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The 18,700 people of this very small ethnic minority
live in compact communities primarily in the three islands
of Wanwei, Wutou and Shanxin in the Fangcheng Multi-ethnic
Autonomous County, the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region,
near the Sino-Vietnamese border. About one quarter of them
live among the Han and Zhuang ethnic groups in nearby
counties and towns.
The Jings live in a
subtropical area with plenty of rainfall and rich mineral
resources. The Beibu Gulf to its south is an ideal fishing
ground. Of the more than 700 species of fish found there,
over 200 are of great economic value and high yields.
Pearls, sea horses and sea otters which grow in abundance
are prized for their medicinal value. Seawater from the
Beibu Gulf is good for salt making. The main crops there are
rice, sweet potato, peanut, taro and millet, and
sub-tropical fruits like papaya, banana and longan are also
plentiful. Mineral deposits include iron, monazite,
titanium, magnetite and silica. The large tracts of
mangroves growing in marshy land along the coast are a rich
source of tannin, an essential raw material for the tanning
industry.
The Jing people had their own script
which was called Zinan. Created on the basis of the script
of the Han people towards the end of the 13th century, it
was found in old song books and religious scriptures. Most
Jings read and write in the Han script because they have
lived with Hans for a long time. They speak the Cantonese
dialect.
The ancestors of the Jings emigrated
from Viet Nam to China in the early 16th century and first
settled on the three uninhabited lands since the
neighborhood had been populated by people of Han and Zhuang
ethnic group. Shoulder to shoulder with the Hans and Zhuangs
there, they developed the border areas together and sealed
close relations in their joint endeavors over the
centuries.
The Jings, who were all illiterate
before 1949, are now going to school, and many young people
have moved onto college education. Each village now has a
clinic, and paramedics have been assigned to each fishing
vessel.
Jing people like antiphonal songs which
are melodious and lyrical. Their traditional instruments
include the two-stringed fiddle, flute, drum, gong and the
single-stringed fiddle, a unique musical instrument of the
ethnic group. Folk stories and legends abound. Their
favorite dances feature lanterns, fancy colored sticks,
embroidery and dragons.
Jing costume is simple
and practical. Traditionally, women wear tight-fitting,
collarless short blouses buttoned in front plus a
diamond-shaped top apron and broad black or brown trousers.
When going out, they would put on a light colored gown with
narrow sleeves. They also like earrings. Men wear long
jackets reaching down to the knees and girdles. Now most
people dress themselves like their Han neighbors though a
few elderly women retain their tradition and a few young
women coil their hair and dye their teeth
black.
Many Jings are believers of Buddhism or
Taoism, with a few followers of Catholicism. They also
celebrate the Lunar New Year--Spring Festival -- and the
Pure Brightness Festival, the Dragon Boat Festival and the
Mid-Autumn Festival like the Hans.
Fish sauce
is a favorite condiment the Jing people use in cooking, and
a cake prepared with glutinous rice mixed with sesame is a
great delicacy for them.
There used to be some
taboos, such as stepping over a fishing net placed on the
beach, sitting on a new raft before it was launched, and
stepping on the stove. But many old habits that hampered the
growth of production have died out bit by bit.
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