cultural heritage is defined by the United
Nations as "the practices, representations, expressions, as well as the
knowledge and skills - as well as the instruments, objects, artifacts and
cultural spaces associated therewith - that communities, groups and, in some
cases, individuals recognize as part of their cultural heritage".
Also regrettable to Zhou are reports that some
Chinese villages were demolishing houses with unique architecture and ancient
structural decorations only to replace them with modern but monotonous
buildings.
"There is a compelling urgency for protection," Zhou
said. "We must provide conditions including funding for inheritors to transmit
their art."
He said that to prevent urbanization and
industrialization from encroaching on intangible cultural heritage, it is
important to raise awareness about the need for protection.
Among handmade teapots, for example, different styles
employ different traditional techniques, endowing each with a distinguishing
"character". However, people are increasingly using machines to mass-produce
clay teapots, dramatically diminishing their value.
People must understand that they will ultimately kill
traditional arts by resorting to industrial production, he said.
The vice-minister is a staunch proponent of including
Peking Opera and calligraphy in elementary and high school curricula to expose
youngsters to cultural traditions.
Nearly 100 ancient styles of opera have died out
since the middle of the last century, when the country had more than 300,
according to the ministry.
"I think we could mull over fine-tuning the subjects
(to be taught at schools) by increasing education on traditional culture, so
young people will receive such an education at an earlier age and preserve this
heritage - the 'DNA' of our nation," Zhou said.
In order to rescue China's disappearing intangible
cultural heritage, the country in 2005 organized government departments and
specialists to select 518 examples from hundreds of contenders and award them
State-level protection.
The second batch, covering nearly 700 items, will be
announced soon, Zhou said.
Those items listed at the national level of
protection are outstanding representatives of the country's intangible cultural
heritage, but compared with the size of the country and the diversity of its
culture, the number listed is rather small, Zhou said.
(Source: China Daily)