by Xinhua writers Zhou Yan, Tu Hongchang and Soinam
Norbu
LHASA, March 15 (Xinhua) -- Nearly 50 km west of
Lhasa's city center, hidden in the middle of nowhere in the Lhasa River Valley
surrounded by craggy mountains, is the obscure village of Shexing, a former
manor of the 14th Dalai Lama's parents and the now home to about 400 Tibetan
farmers.
Sunday is the "spring ploughing day", the 20th day of
the Tibetan new year and an auspicious date to begin farming according to the
Tibetan calendar, calculated on the basis of star movements.
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Villagers present Chemar during a
ceremony to mark the start of the spring farming season at Dagze County,
southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, March 15, 2009.
(Xinhua/Chogo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
All
the villagers were dolled up in their best clothing: traditional costumes, hats
or scarves and boots for the elderly, elegant silk jacket and costumes for young
women, and colorful down coats with Mickey Mouse or other Disney images for
children.
Ten-year-old Awangdasan stood out as the "chief
seeder" for this year's ceremony. The third-grader was born in the Chinese year
of the rabbit, with an auspicious birth date that implied good harvest, said
village official Alodanba through an interpreter.
Awangdasan was dressed in a brown costume, with a
hand-knitted, green and brown woolen sweater underneath and a scarlet hat on his
head. A shy boy with few words, he quietly held a small bucket of highland
barley, and followed two cattle -- both hybrids of bull and yak, to spread the
seeds on the ploughed ground.
Eleven tractors, all privately-owned, followed them
to plough the field, in the middle of which a fire had been lit. As a tradition,
housewives from every family added firewood, highland barley and flour to the
fire to keep it burning and giving off thick, but not suffocating, smoke, a
gesture to worship gods and pray for harvest.
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Local villagers drive tractors in a row
during a ceremony to mark the start of the spring farming season at
Shexing Village, Doilung Deqen County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous
Region, March 15, 2009. (Xinhua/Soinam Norbu) Photo Gallery>>> |
Not every inch of the village's 133 hectares of
farmland was ploughed and planted Sunday. "It was just a ceremony, but an
important event for all Tibetan farmers," said Alodanba. "Everyone will begin
working in the fields tomorrow."
At the end of the ceremony, every family offered a
hada, a white, Tibetan-style scarf to the "chief seeder", the cattle and the
tractor drivers. At least 60 men and women stood in a circle to dance Tibetan
dances and sing songs to hail their hometown.
"In my lovely homeland there is a pagoda made of
gold; on top of the pagoda there is a beautiful mural; even after three days of
rain and snow, the mural remains unchanged..." as one of the songs goes.
"We love to sing about the beautiful things in our
life: the mountains, rivers, blue sky, and love between young men and women,"
said village official Alodanba. "In one word, we sing and dance to express our
wish, for everyone to be healthy and for our homeland to be
peaceful."
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Local villagers perform a kind of
traditional dance during a ceremony to mark the start of the spring
farming season at Shexing Village, Doilung Deqen County, southwest China's
Tibet Autonomous Region, March 15, 2009. (Xinhua/Soinam
Norbu) Photo
Gallery>>> |
FEUDAL MANOR LOST
In Shexing Village today, few people remember the
life before 1959, the year feudal serfdom was abolished in Tibet.
The village used to be a manor of the 14th Dalai
Lama's parents. "No one remembered seeing his parents here. They entrusted a
relative to take care of the holding," said Siniloshang, 68.
Siniloshang, who was a village official for 40 years
before he retired last year, moved to Shexing Village to live with his wife's
family in 1960. "I just heard the elderly people say the manor's housekeeper,
Longsaiphuntsok, was cruel to the serfs. Every time he passed on horseback,
whoever was on his way must turn around and run as far as possible."
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Local villagers burn joss sticks during
a ceremony to mark the start of the spring farming season at Shexing
Village, Doilung Deqen County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region,
March 15, 2009. (Xinhua/Soinam Norbu) Photo Gallery>>> |
As a young man, Siniloshang used to hear the elderly
villagers sing a doggerel, which, with black humor, told the life and mindset of
the serfs. The doggerel goes as follows, when translated into English:
"No food, no drink, but not a second's hesitation
when there's work to be done; No shoes, no socks, trek along on your bare feet,
day and night, all year round. So? Pray you had ironclad hoofs, and eyes of an
owl so that you can work tirelessly day in, day out."
Today, not a single house of the former manor is
still standing. "The old houses were shared among the poor villagers after 1959
and have been torn down over the years," said Siniloshang.
In a government-sponsored project, the villagers are
building new homes with subsidies ranging from 24,000 to 45,000 yuan (3,530 to
6,620 U.S. dollars). By the end of this year, every family will move into their
new homes, said Siniloshang.
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Women present highland barley wine to
tractor drivers during a ceremony to mark the start of the spring farming
season at Dagze County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, March
15, 2009. (Xinhua/Chogo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
Siniloshang
was elected village secretary shortly after he was married. "It was a
'democratic election'," he said. "There were about 10 candidates but no ballot.
So we just put our hats on the ground and the villagers voted by throwing peas
into the hat of the ideal candidate."
Life was tough in the village, as few crops survive
at an altitude more than 3,700 meters high. The villagers mainly plant highland
barley and a little wheat, peas and occasionally, rape.
But thanks to the rich clay resources in the Lhasa
River valley, most villagers make two incomes nowadays by farming and working at
a local brickyard. "When they're not busy in the fields, they can work at the
brickyard for 30 to 50 yuan a day," said Siniloshang.
The village, surrounded by mountains on all sides,
had little access to traffic before the plateau highway linking Qinghai and
Tibet was built in the 1950s. Today, a few families have bought trucks to bring
in supplies to and from the inland regions. "Theserich families report 20,000
yuan of per capita income a year," said Siniloshang.
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A villager decorates his bulls before a
ceremony to mark the start of the spring farming season at Shexing
Village, Doilung Deqen County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region,
March 15, 2009. (Xinhua/Soinam Norbu) Photo
Gallery>>> |
The
average per capita annual income in Shexing Village is about 4,000 yuan a year,
incomparable with the city dwellers but higher than the average 3,400 yuan in
Maxiang Township, a cluster of six villages including Shexing.
"Until 1967, no one was able to read or write except
a living Buddha at the village monastery," said Siniloshang. "The first village
school was founded in the late 1960s."
Today, all the children go to the village primary
school and move to the county seat of Doilungdeqen for secondary education. At
least six young people have entered college, the oldest of whom, Zhasang, has
secured a job at the Agricultural Bank of China in Nyemo County, in the suburbs
of Lhasa.
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A villager holds a box of Chemar during
a ceremony to mark the start of the spring farming season at Shexing
Village, Doilung Deqen County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region,
March 15, 2009.(Xinhua/Soinam Norbu) Photo Gallery>>> |