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The 634,700 Shes are scattered in
Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Jiangxi and Guangdong provinces. They
live in villages of several dozen households or live along
with Hans. Most reside in hilly country 500 to 1,500 meters
high. Rivers have carved out their valleys. The climate is
mild and humid, the frost season brief, and the land
fertile. Agricultural products abound: rice, sweet potatoes,
wheat, rape, beans, tobacco and potatoes are just a
few.
Timber and bamboo are important commercial
commodities for the Shes; other native produce include tea,
oil tea, dried and cured bamboo shoots, peanuts, ramie,
mushroom, camphor and medicinal herbs. Mineral resources
include coal, iron, gold, copper, alum, graphite, sulfur,
talcum, mica and many other non-ferrous
metals.
The She language is very close to the
Hakka dialect of the Hans, and most Shes speak Chinese
instead of their ethnic tongue; a few Guangdong Shes speak a
language similar to the Miao.
How
the Shes Live
Shes like to sing. They sing in
the fields as well as on special festival occasions, and
every year Shes participate in several singing festivals.
Shes like to sing duets, but they sing alone as
well.
Women wear clothes with flowers, birds
and geometric embroidery. Often they wear bright-colored
sashes or bamboo hats, decorated with pearls and trimmed
with white or red silk lace. Lace is also used to trim
clothing.
In some areas, women wear shorts
year-round. When they do so, they wrap their legs and wear
colorful waist sashes and jackets with lace. They coil their
hair on top of the heads and tie it with red wool thread. On
her wedding day, a She bride will wear a phoenix coronet
held in place by silver hairpins.
The She
families are organized by "ancestral temples"
together with people of the same surname or clan. Each such
temple has a chief responsible for settling internal
disputes, administering public affairs and presiding over
sacrificial ceremonies. Within each temple are the
"fangs," under which blood-related groups live
together.
The basic living and production unit
remains the patriarchal family, led by the eldest man.
Still, She women enjoy a higher status than their Han
sisters. In fact, She men often live with their wives'
families and adopt their surnames.
Today, She
marital customs are much like those of the Hans. But under
pre-1949 feudal conditions, parent-arranged marriages were
common, as were outright sales of daughters. Brides' dowries
usually included farm tools, bamboo hats and rain capes. The
wedding ceremony was simple. The groom would go to the home
of the bride's family for a feast. Finding the table empty,
he would sing out what he wanted, calling for chopsticks,
wine and traditional wedding food. At the end of the
banquet, he would sing again, this time ordering the dishes
to be removed. The cook, in turn, would return his songs
with melodies of his own. The newlyweds would say prayers to
their ancestors and bid farewell to the bride's relatives.
With the groom in front, they would walk to his family's
home, each holding an umbrella and singing in echo. The
groom's parents would welcome them at the front door,
completing the wedding ceremony.
As the feudal
landlord system evolved, parents and matchmakers became more
important in making "correct" marriages; bride
prices became exorbitant, and the poorest peasants were
unable to afford marriage. Because of so many pre-arranged,
loveless marriages, folk singing gatherings became a means
for people to spend time with their lovers -- in defiance of
the feudal marriage system.
Centuries ago, Shes
cremated their dead, but by the 1940s earth burial was
common.
Like Hans, Shes celebrate the Spring
Festival, Lantern Festival, Pure Brightness Festival (in
memory of the dead), Dragon Boat-Racing Festival, Moon
Festival and the Double-Ninth Festival. In addition, the
third day of the third lunar month is a holiday on which no
work is done. Ancestor worship is the center of another
festival on the eighth day of the fourth lunar month.
Sacrifices are offered to the "Duobei King" in
October, and people have a day off on the 19th of the second
lunar month to mark the Buddha's attainment of
Nirvana.
Traditionally, every clan was
symbolized by a dragon-headed stick, a sign of the Shes'
totemic beliefs. Moreover, Shes used to trace their ancestry
to a legendary "Panhu," who helped an emperor put
down a rebellion and won the love of his princess. Legend
has it that Panhu and the princess had three sons and a
daughter, who became the ancestors of the Shes. Shes used to
worship a painting of their legendary ancestors and make
sacrificial offerings to them every three
years.
Until education became widespread after
the founding of the People’s Republic of China, Shes
believed in hosts and spirits. Superstition used to hamper
people's minds and production. Among the old and the
uneducated, it still
does.
History
Scholars disagree about the true origins of
the Shes. Are they descendants of the ancient Yues? Do they
share common ancestry with the Yaos? Most believe that the
Shes' ancestors originally lived in the Phoenix Mountains in
Chaozhou, Guangdong Province. They left their native place
to escape the oppression of their feudal rulers. That's why
they called themselves "guests from the
mountains."
In their new homes, the Shes were
ruled by the central government for the first time in the
7th century, when the Tang court organized prefectures in
Zhangzhou and Tingzhou in Fujian Province. Feudal patterns
among the Shes were well established by the Song Dynasty
(960-1279). At that time, the Shes were planters of rice,
tea, sugar cane and ramie.
By the 14th century,
many Shes had migrated into the mountain areas in eastern
Fujian, southern Zhejiang and northeastern Jiangxi. Although
they worked hard alongside Hans, many were impoverished by
feudal lords who seized large tracts of land. Others had to
work as hired laborers, or fled to find a living. The
situation improved under the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). Some
prosperous Shes were picked to govern the rest in the
interests of the Ming court.
Throughout
history, the Shes struggled against exploitation and
oppression imposed by their rulers. During the First
Revolutionary Civil War (1924-27), She peasants in eastern
Guangdong organized to fight landlords, and similar
uprisings sprang up in Fujian and Zhejiang provinces.
Revolutionary activities exploded in eastern Fujian during
the Agrarian Revolution (1927-37), and most of the She areas
were under the worker-peasant democratic power. The Shes
made great contributions to the Anti-Japanese struggle
(1937-45) and in the struggle against the Kuomintang. Most
She areas were revolutionary bases during the war for
China's liberation in 1949.
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