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Will China's Bow and Arrow Rise Again?

The Manchu banner men of those days often led pretty dissolute lives; the
seventh generation of Ju Yuan Hao's founder was no exception. Finally he became
an opium addict and hardly had the willpower left to do any business. In the
end, he had no choice but to sell off the family business.
Yang Wentong's father Yang Ruilin was a craftsman who was infatuated with bow
and arrow making when he knew the seventh-generation inheritor of the Ju Yuan
Hao shop wanted to sell it, he immediately collected the money and bought
it.
In the prosperous time, the "bow and arrow courtyard" could produce
more than 500 bows a month. However, with the changes of time, Yang Wentong, the
ninth-generation of Ju Yuan Hao makers, gradually went out the practice of
making bows.
His fortune began to reverse itself in 1998, when Yang took his bows to an
international archery competition. There, the coach of the national archery team
took a fancy to his traditional bow, and from then on, Yang Wentong began to
make bows again in his spare time, and also encouraged his sons to inherit the
ancestral craft.
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