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Most of the 1,254,800 Hanis live in the valleys
between the Yuanjiang and Lancang rivers, that is, the vast
area between the Ailao and Mengle mountains in southern
Yunnan Province. They are under the jurisdiction of the
Honghe Hani-Yi Autonomous Prefecture, which includes Honghe,
Yuanyang, Luchun and Jinping counties. Others dwell in
Mojiang, Jiangcheng, Pu'er, Lancang and Zhenyuan counties in
Simao Prefecture; in Xishuangbanna's Menghai, Jinghong and
Mengla counties; in Yuanjiang and Xinping, Yuxi Prefecture,
and (a small number) in Eshan, Jianshui, Jingdong and Jinggu
counties.
Customs and Culture
Their language belongs to the Yi branch of the
Tibetan-Myanmese language group of the Chinese-Tibetan
language family. Having no script of their own before 1949,
they kept records by carving notches on sticks. In 1957 the
people's government helped them to create a script based on
the Roman alphabet.
The areas inhabited by the
Hanis have rich natural resources. Beneath the ground are
deposits of tin, copper, iron, nickel and other minerals.
Growing on the rolling Ailao Mountains are pine, cypress,
palm, tung oil and camphor trees, and the forests abound in
animals such as tigers, leopards, bears, monkeys, peacocks,
parrots and pheasants. Being subtropical, the land is
fertile and the rainfall plentiful -- ideal for growing
rice, millet, cotton, peanuts, indigo and tea.
Xishuangbanna's Nanru Hills are one of the country's major
producers of the famous Pu'er tea.
The Hanis
are monogamous. Before 1949, a man was allowed to have a
concubine if the wife had born him no son after some years
of marriage. However, he was not supposed to forsake his
original wife to remarry. Marriages are mostly arranged by
the parents.
The Hanis in Mojiang and Biyue
have a very interesting custom for settling an engagement.
The parents of both the girl and boy involved should walk
some distance together, and so long as they meet no animals
the engagement can go ahead.
The brides usually
return to live with their parents only two or three days
after the wedding ceremony and join their husbands again at
rice-transplanting time. But this is not practised in the
Honghe area.
A son's name begins with the last
one or two words of his father's name in order to keep the
family line going. This practice has been handed down for as
many as 55 generations in some families.
The
Hanis prefer clothing made of home-spun dark blue cloth. Men
wear front-buttoned jackets and trousers, and black or white
cloth turbans. Women have collarless, front-buttoned blouses
with the cuffs and trouser legs laced. Hanis in
Xishuangbanna wear jackets buttoned on the right side and
decorated with silver ornaments. They wear black turbans.
Women there, as well as in the Lancang area, wear skirts,
round caps, and strings of silver ornaments. Both men and
women wear leggings. In Mojiang, Yuanjiang and Jiangcheng,
some women wear long, pleated or narrow skirts, while others
have knee-length trousers with embroidered girdles. Women in
general like to wear earrings, silver rings and necklaces.
Married and unmarried women wear different
hairstyles.
The Hanis build their two- and
three-story houses of bamboo, mud, stone and wood on hill
slopes. A village comprises from ten to as many as 400
households. In places like Honghe, Yuanyang and Luchun,
houses have mud walls and thatched roofs, supported by
wooden pillars placed on stone foundations, while in
Xishuangbanna, houses are built of bamboo.
They
are polytheists and ancestor worshippers. Rituals are
regularly held to worship the Gods of Heaven, Earth, the
Dragon Tree and their village, as well as their family
patron gods. Believing they are protected by the God of the
village gate, the Hanis in Xishuangbanna also hold
ceremonies to pay respects to this deity. A shaman presides
over the rites, at which sacrifices of cattle are
offered.
There are days devoted to animals,
such as Sheep Day, on which sacrifices are made. On days
when someone dies, a wild animal comes into the village, a
dog climbs onto the roof of a house, or a fire breaks out,
people would be called to stop working and hold ceremonies
to avert misfortune.
The Hani people celebrate
their New Year in October, as their lunar calendar begins in
that month. During the weeklong festivities, pigs are
slaughtered and special glutinous rice balls are prepared.
Relatives and friends visit each other, go-betweens are busy
making matches, and married women go to see their parents.
They also celebrate the June Festival, which falls on the
24th of that month. This is a happy occasion especially for
the young people. They sing, dance, play on swings and hold
wrestling contests. At night, people in some places light
pine torches while beating drums and gongs to expel evil
spirits and disease. Like their Han neighbors, the Hanis who
live in the Honghe area celebrate the Spring, Dragon Boat
and Moon festivals.
Legends, fairy tales,
poetry, stories, fables, ballads, proverbs, mythology and
riddles form their oral literature. Genesis is a legend
describing the origin of all things on earth. An Account of
Floods tells how men conquered floods. Labare and Ahjigu are
songs sung on solemn occasions such as weddings, funerals,
festivals and religious rituals.
The Hanis are
good singers and dancers. They use three- and four-stringed
instruments, flutes and gourd-shaped wind instruments.
Popular are the "Hand Clapping" and
"Fan" dances. The "Dongpocuo" dance
popular in Xishuangbanna is a typical Hani dance; it is
vigorous, graceful and
rhythmic.
Origins and History
Historical records indicate that a tribal
people called the "Heyis" was active south of the
Dadu River in the 3rd century B.C. These were possibly the
ancestors of the Hanis of today. According to the records,
some of them had moved to the area of the Lancang River
between the 4th and 8th centuries. Local chieftains then
paid tribute to the Tang court and in return they were
included on the list of officials and subjects of that
dynasty. The Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368) established a
prefecture to rule the Hanis and other minorities in Yunnan.
The Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) exercised its rule through
local chieftains, who were granted official posts. During
the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) court officials replaced the
chieftains.
The social development of the Hanis
was uneven in different areas before 1949 in 1949. Those in
contact with the Hans were more developed economically and
culturally. The feudal landlord economy was dominant during
the Ming and Qing dynasties. Productivity was more or less
on the Han level but the peasants were exploited harshly by
the landlords who seized large tracts of fertile land. The
situation in Jinghong, Menglong and Xiding was different.
Vestiges of primitive communal land ownership still
remained. There, the majority of land was public property.
Commune members owned paddy fields and tea plantations, and
could reclaim and cultivate communal land. However, private
land ownership was fairly developed in Menghai, Mengsong and
Mengla counties. Landlords and rich peasants possessed most
of the arable land there, as well as the tea plantations,
forests and wasteland. Poor peasants were subjected to
exploitation in various forms.
In counties like
Honghe, Yuanyang, Luchun, Jinping and Jiangcheng, the
economy was in a sort of transition from primitive economy
to the feudal landlord economy. Peasants were burdened by
exorbitant taxes and levies enforced by the chieftains, who
were both land owers and political rulers.
In
the Ailao mountains, the Hanis were impoverished and
suffered under various forms of exploitation. In one
village, which had some 150 households 50 years ago, only 17
families were left at the time of liberation due to famine
and disease.
A New and Prosperous
Life
The Hani inhabited areas were liberated
in 1949. In the early post-1949 days, local governments at
different levels enthusiastically worked for the unity of
different nationalities while mopping up the Kuomintang
remnants, bandits and local tyrants. Between 1950 and 1957
the state allocated to the Hanis large quantities of relief
grain, clothing, seeds and cattle, coupled with agricultural
loans, to help them overcome their difficulties and develop
production.
The Honghe Hani-Yi Autonomous
Prefecture was set up in 1957 as a merger of the earlier
Honghe Hani Autonomous Prefecture and Mongzi Prefecture.
Meanwhile, a number of autonomous counties were established.
Democratic reforms, with land reform as the central task,
were started in 1952 and completed within five years. Land
reform brought about profound changes in the relations of
production: The peasants became the masters of their own
land, their living standards improved, unity among different
nationalities was further strengthened, and social order in
this border area was enhanced. Land reform was followed by
the socialist transformation of
agriculture.
Many farmland capital construction
works have been carried out since liberation. These include
opening up terraced land, changing dry land into paddy
fields, building reservoirs and expanding irrigated acreage.
More than 700 small hydroelectric power stations have been
put up throughout the Hani areas, supplying electricity to
70 per cent of the townships, and farm mechanization is on
the rise. The post-liberation years have also seen marked
development in forestry, livestock breeding, sideline
occupations and fishing.
Industrial enterprises
which have sprung up after 1949 cover metallurgy, mining,
machine-building, chemicals, cement, textiles, plastics,
cigarettes and food processing. In Honghe Prefecture alone,
400 state- and collective-run factories are in operation. A
highway network, with Kunming to Daluo, Gejiu to Jingping,
and Simao to Jiangcheng as the trunk lines, links all the
counties within the area and facilitates communications with
neighboring places. Department stores now supply cheap salt,
which used to be in short supply, and other daily
necessities, bringing most of the comforts of modern life to
the Hani people.
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