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Numbering 18,000 in all, the Jinos live in the
Jinoluoke Township of Jinghong County in the Xishuangbanna
Dai Autonomous Prefecture, Yunnan Province.
The
language of this ethnic minority belongs to the
Tibetan-Myanmese group of the Chinese-Tibetan language
family. Its structure and vocabulary have much in common
with Yi and Myanmese. Without a written language of their
own, the Jino people used to keep records by notching on
wood or bamboo.
Jinoluoke is a mountainous area
stretching for 70 kilometers from east to west and 50
kilometers from north to south. The climate there is rainy
and subtropical with an average annual temperature of 18 to
20 degrees. The rainy season lasts from May to September
with July and August having the heaviest rainfall. The rest
of the year is dry.
Jino land is crisscrossed
by numerous rivers and streams, the longest being the Pani
and the Small Black rivers. The major crops are upland and
wet rice and corn. The famous Pu'er tea grows on Mount Jino.
Jinoluoke also has a long history of cotton-growing and is
abundant in such tropical fruits as bananas and papayas.
Elephants and wild oxen roam the dense primeval forests
which are also the habitat of monkeys, hornbills and other
birds. Jinoluoke is also rich in mineral
resources.
History
It is said that the Jinos migrated to
Jinoluoke from Pu'er and Mojiang or places even farther
north. It seems likely that they still lived in a
matriarchal society when they first settled around the Jino
Mountain. Legend has it that the first settler on the
mountain ridge was a widow by the name of Jiezhuo. She gave
birth to seven boys and seven girls who later married each
other. As the population grew, the big family was divided
into two groups to live in as many villages, or rather two
clans that could intermarry. One was called Citong, the
patriarchal village, and the other was Manfeng, the
matriarchal village. With the passage of time, the Jino
population multiplied and more Jino villages came into
existence.
Until some 40 years ago, Jino people
from far and near still went to offer sacrifices to their
ancestors in the matriarchal and patriarchal villages every
year.
The Jino matriarchal society gave way to
a patriarchal one some 300 years ago. But the Jinos were
still in the transitional stage from a primitive to a class
society at the time the People's Republic was founded in
1949.
Most Jinos are farmers. In 1949 they
still cultivated land by a slash and burn method, not
knowing how to irrigate their crops. Land was communally
owned by clans or villages and farmed collectively except in
some villages where land was privately
owned.
The Jonos are great hunters. When men go
out hunting, they shoulder crossbows with poisoned arrows or
shot-guns. They are also experts in the use of traps and
nooses to catch wild animals. They hunt in groups and divide
the game equally among the participants. But the pelts of
animals go to the men who shot them. While the men hunt, the
women gather wild fruit in the forests. Edible herbs are
also collected for soup.
The early ancestors of
the Jinos, united by ties of consanguinity into a big
family, dwelled in the Jizhuo Mountains in very ancient
times. But the social structure of the Jinos had changed by
1949. The basic unit of society was no longer the clan by
blood-ties following the emergence of the communal village
in which people of different clans lived together. The
boundaries of the villages were marked with wooden or stone
tablets on which swords and spears were carved. The land
within the boundary was communal property, and each village
was inhabited by at least two clans whose members could
intermarry. Two elders were elected to take care of village
administration as well as sacrificial rites and production.
Each village was a small, self-contained
world.
Primitive egalitarianism still manifests
itself to these days in Jino customs. The meat of wild
beasts brought back by hunters is divided equally among all
adults and children in a village. Even a small deer is cut
into very tiny pieces and shared out among all the
villagers, including the new-born. Because of low
crop-yields resulting from primitive farming methods and
extortion by the Kuomintang and Dai overlords, there was
always a shortage of grain for three or four months every
year. But despite that, the Jinos stored what little grain
they had in unguarded straw sheds outside their houses, and
never worried that it would be stolen.
Zhuoba
(the village father) and Zhuose (the village mother) were
the leaders in a communal village. Being the oldest people
in the village, they were respected by all. They became
village leaders by virtue of their seniority, not because
they were brave in war or eloquent in speech. No matter how
mediocre they might be, even if they were blind or deaf,
they had to serve as village elders so long as they were the
oldest people in the community. After their death, the next
eldest in the same clan would be chosen as
successors.
Their functions were tinged with
time-honored traditions or religion. For instance, the
yearly sowing could only begin after the elders had animals
slaughtered and offered to the spirits at a ceremony during
which the elders put a few seeds in the soil, before the
other villagers could start sowing on a big scale. The
elders also fixed the dates for holidays. The beating of a
big drum and gong in elders' homes ushered in the new year,
and all the villagers, young and old, would rush to the
elders' homes to sing and
dance.
Life Style
The Jinos live in bamboo houses built on
stilts on flat hilltops. The men usually wear collarless
white jackets and white or blue trousers made of flax or
cotton. Before liberation most men divided their hair into
three tufts. Women, as a rule, prefer multi-colored and
embroidered collarless short gowns and short black skirts
rimmed in red and opened at the front. Many wear long skirts
and puttees. They also wear their hair in a coil just above
the foreheads, and sling across their shoulders
sharp-pointed flax hats. Both men and women go barefooted,
and have thick bamboo or wooden sticks plugged into the
holes in their earlobes. Those with big holes in their
earlobes are considered most beautiful. The Jinos carry
things in baskets on their backs with straps tied on their
foreheads.
Monogamy is practiced in Jino
society. But before marriage the prospective brides and
grooms are permitted to have sex. If a woman brings her
illegitimate child to live in the home of her husband, both
the mother and child are not looked down upon. In some
villages, special houses are built for unmarried young men
and women to spend the night. But once married, a woman must
remain faithful to the husband throughout life. Divorce is
rare.
A dead body is put in a coffin carved out
of a single log and buried in a communal cemetery. The
personal belongings of the dead -- work tools and clothing,
and a copper pot of silver for some of the rich -- are
buried as sacrificial
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