Home / Arts & Entertainment / News Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Primi performance: keep ethnic tradition alive
Adjust font size: Bookmark and Share

Beijing audiences were treated to an evening of Primi dance and culture last Saturday as "Guarding the Forest" showcased traditional movement and song from the minority. The famous "hip dance" drew great applause, with performer Li Changxiu explaining, "The harder a Primi minority visitor bumps their hips with villagers, the warmer the welcome he will receive."

Primi people celebrate their Valentines' Day on May 5 of the lunar calendar.

Primi people celebrate their Valentines' Day on May 5 of the lunar calendar. [Global Times]

Ethnically related to the Tibetans in the Muli Tibetan Autonomous County and Yanyuan in Sichuan Province, the Primi are unique to Yunnan and their villages have a total population of around 30,000.

The special performance last night in Beijing highlighted the importance of nature, forests and trees to the Primi and was supported by the Tufeng Project, an initiative aimed at protecting and celebrating ethnic minority culture.

"Such cultures have a precious hidden quality but are dying out fast," said Chen Zhe, founder of the Tufeng Project and famous lyricist behind popular Chinese hits in the 1980s such as "One Song for All" and "The High Yellow Land."

The Tufeng Project was founded in 2004 to promote and encourage endeavors that focus on the cultural roots of minorities.

In 2002 Chen began the Traditional Culture Legacy Learning Group of Primi, which became the basis of the project.

"Young people are recruited into the group to work as coordinators," Chen explained. "In their villages, they then organize activities such as festivals and ceremonies and encourage other young people to participate and learn traditional customs."

Chen said that many elderly members of the minority practice traditional culture, but the rituals and ways have largely been ignored by the younger generation.

"What I try to do is help to pass the customs from the older generation to the young, because the Primi minority can be considered as an ancestor for many minorities in China," Chen added.

Yang Dexiu, one of the four Primi performers in last night's production said that since joining the Tufeng Project he has helped organize small learning groups for traditional dance, song, weaving and music.

"We plan activities and invite young people both in my village and other Primi villages to celebrate. For instance, we gathered in May to celebrate our own Valentines' Day on May 5 of the lunar calendar," Yang explained. "According to Primi tradition, on May 5 we eat honey, which is good for one's health, especially mixed with bitter buckwheat, a kind of plant found in the mountains."

"During the celebration, the old people in the village gather to have a family meal while the young people dance and sing for a whole day on the grasslands."

1   2    


Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read Bookmark and Share
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Silage Choppers and Snake Spirits
The lives and struggles of two Americans in Modern China.
More
Related >>
- International Forum on the Daodejing
- Experience China in South Africa
- Zheng He: 600 Years On
- Three Gorges: Journey Through Time
- Famous Bells in China