Qucun Village, a small and quiet hamlet, located in the Xikou
Township of Jianning County in southeast China's Fujian Province, has only about 400 households
and 1,700-odd people, but it surprisingly has 118 surnames and more
than 50 dialects, the Southeast Express reported on
January 23.
Villagers here communicate in Mandarin. "Even the most senior
villager can speak Mandarin and this is something rare in
dialect-speaking areas of the country," said Zou Zhiyuan, an
official with the village committee. "There is averagely one
surname for every 15 people," said Zou.
"People only communicate in dialects at home with their family
members," Zou said. For example, Zou and his wife and children
communicate in Liancheng dialect of Longyan Area at home.
According to senior villagers, the village's beginning was
related to the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression
(1937-1945). The villagers came from 57 counties of 11 provinces
across China, with the most hailing from 17 counties of Zhejiang Province and 14 counties of Jiangxi Province. The two areas were once
scarred by large-scale offensives of Japanese troops in the early
1940s.
When asked how their grandparents trekked such a long way to
come here, villagers answered with "fleeing from the Japanese
troops."
Zhang Taigen, born in Linchuan County of Jiangxi Province in
1935, still remembers how his family fled from his native town
before it fell into the Japanese aggressors. "My mother, I and my
younger brother encountered Japanese troops on the way. We hid
behind a heap of faggots while Japanese soldiers poked the faggots
with their bayonets. My mother covered my brother's mouth with her
hands to stop his crying. Later we came to this village and settled
down," said Zhang.
Zou said that the village was finally formed by the banded
refugees at the end of 1940s.
"It is a small basin area surrounded by mountains and has poor
transportation facilities," said Zou. "But it has smooth lands and
two rivers providing enough irrigation and drinking water, proving
a reason for the refugees not to return to their native towns after
the war."
Each family owns on average 0.13 hectares of farmland. "We live
in peace and contentment. Neighbors have good relations," said
Zou.
There are 56 ethnic groups in China. In addition to
Mandarin, there are eight dialects, each with sub-dialects. The
Han, Hui, Man and She communicate in Mandarin, while the others
have their own languages.
Zou said that the villagers keep alive a tradition of writing
antithetical couplets (often written on a scroll or carved on a
pillar) with good wishes, usually marking them with their surnames
or hometown names. It shows that, though decades have passed,
villagers still yearn for the native soil they left long ago, the
Southeast Express reported.
(China.org.cn by Li Jingrong, January 26, 2007)