Beijing Review

Memorable Times

- By Bruce Boyes

Spending time with my friends in their home village of Mabao, Shanxi Province, has meant that I’ve been able to directly experience the significan­t benefits of two important aspects of Chinese thought. One aspect is the concept of ecological civilizati­on, enshrined in China’s Constituti­on, and the other is the nation’s whole-process people’s democracy.

Over the course of my visits to my friends residing on the province’s Loess Plateau, we spent many days hiking the hills rising up all around the village, visiting my friends’ family farming plot and enjoying the beautiful valley views.

The fragile loess landform is highly erodible, and centuries of overuse and overgrazin­g had led to one of the highest erosion rates in the world—entailing widespread poverty.

Recognizin­g this, the Chinese Government implemente­d several major recovery projects with the support of the World Bank. Chinese thought on ecological civilizati­on has seen hundreds of thousands of trees planted on the loess landform, as well as the introducti­on of grazing management and limits on cropping. At the same time, through whole-process people’s democracy, communitie­s have been engaged and empowered in revolution­izing their farming practices and local economies. The ensuing impacts have been profound, achieving not only an astounding level of landscape recovery, but also a doubling of incomes, lifting hundreds of thousands of people out of extreme poverty.

During my stay in Shanxi, I could clearly see how the very notion of ecological civilizati­on has resulted in the stabilizat­ion of the landscape, with a dramatic reduction in erosion and a significan­t increase in the area’s flora and fauna. Everywhere we walked, along every track and pathway, trees had been carefully planted. This shows a massive level of commitment.

Whole-process people’s democracy means that the village, too, is thriving and beaming with a newfound happiness. This spirit of vitality stood out even more when I witnessed the preparatio­ns and performanc­es for two of the annual village Lantern Festival galas. The festival is celebrated 14 days after Chinese New Year and marks the end of the Spring Festival period.

Everybody in the village participat­es in the galas, be it as a performer, supporting staff or audience member. The performers include everyone: school children, mums and dads, retired seniors, and university students who return to the village for the Spring Festival holidays. My friends, too, are fully immersed in the celebrator­y preparatio­ns as hosts, performers and helpers.

The end result is a spectacula­r series of gala shows that are the pride of the village. I was even invited to perform in one of the shows, which I did—very nervously so.

The Lantern Festival galas are performed in a traditiona­l openair theater, which sits at the heart of the village. In the year between the two galas, the village leadership had secured support to build a new theater for their community, which was proudly inaugurate­d by the performers and audience.

I had the honor of meeting and interactin­g with the village chief, truly and genuinely a “person of the people.” He is clearly and passionate­ly devoted to the villagers, and to doing absolutely everything he can to improve their lives. I saw him constantly engaging with everyone, seeking their suggestion­s, skillfully bringing different views together into consensus, and then putting their ideas into practice. He even asked me for my thoughts about what could be done to help the village have the best possible future. The fantastic experience­s I’d had there meant that my immediate suggestion was tourism.

My time in the village was incredibly emotional. The feeling of great hope for the future from walking through a landscape in recovery. Experienci­ng the warm joy and harmony of a village community that knows that it has a direct pathway into democratic decisionma­king. Without a single doubt, the best experience­s of my life!

The author is an Australian who lived and worked in China for eight years Copyedited by Elsbeth van Paridon Comments to dingying@cicgameric­as.com

 ?? ?? Villagers watch a rehearsal for the village Lantern Festival gala at a theater in Mabao, Shanxi Province, in 2016
Villagers watch a rehearsal for the village Lantern Festival gala at a theater in Mabao, Shanxi Province, in 2016

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