ĦĦĦĦMore than 90 per
cent of the 33,936 Achangs live in Longchuan, Lianghe and Luxi counties
in the Dehong Dai-Jingpo Autonomous Prefecture in southwestern Yunnan
Province. The rest live in Longling County in the neighboring Baoshan
Prefecture.
These areas are on the southern tip
of the Gaoligong Mountains. The climate is warm; the land fertile,
crisscrossed by the Daying and Longchuan rivers and their numerous
tributaries. The river valleys contain many plains, the Fusa and
Lasa being the largest of them. Dense forests populated by deer, musk
deer and bears cover the mountain slopes. Natural resources, such
as coal, iron, copper, lead, mica and graphite, abound.
Achangs speak a language belonging
to the Tibetan-Myanmese language family of the Chinese-Tibetan system.
Most Achangs also can speak Chinese and the language of Dais. Their
written language is Chinese.
Achangs treasure their oral culture
of ballads, stories and folk tales. Singing alternating duets is
a favorite evening recreation of young men and women. Musical instruments
used by Achangs include the bamboo qin
(a stringed plucked instrument), the bamboo flute, the gourd-shaped
sheng (a wind instrument), the sanxian
(a three-stringed plucked instrument), the elephant-leg drum and
the gong. Drum and monkey dances are among the most popular. Handicrafts
include embroidery, lacquering, dyeing, weaving, engraving and silverware
making and are known for their elaborate patterns and detail. Achang
engraving is extraordinary and can best be seen on furniture, buildings
and Buddhist shrines, on which workers have etched vivid forms of
animals and plants.
Customs
Achang men tend to wear blue,
white or black jackets which button down the front, although on
the Lasa plain many men wear jackets with buttons toward the left
side. Achang women like to wear silver objects on festive occasions.
Their clothes vary somewhat depending on where they live, but in
general married women wear skirts and jackets with tight sleeves
and wrap their heads with black or blue cloth that may go as high
as three decimeters. Unmarried women wear trousers and tie their
pigtails on top of their heads. Although the habit is disappearing,
young men and women used to chew areca, blackening their teeth.
For food, Achangs eat rice as their staple and prefer sour dishes.
They live in courtyard houses of brick or stone with wood beam supports.
Achang villages are connected by gravel paths or roads paved with
stone slabs.
The basic unit of the Achang society
is the patriarchal, monogamous family. Young men and women are free
to choose their spouses. Courting rituals are quite specific. When
dusk falls, young men go to bamboo groves near the homes of the
young women they desire and play the sheng to win their favor. In some places,
groups of young men and women gather around a bonfire, where couples
flirt by singing alternate verses. This can go on until dawn. Before
1949, marriages were arranged by parents, which often led to forced
marriage and misery for unlucky young lovers. The Achangs have a
strict incest taboo: people with the same surname do not marry each
other. But intermarriage with Hans and Dais has always been permitted.
Under the Han influence, Achangs generally
practice ancestor worship. Most Achangs on the Fusa plain believe
in Hinayana, a branch of Buddhism.
Achangs generally bury their dead.
In Buddhist areas, funerals are scheduled on holy days and follow
the chanting of scripture by monks. One monk leads the funeral procession.
As he walks, he holds a long strand of white cloth tied to the coffin,
as if he were guiding the dead into the "Heavenly Kingdom."
The coffin is to be carried above the heads of the close relatives
of the dead, figuratively providing the deceased with a "bridge"
to cross the river to the netherworld. The dead are buried without
their metal ornaments; even the gold coatings on false teeth must
be removed to make sure nothing will contaminate their reincarnation.
Those who die of infectious diseases or childbirth are cremated.
Past Socio-economic Conditions
Before 1949 Achangs in the Lianghe
area lived within a familial organization called the "Jiahui"
(family meeting). Similar to the patriarchal clan system, the Jiahui
had written family rules and chose patriarchs to maintain the feudal
order of exploitation. Regarded as inferiors to the men in the Jiahui,
women had few rights. They had no right of inheritance.
After 1949 these practices were gradually eliminated.
The Achangs' ancestors once lived in
the Jinsha, Lancang and Nujiang river valleys in northwestern Yunnan.
Some of them moved west of the Nujiang River where they gradually
evolved from hunters to farmers. According to legends, Achang forbears
in those days lived in a matriarchal society with women having a
dominant familial and social position and lovers living in group
marriages.
During the Tang and Song dynasties
(618-1279), the Achang area was controlled by Yunnan's Nanzhao and
Dali principalities. During the Ming and Qing dynasties (1368-1911),
the Achangs were ruled by Achang hereditary chiefs appointed by
-- and accountable to -- the imperial court. After the Revolution
of 1911, warlords in Yunnan established an administrative bureau
in the Achang area, installing the Bao-Jia system (an administrative
system organized on the basis of households, each Jia being made
up of 10 households, and each Bao of 10 Jia, by which the warlords
enforced their rule at the primary level), oppressing and exploiting
the Achang people in collaboration with local chiefs.
Before 1949, feudalism was the dominant
economic form in the areas in which the Achangs lived. Farming was
done according to the landlord system. Dai chiefs were the feudal
lords; most landlords were Hans. Achang landlords were few.
Where they ruled, chiefs owned all
the land. Aside from collecting taxes to enrich themselves, they
used their political privileges to extort "gifts" from
peasants on such occasions as holidays, weddings and funerals. The
ruling classes, including Achang landlords, prospered through usury
and the exploitation of labor.
Under the rule of chiefs, the Achang
social structure was destroyed. Achangs were organized into the
"gang" (township) and the "zuo" (district),
through which the chiefs ruled them and levied tax upon them. "Official
tax," "tax on opium," "tax on land" --
these and other taxes and levies squeezed the people, draining them
of whatever comforts they could accumulate. In addition, many Achang
villages were burdened with a fixed amount of required, unpaid labor.
Post-liberation Life
Liberation came for the Achangs in
early 1950. Two years later, an Achang autonomous district was established
in Longchuan County's Fusa area, where the Achangs were concentrated.
This was followed by the establishment of three more Achang autonomous
districts in the counties of Luxi and Lianghe in 1953 and 1954.
When the Dehong Dai-Jingpo Autonomous Prefecture was created, the
Achangs were amply represented in the prefectural people's congress.
Beginning in the autumn of 1955, a
gradual land reform abolished feudal land ownership in the Achang
area. Also abolished were feudal privileges, taxes and usury. Farmers
were organized into cooperatives in 1958.
Achangs are famous for their rice cultivation.
Before 1950, Achangs were kept so poor by the feudal system that
they could not afford to eat rice. But since liberation, Achangs
have been able to build irrigation systems that have transformed
arid land into fertile paddy fields, ensuring steady rice harvests.
They also have built small hydroelectric stations, and have bought
farm machinery such as tractors, rice mills, diesel engines, threshers
and winnowers.
Local industries, built up from nothing,
are centered around Lianghe. They now include ironwork, oil pressing,
dyeing, and farm tool, soap and rosin production. In Lasa, an ironworks
produces water-powered fire blowers, replacing the manual ones that
were in common use.
Development of education has been a
priority. Before 1950, there was only one school, in Lasa, and that
one mainly enrolled the children of chiefs. Today, however, several
dozens of primary and middle schools have been set up and almost
all Achang children are at schools.
In those areas, epidemics used to run
rampant. After 1950, epidemic prevention stations and clinics have
been established, and medical workers of Achang origin have been
trained. Epidemics such as the plague, cholera and typhoid fever
have been eliminated.
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