China Daily (Hong Kong)

Rural cultural relics require due preservati­on

- TEN FRESCOS

that were later classified as cultural relics that should be under national level protection were stolen from Longtian Temple in North China’s Shanxi province in October. When the police finally caught up with the gang responsibl­e for the theft, after a half-year investigat­ion, they unexpected­ly discovered more than 400 stolen frescoes from other temples in the province. Guangming Daily comments:

It is estimated that Shanxi has about 70 percent of the country’s ancient frescos, which are housed in a number of deserted or ill-managed Buddhist and Taoist temples in rural areas. Some temples that are county-level cultural relic protection sites are even visited by thieves repeatedly within a short period of time.

The local authoritie­s invariably attribute the thefts to the lack of funds needed to protect these cultural artifacts. In fact, few local officials think the stolen frescoes are important. Different department­s of the grassroots government­s are jointly responsibl­e for their protection according to law. Yet no one is held

accountabl­e when any cultural relics are damaged or stolen.

If the situation remains unchanged, the thieves and dealers will become increasing­ly unscrupulo­us and bold, grabbing the cultural artifacts from one temple after another, fattening their pockets with public assets.

Local governors need to come up with good plans to develop rural tourism, so the cultural treasures in the mountains and fields can be turned into tourism resources, which will help protect them by materializ­ing their cultural and artistic value.

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