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The Nu ethnic minority, numbering some 27,200, live
mainly in Yunnan Province's Bijiang, Fugong, Gongshan and
Lanping counties, which comprise the Nujiang Lisu Autonomous
Prefecture. Others are found in Weixi County in the Diqing
Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture.
The Nu people
speak a language belonging to the Tibetan-Myanmese group of
the Chinese-Tibetan language family. It has no written form,
and, like many of their ethnic minority neighbors, the Nus
used to keep records by carving notches on sticks; educated
Nus nowadays use the Han language (Chinese) for
administrative purposes.
The Nu homeland is a
country of high mountains and deep ravines crossed by the
Lancang, Dulong and Nujiang rivers. The famous Grand Nujiang
Canyon is surrounded by mountains, which reach 3,000 meters
above sea level. Dense virgin forests of pines and firs
cover the mountain slopes and are the habitat of tigers,
leopards, bears, deer, giant hawks and
pheasants.
The area is rich in mineral deposits
and valuable medicinal herbs. In addition, with a warm
climate and plentiful rain, it promises great hydroelectric
potential.
Origins and History
In the eighth century, the area inhabited by
the Nus came under the jurisdiction of the Nanzhao and Dali
principalities, which were tributary to the Tang (618-907)
court. During the Yuan and Ming dynasties it came under the
rule of a Naxi headman in Lijiang. From the 17th century,
rulers comprised various Tibetan and Bai headmen and Tibetan
lamaseries. These rulers usurped the Nus' land and carried
many of them off as slaves.
From the mid-1850s,
the British colonialists who had conquered Myanmur pushed up
the Nujiang River valley. They were followed by American,
French and German adventurers. This caused friction with the
Nu and other minority peoples in the area, such as the Lisu,
Tibetan and Drung ethnic minorities. In 1907, these peoples
banded together to stage a mass uprising against the
encroachments of French
missionaries.
Culture and Customs
Before the founding of the People’s
Republic of China in 1949, social development was uneven
among the various Nu communities. The Nu people in Lanping
and Weixi counties had long entered the feudal stage, and
their methods of production and standard of living were
similar to those of the Hans, Bais and Naxis. There were
vestiges of primitive communalism in the Nu communities in
Bijiang, Fugong and Gongshan, where private ownership and
class polarization had only just begun.
Bamboo
and wooden farm tools were the main implements of
production, and major crops were maize, buckwheat, barley,
Tibetan barley, potatoes, yams and beans. Output was low, as
fertilizer was not used and crop techniques were primitive.
The annual grain harvest was some 100 kg short of the per
capita need and the diet was supplemented by hunting and
fishing using bows and poisoned
arrows.
Industry was represented by handicraft
products made on a cottage-industry basis -- linen, bamboo
and wooden articles, iron tools, and liquor. Surplus
handicrafts were bartered for necessities in the small
markets.
Before China’s national
liberation in 1949, land ownership took three forms:
primitive communal type, private and group-ownership. The
older Nu villages in Bijiang and Fugong retained vestiges of
the ancient patriarchal clan system; there were ten clan
communes located in ten separate villages, which each had
communal land. According to a 1953 survey, a landlord
economy had emerged in Bijiang County, with an increasing
number of land sales, mortgages and leases. In some places,
rich peasants exploited their poorer neighbors by a system
called "washua," under which peasants labored in
semi-serf conditions. Slavery was practiced in a fraudulent
form of son adoption.
Monogamy was the general
practice, although a few wealthy landlords and commune
headmen sometimes had more than one wife. After marriage,
men would move out of the family dwelling and set up a new
household with some of the family property. The new family,
however, still retained a cooperative relationship with the
parental family and the whole clan. The youngest son lived
with his parents and inherited their property. Women had low
social status, doing the household chores and working in the
fields but having no economic rights at
all.
The traditional burial forms dictated that
males be buried face upward with straight limbs, while
females lay sideways with bent limbs. In the case of a dead
couple, the female was made to lie on her side facing the
man and with bent limbs -- symbolizing the submission of the
female to the male. When an adult died, all the members of
the clan or village commune observed three days of
mourning.
The Nus live in wooden or bamboo
houses, each usually consisting of two rooms. The outer one
is for guests and also serves as the kitchen. In the middle
is the fireplace, with an iron or stone tripod for hanging
cooking pots from. The inner room is used as a bedroom and
grain storage, and is off-limits to outsiders. The houses
are built by the common efforts of all the villagers and are
usually erected in one day.
Until the mid-20th
century, both men and women wore linen clothes. Girls after
puberty wore long skirts and jackets with buttons on the
right side. Nu women in Gongshan wrapped themselves in two
pieces of linen cloth and stuck elaborately-worked bamboo
tubes through their pierced ears. Married women in Bijiang
and Fugong wore coral, agate, shell and silver coin
ornaments in their hair and on their chests. For earrings
they used shoulder-length copper rings. Besides, all Nu
women like to adorn themselves with thin rattan bracelets,
belts and anklets. Nu men wear linen gowns and shorts, and
carry axes and bows and arrows.
The staple food
of the Nus is maize and buckwheat. They rarely grow
vegetables. In the past, just before the summer harvest they
had to gather wild plants to keep alive. Both men and women
drink large quantities of strong liquor.
The
Nus were animists, and objects of worship included the sun,
moon, stars, mountains, rivers, trees and rocks. The shamans
were often clan or commune chiefs and practiced divination
to ensure good harvests. Apart from that, their duties also
included primitive medicine and the handing down of the
tribe's folklore. Any small mishap was the occasion for
holding an elaborate appeasement rite, involving huge waste
and hardship to the Nu people. In addition, Lamaism and
Christianity had made some headway among the Nus before liberation.
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