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There are in China 286,500 Shuis, the
majority of whom dwell on the upper reaches of the Longjiang
and Duliu rivers that meander across plains and rolling land
interspersed with vast expanses of forests in southern
Guizhou Province. They live in compact communities in the
Sandu Shui Autonomous County and in Libo, Dushan and other
counties. Some Shuis have their homes in the northwestern
part of the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous
Region.
The areas in which the Shuis live are a
land of plenty, abounding in fish and rice. Wheat, rape,
ramie are also grown besides a great variety of citrus and
other fruits. The forests are a source of timber and
medicinal herbs. The Duliu and other rivers teem with
fish.
The Shui language belongs to the
Zhuang-Dong branch of the Chinese-Tibetan language family.
The Shuis used to have an archaic writing script. Some of
their words were pictographs, while others resembled Chinese
characters written upside down. Except for scores of these
ancient words that are still used for religious purposes,
the Shuis use Chinese in their daily lives.
The
Shuis boast a treasure house of colorful oral literature and
art. Their literature includes poetry, legends, fairy tales
and fables. Among the various forms, poetry, which consists
of long narrative poems and extemporaneous ballads, are
generally considered the most
prominent.
Stories and fables in prose style
praise the diligence, bravery, wisdom and love of the Shui
ethnic group and satirize the stupidity of feudal rulers.
With rich content and vivid plots Shui tales are usually
highly romantic.
Their songs, which are usually
sung without the accompaniment of musical instruments, fall
into two categories. The "grand songs" are sung
while they work, whereas the "wine songs" are
meant for wedding feasts or funerals.
The Shui
people are good dancers. "Lusheng Dance" and
"Copper Drum Dance" are the most popular dances
enjoyed by all on festive occasions. Traditional musical
instruments include gongs, drums, lusheng, huqin and suona
horns. The Shui people make beautiful handicrafts --
embroideries, batiks, paper cuts and
woodcarvings.
Life Style
The Shuis usually dress in black and blue. Men
have long gowns and black turbans, and women wear collarless
blue blouses, black trousers and aprons, all of which are
embroidered. On festival occasions, the females put on
skirts and a variety of silver earrings, necklaces and
bracelets. They usually wear their hair in
buns.
Shui diets consist of rice and fish,
supplemented with corn, barley, wheat and sweet potatoes. A
kind of liquor made of rice goes to entertain guests or is
offered to dead ancestors at sacrificial
ceremonies.
A Shui house is either a
one-storied affair or a two-storied building. Dwellers of
two-storied houses usually live upstairs and reserve the
ground floor for livestock, dogs and
chickens.
Monogamy is practiced. Young people
had the freedom to choose their spouses three centuries ago.
Such freedom came to an end with the growth of the feudal
economy, and children of rich landed families could only
marry those of wealthy ones, and marriage was arranged by
parents.
On wedding day, the groom's family
sent some unmarried men to escort the bride home. The bride
walked all the way to her husband's home under an umbrella
and returned to her parent's home on the same day or the day
after. The bride, as a rule, did not live very often with
her husband until six months after marriage. Such feudal
ways as parental arrangement of children's marriages and
extortion of big payments by parents of brides from the
grooms' families have ceased to exist following the
establishment of the People's Republic in
1949.
Shui funerals used to be extremely
elaborate. Livestock were killed as sacrificial offerings to
the dead. Singing, dancing and performance of local operas
went on and on until an auspicious day was found to bury the
dead. Such wasteful funerals have been simplified in the
post-1949 years.
The Shuis are believers of
polytheism. In former days a shaman would be employed to say
prayers and animals slaughtered to be offered to evil
spirits when someone fell ill or died or when something bad
happened. Catholicism that came to the area in the late Qing
Dynasty (1644-1911) won very few converts.
The
Shuis have a calendar of their own which takes the ninth
lunar month as the beginning of a new year, and their
biggest festival is the "duan" holiday which is
celebrated with great pomp after the autumn harvest at the
beginning of the 11th lunar month every year. Garbed in
their colorful costumes, the Shuis gather in their village
to watch horse races and plays, and to feast for days on
end.
History
The
Shuis are probably the descendants of the Luoyues, one of
the early tribes that lived along China's southeastern coast
before the Han Dynasty (206 B.C.-A.D. 24). They adopted
their present name at the end of the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644).
In the Song Dynasty (960-1279)
villages were formed and rice growing began. By the end of
the Song, the Shuis had entered the early stage of
feudalism. The nobles bearing the surname of Meng initiated
in the upper reaches of the Longjiang River a feudal system
which bore the distinctive vestiges of the communal village.
The Yuan rulers (1271-1368) established local governments at
the prefectural level in an attempt to appease the ethnic
groups. The Ming period witnessed a marked economic growth
in Shui communities. The introduction of improved farm tools
made it possible for farmers to open up paddy fields on
flatland and terraced fields on mountain slopes. The
primitive "slash and burn" farming gave way to
more advanced agriculture characterized by the use of
irrigation and draught animals. As a result, grain output
increased remarkably.
The Ming imperial court
followed the preceding dynasty's practice of appointing
hereditary Shui headmen. Under this system, the Shuis had to
pay taxes to and do corvee for these court-appointed headmen
as well as for the imperial court.
During the
two centuries between 1640 and 1840 the Shui economy
continued to develop. Farm production registered a marked
increase, with per hectare yield of rice on flatland
reaching 2,250 kilograms. Some quit farming and became
handicraftsmen.
After the Revolution of 1911,
national capitalism gained some ground in the area. In what
is now the Sandu Shui Autonomous County, iron mines and
plants processing iron, mercury and antimony were set up,
but later they were either taken over by Kuomintang
monopolist capital or went bankrupt. The comprador
capitalists plundered the rich natural resources, while big
landowners annexed large areas of farmland. Ruthless
exploitation through usury, hired labor and high land rent
robbed farmers of 60 to 70 per cent of their crops, thus
ruining a great many
farmers.
Changes After 1949
The founding of New China brought a revival
and further growth in production. During the land reform in
the early 50's, full respect for Shui customs was emphasized
and public land was reserved for festive horseracing and
dancing. In 1957 the Sandu Shui Autonomous County was
established.
Formerly only 13 per cent of the
arable land was irrigated. Now thousands of water
conservancy facilities have been built to bring most arable
land under irrigation.
Abundant mineral
resources have been found and mined. Today local industries
include chemical fertilizer, coalmining, farm machinery,
sulfur, casting, sugar refining, winemaking and ceramics.
Handicraft industries such as ironwork, masonry, silver
jewelry, carpentry, textiles, papermaking, bamboo articles
have also developed.
In the past,
transportation was very difficult in this mountainous area,
with only one 17-km highway traversing the county. Now all
the seven districts in the county are connected by highways
or waterways, and many towns and factories have bus
services. The Hunan-Guizhou and Guizhou-Guangxi railways
have further facilitated the interflow of commodities
between the Shui community and other areas and strengthened
ties between the Shui and other ethnic
groups.
Before 1949 there were few schools in
the area. By 1981, apart from 10 secondary schools and 145
primary schools with a total enrolment of 27,700, there was
one ethnic minority school and one ethnic minority teachers'
school. Officials of the Shui people now number over 1,000,
or over 30 per cent of the county's total administrative
staff.
In the past malaria was rampant in the
area with an 80 per cent incidence rate, but the only
medical facility was a small hospital with three medical
workers. After 1949 a large number of clinics and hospitals
were set up. Thanks to the persistent efforts in the past
years, malaria has been brought under control.
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