Stool Dance of the Miao Ethnic Group
People of the Chinese Miao Ethnic Group, dwelling in
southeast Guizhou
Province, enjoy many ancient and distinctive traditions. A couple of
favorite customs are playing lusheng (reed-pipe wind) and the stool dance, both
of which continue to be highlights of Miao festivals and major events.
The Miao's most important celebration takes place after their autumn harvest.
Men play lusheng while women dressed in gaily decorated costumes perform a
special dance using stools as props.
During New Year celebrations, lusheng music can be heard
and the stool dance seen everywhere in Miao villages. In fact, at every
get-together the Miao people dance. Elderly members of the minority may be too
old to swirl around with stools, but they eagerly watch the fun from the
sidelines. Smiling kids wearing New Year outfits excitedly sway to the beat.
Miao people usually wear short skirts when they do the stool dance, and there
is an interesting story about this tradition. It is said that one day 300 years
ago, an old Miao woman was walking home in a long skirt that was stained with
excrement. Dressed in the dirty skirt, she stepped up to an altar
to offer a sacrifice to the deity. The deity was offended by her garment and
punished her by killing her with a lightning bolt. To ensure the future of the
clan, Miao people later decided that their women should wear short skirts
instead of long ones.
Legend holds that the stool dance originated at the birth
of a Miao chieftain. The chieftain's mother delivered him after a
three-and-half-year pregnancy. He was born plump and had a red spot on the
middle of his forehead - signs believed to bring fortune to the whole tribe. At
his one-month party, all of his relatives and the villagers nearby came to
celebrate. The drinking party lasted for three days and nights and before it
came to a close, the baby chieftain's father was so intoxicated that he grabbed
a wooden stool and began to dance with it. His stumbling steps and pounding on
the stool caught the attention of all the guests, who immediately grabbed stools
and began dancing themselves, continuing on until daybreak. Since then,
villagers have celebrated the birth of Miao babies by grabbing up stools for a
dance.
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