Special report: Reconstruction After
Earthquake
BEIJING, July 8 --
Wang Zhisheng feels old and tired. At 75, he has long been grieving for his lost
wife and daughter and when the earthquake took away his home and friends on May
12, the lean, tall man with gray hair wanted to end it all.
Wang is a Shibi. For the Qiang minority, one of the
oldest groups in Chinese history, Shibis are communicators between man and god.
More importantly, for a minority with no written language, Shibis maintain a
tradition which has lasted thousands of years.
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Shibi Wang Zhisheng beats goat skin drum
at a burial ritual held for people died in the May 12 earthquake.(Photo
Source: China Daily/Zhang Han) Photo
Gallery>>> |
When
the earth trembled, Wang was watching TV. He ran out of the house and shouted
"dog, dog, dog", a chant shared by every survivor in the Qiangfeng village of
Mianchi town.
To Qiang people, dog is the mother of the God of
Earth. By chanting "dog", the God of Earth would stop trembling.
Yet the mountains did not heed the call and huge
chunks of slopes tumbled down, generating smoldering dust that enveloped the
panicking humans.
The devastation to the Qiang culture is acutely felt.
Of all the places that the 32,000 Qiang people live in southwestern China,
Beichuan, the country's only autonomous county for the Qiang people in Sichuan
province, was totally ruined. Wenchuan, the county where Wang lives, also
suffered heavy losses as the epicenter of the 8.0 magnitude earthquake.
Wang is the younger of a Shibi's two sons. His
brother was the one to whom the family heritage would be bequeathed. But his
brother wasn't interested in the Shibi culture and preferred to do something
else.
The father accepted the fact and decided to pass on his knowledge to Wang. After a hard day's work in the fields, the father and son would chant ancient scriptures while others chatted away the wintry days around the family hearth.