Supporters of a centuries-old tradition of hand-making delicate
rice paper that was used in imperial courts is seeking state
assistance amid escalating costs and declining production.
"Unless the situation is remedied, our descendants will only be
able to recall the past glory in museums," said Zhou Jiehua, head
of the Cultural Heritage Bureau in Jiajiang County, southwest
China's Sichuan Province.
The "glory" he was referring to is a 1,000-year-old tradition of
hand-making paper that is native to his county. Bamboo is the raw
material used to make fine grain paper once used during imperial
exams and now used by 60 percent of China's painters and
calligraphers.
Zhou said the traditional technique involves a 72-step process.
"Only five of the 1,000 paper mills in the county still strictly
follow these manual procedures -- all the others have simplified
the production process to cut costs and time."
The technique dates back to the Tang Dynasty (618-907). In its
heyday in the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911) dynasties, the
county's paper output made up 30 percent of the country's
total.
"Around 1,700, Emperor Kang Xi chose the handmade paper from
Jiajiang County as the only paper for imperial exams in Beijing and
merchants from across the nation flooded here each year to buy the
paper," Zhou said.
Today, the industry employs some 7,500 people in Jiajiang
County, about 60 percent of the local population, but a sharp
decline compared with 40,000 workers employed in the 1930s.
Shen Liujun, 46, is one of the few people who still strictly
follow the 72-step process. His cottage industry, in the outlying
mountainous areas of the county, produces three tons of rice paper
a year, a mere sheaf of paper compared to the county's annual
output of 5,000 tons.
Maintaining traditional production techniques means low output
and big disadvantages for Shen in the fiercely competitive open
market. "If this traditional paper-making technique is added to the
national cultural heritage list, (Shen's) family will get some
government support to help preserve the traditional handiwork,"
Zhou told Xinhua in an interview.
The county authority has applied to include the technology into
China's first group of intangible cultural heritage, a final list
of which will be announced on June 10, when China marks its first
National Cultural Heritage Day.
Huayi Paper Mill, one of the bigger paper-making businesses with
20 employees, has simplified the production process to improve
productivity.
"It used to take six months to go through all the traditional 72
steps. The steaming and boiling processes alone take seven days and
seven nights," said Xu Anfu, who owns the mill. "We've omitted
nearly 50 steps and it now takes only a month. But the quality of
the product is not the same."
Besides lower quality, Zhou said the industry is facing many
other problems including a lack of raw material and professionals.
The process also produces a lot of waste and pollution.
"There used to be several thousand hectares of bamboo forests in
the county but now we have to buy bamboo from other counties and
even from neighboring Yunnan Province," Zhou said.
The traditional methods of the industry also demand strenuous
physical labor but low profits equate to low pay, so very few young
people are interested in this industry, Xu said.
"The four best craftsmen at my workshop are all in their 40s.
Their knowledge has been passed down from generation to
generation," he said. "But their sons are unlikely to carry it
forward."
The industry is also facing growing pressure because of the
waste it produces. It was blamed for polluting local rivers and
lakes and the county government has spent 300,000 yuan (US$37,500)
to repair damage to the local environment.
"We hope that state protection (through cultural heritage
listing) will help us tackle the problems," Zhou said.
China also plans to restore some traditional paper-making
workshops to preserve the ancient techniques rather than to make
profits, he added. "We've also compiled a booklet on the
traditional paper-making procedures and have collected antique
tools."
He said these workshops will, it is hoped, help the outlying
county attract more tourists and improve the local people's quality
of life.
(Xinhua News Agency June 6, 2006)