Shanghai Daily

China’s rich multi-ethnic culture gets a platform at sporting gala

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HU Anmin, 81, used to perform Chinese rope skipping alone at China’s Ethnic Games, but not anymore.

He has inspired more than 100,000 ordinary people from around China to join in the sport which may have been the retired teacher’s proudest achievemen­t since he made his debut at the Ethnic Games two decades ago.

Creating opportunit­ies for ordinary people of different ages who have sports dreams, is what Ethnic Games values.

If you strip away his prestige that comes with being known as the King of Chinese rope skipping, Hu from the Man ethnic group is just like an ordinary elderly man with grey hair and beard. However, browsing through his photo albums, you can see he has lived a life that is deeply fulfilling.

He’s the connector of dots, like a bridge that brings ordinary people to an event which has a long history. He collected, inherited and also created about 300 styles across 12 categories of rope skipping that have a long history in his ethnic group.

“I love being here because it’s something that I’ve never experience­d before,” Hu, one of the oldest athletes at the 11th Ethnic Games in Zhengzhou, northern Henan Province, said. “I love all of the dreams I have fulfilled and still am chasing at the Ethnic Games.”

This year’s gala saw Hu’s family members also participat­e as rope skipping performers, including his son, daughter and 10-year-old granddaugh­ter. “I’m very optimistic that I can perform in the Ethnic Games four years from now, while my second grandson will be over five years old and can also join,” Hu added.

In terms of popularity, sparklergr­abbing game reigns supreme for the Zhuang, Dong and other ethnic groups in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and it is no different for Tan Yimou from the Zhuang ethnic group.

The sport is known as “Chinese Rugby.” Apart from the colorful disk about the size of a hand used in the sport instead of a ball, there are similariti­es between the game and rugby. As with many of his fellows, Tan has sweated every day to practice since he was only 12.

“Sparkler-grabbing made its debut as an exhibition event at the 2nd Ethnic Games in 1982. Four years later in Hohhot, it was listed as an official event when I first represente­d Guangxi as a player,” Tan recalled.

At that time, sparkler-grabbing was still foreign to most people from other parts of China, or it was just seen as a peculiar ethnic event that was held during local festivals.

Tan and other enthusiast­s played major roles in promoting the event to get nationwide recognitio­n.

“It’s helpful to popularize sparklergr­abbing through standardiz­ing rules and taking it closer to modern sports so that more people can participat­e.”

Tan’s efforts paid off and at this year’s Games, Guangxi team only scraped to win the title over a rising Beijing team.

After the government issued an action plan for 2019-2030 to implement the country’s Healthy China initiative and promote people’s health, Tan was happy to see that traditiona­l sports, including sparkler-grabbing, make their way into the school curriculum in Guangxi.

Tan is still having fun in the event and is the Guangxi head coach at the 11th Ethnic Games, which will be closed today. “It’s part of who I am, promoting sparkler-grabbing is more important than anything else.”

Meanwhile, cheered on by spectators, high-wire walker Adili Wuxor performs the Uygur ethnic group’s acrobatic feat, known as Dawaz, with his pupils on a tightrope high above the ground.

Standing out as one of the most recognizab­le figures, 48-year-old Adili is competing at his 10th Games since 1982. Conserving and popularizi­ng the cultural heritage of this quadrennia­l event has become a duty for him.

“Thanks to the inaugural ethnic games held in 1953, my father brought Dawaz to a larger stage, even though the sport was once on the verge of extinction,” recalled Adili, whose ancestors have lived in the obscure county of Yengisar near the Taklimakan Desert in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region for generation­s.

Following in his father’s footsteps, the sixth generation of Dawaz practition­ers press on, even going barefoot in winter because there was not enough money to buy a pair of training shoes.

But the sport made quite a splash when he brought Dawaz to the 2nd Ethnic Games in 1982. “It provides a platform for China’s rich multi-ethnic culture,” Adili said.

His hard work has paid off, too. Dawaz was selected among the first batch of China’s “Representa­tive List of Intangible Cultural Heritage” in 2006. “It seemed like a dream come true when Dawaz reached this unpreceden­ted level,” Adili conceded.

A specialize­d acrobatics school for Dawaz has since been establishe­d in Yengisar to train talented youngsters.

“It will continue to grow and I really enjoy passing on the delights of Dawaz to pupils of all ages,” Adili said.

He has already set his sights further ahead: to get this unique creation onto the World Intangible Cultural Heritage list. “It’s good to see this national treasure flourishin­g again. I will keep trying until I make it,” Adili concluded.

(Xinhua)

 ??  ?? Players compete during the sparklergr­abbing game between Guangxi and Ningxia at the 11th National Traditiona­l Games of Ethnic Minorities of the People’s Republic of China in Zhengzhou, Henan Province, on Friday. — Xinhua
Players compete during the sparklergr­abbing game between Guangxi and Ningxia at the 11th National Traditiona­l Games of Ethnic Minorities of the People’s Republic of China in Zhengzhou, Henan Province, on Friday. — Xinhua
 ??  ?? Hu Anmin performs rope skipping during China’s 11th Ethnic Games on Saturday. — Xinhua
Hu Anmin performs rope skipping during China’s 11th Ethnic Games on Saturday. — Xinhua

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