Old China in New China
Over the last few weeks my free time became a land-fill, and one of the things dumping its demands on my time was an exhibition on Lijiang, a beautiful city in China, and with which our town in Germany has a friendship treaty. I am in an association supporting this idea to encourage contact and cooperation and throw some light in the dark corners, which can cause prejudice, and all the while trying not to be misused by interested parties. Quite fun really!
The exhibition is made up of my photos, and these are two of them. At first sight there is nothing really to connect them, but my title suggests the link. The first shows Baisha, an ancient small town, or even a village in chinese terms, on the outskirts of Lijiang, which has not yet been flattened by tourism. The stalls are there, but the produce is local and the people in the street could be local or tourists. A lot of the older women still wear their traditional costume, and it is not just for the tourists.
The buildings are old and traditional. The Jade-Dragon Snow-Mountain in the background is as beautiful as it was centuries ago, but we can sense the imminent change and tussle of trying to move with the times and at the same time preserve history and traditions.
There are 56 recognised minorities in China and 15 of them are in Lijiang, in fact the Han, the majority of the Chinese, only make up 42% of the population, and the traditional costumes of the other minorities are everywhere in the city. Some, especially the older women, wear them as their everyday clothes, others just for weddings and celebrations, others are simply in the tourist trade, or hired costumes for a photo shoot, regardless of whether they have any connection to the minority or not. The two people in the second photo could be any of those, although the costumes certainly weren't the very tacky tourist photo shoot type.
It is definitely food for thought. The old buildings, clothes and style are beautiful in my eyes and I hope they don't disappear. But do I have any right to wish for that? Is it fair on the people facing the impracticalities of old, just to look cool for a Westerner? And in any case, to what extent do they still really exist and are not already just a beautiful dream for tourists?
Pete