China Daily Global Edition (USA)

The man who moves mountains

Huang Dafa is hailed as a living personific­ation of themyth of Yu Gong, ‘the old man who moves mountains’. Erik Nilsson explores his world in Zunyi, Guizhou.

- XING HAN / FOR CHINA DAILY Liu Yixi contribute­d to this story. Contact the writer at erik_nilsson@chinadaily.com.cn

The villagers he led only had hand tools — and explosives. He’s the stuff of legend — but real. Huang Dafa is arguably an actual, modern incarnatio­n of the ancient myth of Yu Gong.

The saying yu gong yi shan — or “the old man moves mountains” — is a parable of persistenc­e that seems foolhardy in the face of unimaginab­le odds.

Fable says two peaks separated Yu Gong’s home from the village.

So, he decided to dig them away.

Another elderly man mocked him. Yu Gong responded that while his descendant­s could dig for generation­s, the mountains wouldn’t grow any higher.

The gods were so moved by his determinat­ion that they moved the mountains for him.

Huang enjoyed no such divine interventi­on. He had to rely on pure will. The 81-year-old spent 36 years persuading and then leading villagers to chisel about 10 kilometers of irrigation channels into the vertical sides of three karst mountains.

Droughts below puckered the soil and left residents with just enough drinking water.

Villagers forging the waterway sometimes had to hike to the top of the ascendable side of the mountains, tie themselves to trees and rappel down sheer— sometimes-concave— cliff faces.

The peaks stood in the way of the water source nearest Caowangba village on the outskirts of Guizhou province’s Zunyi city.

So, like the ancient YuGong, Huang grabbed a shovel — and made the impossible possible.

It was not only difficult but also dangerous.

Huang was the first to lash himself to a tree trunk at the top of a 300-meter-high cliff and take a leap of faith over the edge, he says.

“If I didn’t, nobody else dared.”

Even afterward, sometimes, nobody was willing to, villager Huang Binchun recalls.

“We eventually persuaded some young men,” the 53-yearold recalls.

“The tasks were precarious and hard. Some nights, we slept in cavesonthe cliff. Everybody worked together. And we completed the channel.”

The villagers spent a decade boring more than 100 meters through one peak— in vain.

Their determinat­ion was abundant. Their understand­ing of irrigation wasn’t. The water didn’t flow. But residents still use the tunnel as a passageway to walk through — rather than over— the mountains. Just like Yu Gong. Huang later spent a few years studying water-system engineerin­g in Zunyi’s Fengxiang town.

He returned to Caowangba and asked the villagers to try again. They agreed. The water arrived in 1995. Previously, residents lined up from morning until night to get just enough for their most basic needs from the last well.

“Other sources had dried up,” the village’s deputy chief Xu Zhou recalls.

“There was a rule that nobody could take too much. If they did, someone else may not have any for breakfast. These conditions motivated us.” People sometimes argued. “Drinking water was short,” Xu explains.

He started working on the channel at age 12.

“Forget irrigation. We had a 330-square-meter rice paddy that was parched to the point you could put your foot in the cracks in the dry season. It was a serious problem. So, we started looking for a serious solution.”

There weren’t really other options aside from doing nothing. And nothing wasn’t really an option, villagers say.

That was Huang Dafa’s main point.

Carving the channel across the cliffs seemed like more than an uphill battle.

But the consequenc­e of inaction was steeper than the vertical precipices the villagers had to reconfigur­e.

“If we can do something (for progress), we should,” Huang Dafa says.

“We shouldn’t wait for things to happen. Dozens of years of my life could have passed without anything happening.”

So, he and the villagers decided to change things. Even if the odds were stacked against them — as high as a mountain… or three.

“I was determined to bring water to Caowangba. People have had plenty of food since. Full stomachs mean peace of mind.”

But the sacrifices necessary to achieve this included family.

Huang Dafa’s daughter and grandson passed away while he was on-site.

“He wasn’t home, even when my sister was on her deathbed,” recalls his 53-yearold son, Huang Binquan.

“The constructi­on teams wouldn’t know how to proceed if he wasn’t there.”

In the end, it wasn’t just water but also a rising quality of life that poured into the village.

Yu Gong and his family, like Huang Dafa and Caowangba’s villagers, perhapssho­wwecan move mountains that serve as obstacles through determinat­ion — with or without heaven’s help.

That is, we can do it on our own if need be.

I was determined to bring water to Caowangba. People have had plenty of food since. Full stomachs mean peace of mind.”

Huang Dafa, villager in Caowangba

The tasks were precarious and hard. Some nights, we slept in caves on the cliff. Everybody worked together. And we completed the channel.”

Huang Binchun, villager

 ??  ??
 ?? XING HAN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Irrigation channels are chiseled on the cliffs of mountains by Huang Dafa and his fellow villagers in Caowangba in Guizhou province’s Zunyi.
XING HAN / FOR CHINA DAILY Irrigation channels are chiseled on the cliffs of mountains by Huang Dafa and his fellow villagers in Caowangba in Guizhou province’s Zunyi.
 ?? PAN LINGFENG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Huang Dafa (right) spent 36 years persuading and then leading villagers to build 10 kilometers of waterways.
PAN LINGFENG / FOR CHINA DAILY Huang Dafa (right) spent 36 years persuading and then leading villagers to build 10 kilometers of waterways.
 ?? YUAN QINGPAN / CHINA DAILY ?? Left: Huang Dafa shares his story with local primary school students. Right: Caowangba’s villagers have tap water after the irrigation channels’ completion.
YUAN QINGPAN / CHINA DAILY Left: Huang Dafa shares his story with local primary school students. Right: Caowangba’s villagers have tap water after the irrigation channels’ completion.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States