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The 438,200 Gelos live in dispersed clusters of
communities in about 20 counties in western Guizhou
Province, four counties of the Wenshan Zhuang-Miao
Autonomous Prefecture in southeastern Yunnan Province and
the Longlin Multi-ethnic Autonomous County in Guangxi Zhuang
Autonomous Region.
Only about a quarter of the
Gelos still speak the Gelo language belonging to the
Chinese-Tibetan language family. Yet, because of close
contact with other ethnic groups, their language has not
remained pure -- even within counties. There are
Gelo-speaking people unable to converse with each other. For
this reason, the language of the Hans, or Chinese, has
become their common language, though many Gelos have learned
three or four languages from other people in their
communities, including the Miaos, Yis and Bouyeis. Living
among other ethnic groups, the Gelos have become largely
assimilated to the majority Han
customs.
How the Gelos Live
The Gelos' living quarters, like those of
their Han neighbors, usually consist of a central kitchen
and two bedrooms built on a hillside or at the foot of a
mountain. Before liberation, poor Gelos lived in mud, bamboo
or stone houses, some with thatched roofs. Landlords and
wealthier peasants lived in houses with wooden columns and
thick stone slabs, with tile or stone roofs. Now, nearly
everyone lives in houses of wood.
Gelos
continued to wear their ethnic costumes until 30 or 40 years
ago. Women wore very short jackets with sleeves embroidered
with patterns of fish scale. They wore tight skirts divided
into three sections, the middle one of red wool and the
upper and lower ones of black-and-white striped linen. Gelo
women also wore short, black sleeveless gowns which hung
longer in the back. Their shoes had pointed, upturned toes.
Men wore front-buttoned jackets, and both sexes wore long
scarves.
In the mountain areas, the Gelos eat
mostly maize, while in the flatlands, they eat wheat, rice,
millet and sorghum. All the Gelos -- like many other Chinese
-- love to eat hot and sour dishes as well as glutinous rice
cakes.
Before 1949, Gelo marriage customs were
feudal, with matches made by parents at childhood,
regardless of the desires of the children involved. As Gelos
were so few and so scattered, marriages were usually made
among cousins. To celebrate the marriage, the bride would
walk with her relatives, carrying an umbrella, to the
groom's home, where they would live apart from their
parents.
While funeral customs in most Gelo
communities are the same as in Han areas, singing and
dancing still marks funerals in a few places, such as Zunyi
and Renhuai counties in Guizhou. There, mourners dance in
groups of three, one playing a lusheng (reed pipe), one
beating a bamboo pole, the third brandishing a sword, and
all singing as they dance. In other areas, mourners sing in
front of the coffin; family members of the deceased serve
wine in gratitude to them. In some places, a shaman who
chooses the time and place of burial recites scriptures at
the grave. Animal sacrifice usually accompanies the burial.
Trees, rather than stones, mark the grave.
Gelo
folk literature consists of poetry, stories and proverbs.
Poems are of three, five or seven-character lines. Most Gelo
folk tales eulogize the intelligence, honesty, diligence and
bravery of the Gelo people, and satirize the upper classes.
Typical are "The Brave Girl" and "Deaf Elder
Brother and Blind Younger Brother Stealing Sheep." Gelo
dances are simple and graceful, accompanied by the erhu,
horizontal xiao, suona, gong, drum and other string and wind
instruments.
"Flower Dragon" and
"Bamboo-Strip Egg" are two favorite Gelo games.
"Flower Dragon," in fact, is a ball of woven
bamboo, a little larger than a ping-pong ball. Inside are
bits of broken porcelain, coins and sandstones. The game,
especially popular in Zunyi and Renhuai, is played by groups
of pairs on hillsides. "Bamboo-Strip Egg" is also
a ball, larger and stuffed with rice straw. Two teams of
three or five throw and kick the ball, avoiding contact
except with the hands or feet.
Most Gelo
festivals echo Han traditions, but some practices differ. At
Spring Festival-- the Lunar New Year -- Gelos offer a huge
rice cake to their ancestors and after it is made, it
remains untouched for three days. In Guizhou's Anshun,
Puding and Zhenning, Gelo communities also celebrate the
sixth day of the sixth lunar month by sacrificing chickens
and preparing wine to bless the rice crop already in the
fields.
The sixth day of the seventh lunar
month marks the second most important event of the year, a
festival of ancestor worship in Wozi and Gaoyang villages of
Puding County. Oxen, pigs and sheep are slaughtered for
ritual sacrifices to ancestors.
On the first
day of the tenth lunar month, Gelos give their oxen a day of
rest. This is the day of the Ox King Buddha, and in some
communities on this day oxen are honored and fed special
rice cakes.
Prior to liberation, Gelos had a
number of distinctive taboos. During Spring Festival, for
example, they did not allow themselves to sweep floors,
carry water, cook food, clean houses, plough, ride horses or
pour water from their houses. In some areas on other
holidays, Gelos would not transplant rice or build houses if
they heard thunder.
History
Over the last 2,000 years or more, Gelos have
lived in many places in China. Bridges, graves, wells, and
even villages in Guizhou Province still bear Gelo names,
even where no Gelo still lives. The group's name dates back
to the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). Before then, they were
called the "Liaos." Descended from the Yelang, the
strongest tribe in the Han Dynasty's Zangke Prefecture, the
Liaos moved out of Zangke to Sichuan, where they became
subject to the feudal regime, between the third and fifth
centuries.
By the fifth century, the Liaos had
developed metal spears, shields and fishing tools and copper
cooking vessels. They could weave fine linen. At this time,
the Liao people elected their kings, who later became
hereditary rulers. As with other south-central minorities,
the Gelos were ruled in the Yuan and Ming periods
(1271-1644) by appointed chiefs, who lost their authority to
the central court when the Qing Dynasty came to
power.
Until 1949, most Gelos were farmers.
They grew rice, maize, wheat, sweet potatoes, and millet.
Before the founding of the People’s Republic of China,
Gelo farmers had no irrigation or ways of storing water. As
a result, their maize output was only about 675 kg per
hectare. Droughts inevitably brought about devastating
consequences. Side businesses, especially cork production,
bamboo weaving and making straw sandals were essential to
the Gelos for survival.
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