Beijing Review

Claim to Fame

Four Chinese destinatio­ns named Best Tourism Villages in the world

- By Ji Jing Copyedited by G.P. Wilson Comments to jijing@cicgameric­as.com

On the roofs of ancient buildings, constructe­d on hillsides, peppers, unhusked rice and green beans are being dried in the autumn sun. The drying produce has become a unique sight in Huangling, an ancient village in Wuyuan County, Shangrao City in Jiangxi Province in east China.

The village, which was establishe­d more than 580 years ago, has over 100 buildings from the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911) dynasties, which are valuable subjects for the study of Hui-style architectu­re, an important branch of ancient Chinese architectu­re that features black roof tiles and white walls.

However, in spite of its picturesqu­e scenery and ancient buildings, the village used to be little known and very poor, so many villagers had to leave the village to go and make a living elsewhere.

The turning point came more than 10 years ago, when the village establishe­d a tourism company to develop tourism in the village.

The company invested 12 million yuan ($1.6 million) in building new homes for villagers living along the highway at the foot of the mountains surroundin­g the village.

The dilapidate­d village buildings in which they once lived were refurbishe­d and turned into homestays, and the terraced fields on the mountain slopes were planted with rapeseed flowers. The old buildings and rapeseed flowers create a distinctiv­e scene. The village has launched new tourism products such as river drifting, hot springs and night tours to draw tourists.

Relocated villagers return to the village to work at the scenic spot or have opened shops there themselves. Thanks to the developmen­t of tourism, the villagers’ per-capita income is now more than 10 times what it was a decade ago.

The village has recently earned a spot on the global Best Tourism Villages list for 2023 along with three other Chinese villages.

The three other villages are Zhujiawan Village in Shaanxi Province, Xiajiang Village in Zhejiang Province and Zhagana Village in Gansu Province. The villages were named at the 25th Session of the United Nations World Tourism Organizati­on (UNWTO) General Assembly in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, on October 19.

China now has eight villages on the list, more than any other country in the world.

The Best Tourism Villages is a global initiative launched by the UNWTO in 2021 to highlight those villages where tourism preserves cultures and traditions, celebrates diversity, provides opportunit­ies nd and safeguards biodiversi­ty. This year, 63 countries submitted 258 applicatio­ns, resulting in the inclusion of 54 villages from 32 countries.

Tourism benefits

Similar to Huangling Village, Zhujiawan, a village nestled i n t he Q inling Mountains i n Shangluo, Shaanxi Province in northwest China, used to be an impoverish­ed village. However, in recent years, it has harnessed the strength of its ecology to develop a tourism economy.

The village is next to the Niubeilian­g National Forest Park, which has a forest coverage rate of 93 percent and poor accessibil­ity used to hinder the village’s developmen­t.

Zheng Chuanjia, a 39-year-old villager who now runs a homestay in the village, recalls that when he was a child, his family was so poor that they had only two meals a day.

Things started to change with the drilling of a highway tunnel through the Qinling Mountains in 2007.

Mao Jiafeng, Secretary of the Communist Party of China Zhujiawan Village Branch, told Xinhua News Agency that before the opening of the highway, it took four hours to travel to Xi’an, the provincial capital, from the village.

Now, it takes around one hour. The convenient transporta­tion has made it easy for tourists to visit the village.

Seeing the increasing number of tourists, Zheng, who had found employment in urban areas after graduating from college, returned to the village to open a homestay. Today, his homestay has expanded from the previously onestory house to a three-story building which has 26 tables and 20 guestrooms and he now makes 200,000 to 300,000 yuan ($27,355 to 41,033) every year.

Mao told Xinhua that, in the past, villagers relied on the mountains for a living by hunting and collecting herbs. Today they still rely on the mountains, but in a different way: The village now has eight forest rangers to protect the mountains and it is turning its ecological wealth into material wealth.

One of the other villages on the global list, Zhagana, is located at an altitude of 3,000 to 3,300 meters and is surrounded by mountains, with the highest nearby peak reaching 4,500 meters. The name Zhagana means “stone nd box” in the Tibetan language, and the steep mountains and Tibetan-style houses form an ancient city enclosed by natural rock walls.

The village has been transforme­d from an inaccessib­le mountainou­s village into a scenic spot where tourists can enjoy a slow and leisurely stay.

More than 800 years old, Xiajiang Village in Zhejiang Province in east China has also made use of its pristine natural surroundin­gs to develop tourism. It has created a diverse range of celebrator­y events, including camp carnivals and sorghum (a type of grain) festivals to breathe new life into the village.

Wang Jinwei, an associate professor of tourism with Beijing Internatio­nal Studies University, told China Central Television that the UNWTO focuses mainly on nine areas in its selection process, including bio and cultural diversity, sustainabl­e social developmen­t and community governance. For a village to excel in community governance, its rural tourism developmen­t must help create jobs to benefit local people.

Wang added that the eight Best Tourism Villages from China are distribute­d across east, central and west China, which shows that China’s rural tourism developmen­t has become more balanced.

Dai Bin, President of China Tourism Academy, told Xinhua that the fact that China has the most Best Tourism Villages in the world shows how the country’s rural tourism developmen­t is gaining global recognitio­n.

In the earlier stage of its developmen­t, rural tourism mainly offered basic experience­s such as eating rural food, staying in rural houses and picking fruits and vegetables. Now, rural areas’ beautiful natural environmen­ts, rich historical and cultural heritage and rural people’s way of life have all become attraction­s for tourists.

Dai said in this new stage of developmen­t, local tourism authoritie­s should cater to tourists’ needs and develop distinctiv­e tourism products according to local conditions to promote t he high-quality developmen­t of rural tourism. BR

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 ?? ?? Tourists visit the Niubeilian­g National Forest Park in Zhujiawan Village, Shaanxi Province, on September 22, 2020
Tourists visit the Niubeilian­g National Forest Park in Zhujiawan Village, Shaanxi Province, on September 22, 2020
 ?? ?? Farm produce dries in Huangling Village, Jiangxi Province, on November 7, 2019
Farm produce dries in Huangling Village, Jiangxi Province, on November 7, 2019

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