The Achang ethnic minority mainly resides in
Yunnan Province, southern part of China. With agriculture as its primary
industry, it is famous for rice planting. In the past, Achang believed in the
Hinayana at large. Its main religious festivals are such as Jinwa (Close-Door
Festival), Chuwa (Open-Door Festival), the Burning Cabbage Festival and the
Water-Splashing Festival. Apart from religious festivals, there are also many
local special traditional festivals such as the Firebrand Festival, the Woluo
Festival, the Flower Watering Festival and the Spring Festival, among which the
Firebrand and Woluo festivals are larger in scale and
richer in contents than the others.
Woluo Festival
On each lunar February 4, the Achang ethnic
minority holds the Woluo Festival, one of the important traditional festivals of
the Achang people. In Achang language, Woluo means amusement near the house.
Legend has it that this festival is held to memorize the primogenitor that
created the world.
On the eve of the festival, people in every
village put up an altar of 4 square meters with two decorated archways in the
middle, on which they paint the sun, moon and stars above and two color figures
of Achang, one male and one female, below symbolizing two ancestors. On the top
of the archways, there is a wood-carved arrow on full bow erected to represent
the arrow used to shoot down the fake sun.
The grand rite of the ancestor worship is
presided by the Huopao who will troll the myth epic of his people to praise the
great achievement of the two creators. Then following the Huopao, people sing
the original and simple Woluo Melody around the altar and perform the Woluo
Dance, which takes the nature view of sun and moon as the stage scenes. The
dancing and singing will go on the whole night. Besides, there are some
recreational performances such as the martial art, singing in antiphonal style,
swinging, and spring lanterns, etc. The festival carries through under an
atmosphere of piety, pleasure and auspices.
Lunar January 4 is contributed for the
commemoration of the deeds of the two legendary primogenitors of Achang, who
eradicated the banes and created benefits for the people. On the occasion,
people will scarify the best dishes to him. Afterward, they will slaughter dogs
and eat dog meat with taros. If the boa can be caught on the very fete day, it
is considered as an auspicious sign.
Firebrand Festival
The festival is held on lunar June 24. On
that day, people will slaughter swine and cattle for the sacrifice in order to
pray for a bumper harvest as well as drive away pests and disasters. On the
festival, raw pork and rice noodles are cooked for everybody. In the evening,
people wander around the village with lit firebrands.
Water-Splashing Festival
The Achang ethnic minority celebrates the
same Water-Splashing Festival as the Dai ethnic minority. It is a good
opportunity for the youngling to choose their lovers. Girls' families often
prepare eight delicious dishes to welcome springals who are coming to court.
Only after the number of the diners meets the
requirement , people can get seated. The guy has to walk
off with the chicken head from girl's family under cover. The guy with the
chicken head has to drink, as a kind of punishment if the girl finds the chicken
head, otherwise the girl has to drink. If the pilferer is caught on the spot, he
will not only be penalized but also teased by girls. After the meal, the guy has
to give money to the girl according to the cost of the dishes without being
noticed by her.
Huijie Festival
As a traditional holiday of the Achang
people, the Huijie Festival usually falls in mid-September of each Chinese lunar year. The Achang people
believe in the Hinayana. Huijie used to be a religious get-together. Legend has
it that a Ge Da Ma (In Achang language, it means Bodhisattva) overcame many
difficulties on his way to the heaven for acquiring the scriptures and finally
succeeding in it. Then he decided to return to the world on September 15. To
welcome his return, the Achang people arranged the black dragon and white
elephant; young men and women collected rice and prepared vegetarian diet for
the offering. This gradually became a traditional festival.
On the occasion, men dress in blue, black or
white frocks with buttons down the front and black trousers, with a bag on the
shoulder. And they wear a long piece of headcloth. Married women put on clothes
buttoned down the front with long and narrow sleeves, and skirts covering the
knees. They also wrap puttees and black or blue head cloth. Girls mostly set
their braids over their heads. They have on their chests four ranges of silver
buttons on juxtaposition, on which hang four silver chains. They also wear
ornaments such as flowers, chaplets, and earrings. During the holiday, the main
activities include playing
white elephant and black dragon dance. The white elephants and black dragons are made by handicraftsmen in
the villages, who use bamboo as the frames, paper as body cover and cloth as
trunk. While playing the white elephants, a man hides himself inside and draws
the rope on the pulley to control the swing up and down of the trunk. Young men
in attires wave the black dragons.
At the beginning of the Huijie, people tie
red silk on the white elephant and black dragon. By beating drums and gongs, men
and women, young or old, gather around the elephant and dragon playing team,
going around the village once. Then they all come to the square, and encircle
the elephant and dragon. Abruptly the drums, gongs and cymbals start beating
together. People begin to perform the merry and bold Elephant-Leg Drum Dance.
While dancing, the cymbal beaters keep standing side on side with the drummers,
jumping left and right, extending and drawing back from time to time, body
heaving like wave. They make a large stride ahead while dancing, then squat by
retreating, with striding, retreating and squatting three times. When the
performance reaches the upsurge, the crowd of onlookers cheer and applaud. At
the same time, the white elephants shake their trunks much more frequently and
the black dragons dance more fiercely.
Seeding Festival and Fresh Tasting
Festival
The Seeding and Fresh Tasting festivals are both
traditional feasts of Achang, which respectively fall on March 10 and August 15
on Chinese lunar calendar. On the festival, every family tidies up the courtyard
and room, and prepares fish, rice noodles, acid food and rice wine. Then they go
to the field to pick a pocket of the biggest taros and a maize cob with two
spikes. They enlace the corn and taros around a bamboo pole of around 1 meter long,
and place it in the left or
the right corner of the main
room. Afterward they braise fresh rice and slaughter a fat chicken, and put them
on the altar to recall their ancestors. Married women will be taken back home
for family reunion. After the dinner, men will put on blue, black or colorless short frocks and black
trousers; women will dress themselves in shirts buttoned down the front and wear
aprons. They also wear silver chaplets, on which there are ornaments such as
silver chains, fringes and silver badges. Young girls will set their braid on the head. They get
together in the front or at the rear of the village, enjoying dancing and
singing.
Seeding and Fresh Tasting festivals date
back long ago. Legend has it that long ago, there was an old woman of Achang
ethnic minority, who always kept the plump seeds of various cereals and sent
them to others in the planting season in the coming year. People loved and respected her, because she always helped others and
improved their farming skills. In August of one year, she passed away before the
harvest. All the people felt sad and sorry on such news, because she could not
taste the corn she had planted and wore the new dress she had woven.
They processed the rice, legumes, and vegetables she had
planted into delicious food, and made new dress of the cloth she had woven,
which they sacrificed on her altar.
Since then, on each lunar August 15, every
household of Achang tidies up rooms and prepares an ample feast with rice,
legumes, melons and fruits they have harvested that year. That is the origin of the Fresh Tasting
Festival. In March of the next year after the old woman died, people planted the seeds she had left. Hence, on
March 10 of every year, people usually hold the Seeding Festival.
Up to date, taking advantage of their
married daughters coming back home, the Achang people exchange seeds of various
crops with one another to increase the output .