China Daily

Chinese brews bestowed with global honor

Nation’s millennia-old tea culture made UNESCO intangible cultural heritage

- By WANG KAIHAO wangkaihao@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese tea culture, whose influence has been intertwine­d with the nation throughout much of its history, was on Tuesday added to the UNESCO list of intangible cultural heritage.

Traditiona­l tea processing techniques and their associated social practices in China were added to UNESCO’s Representa­tive List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

The status was conferred by the Intergover­nmental Committee for the Safeguardi­ng of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Rabat, Morocco. The newly inscribed item consists of many elements, such as knowledge, skills and practices concerning the management of tea plantation­s, the picking of tea leaves and the processing, drinking and sharing of tea.

The techniques are mainly found in provinces such as Zhejiang, Jiangsu,

Anhui, Fujian and Hunan among others. Associated social practices, however, are spread throughout the country and are shared by many ethnic groups.

In China, 44 registered nationalle­vel intangible cultural heritage entries from 15 provincial-level administra­tive divisions are related to tea.

Over 2,000 tea varieties, mainly in six categories — green, black, yellow, oolong, white and dark — are grown in China. Core skills include shaqing (enzyme inactivati­on), menhuang (yellowing), wodui (piling), weidiao (withering), zuoqing (leaves shaking and cooling), fajiao (oxidation or fermentati­on) and yinzhi (scenting).

“The inscriptio­n of the elements into the UNESCO list marks the significan­t contributi­on made by Chinese culture to the world,” said Wang Chenyang, director of intangible cultural heritage department of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism.

“Tea helped to promote exchanges and mutual learning among the world’s civilizati­ons through the Silk Road and other ancient trade networks,” Wang said.

As the bidding document from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism to UNESCO explained, tea is ubiquitous in Chinese people’s daily lives. Steeped or boiled tea is served in homes, workplaces, tea houses, restaurant­s and temples and used as an important medium for communicat­ion in socializin­g and ceremonies such as weddings, apprentice-taking and sacrifices.

“The practices of greeting guests with tea and building good relationsh­ips within families and among neighborho­ods through tea-related activities are shared among multiple ethnic groups, and provide a sense of identity and continuity for communitie­s, groups and individual­s concerned,” the document wrote.

“Through producing, brewing and tasting tea, bearers and practition­ers enrich their lives, maintain a peaceful and inclusive mindset, and thereby cultivate a mild and reflective personalit­y, and improve their internal realms and promote selfcultiv­ation,” Wang added.

The practices also demonstrat­e the humanistic spirit of modesty, harmony, comity and respect, contribute to harmony within families and among people, and enhance cultural identity and social cohesion, the official said.

According to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, there are over 40 vocational colleges and 80 universiti­es in China that have set up majors in tea science or tea culture.

The new inscriptio­n is the 43rd entry from China on the Representa­tive List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

 ?? ZHOU XIUYUCHUN / XINHUA ?? Tea farmers dry tea leaves under the sun in Changning, Hunan province, in September last year.
ZHOU XIUYUCHUN / XINHUA Tea farmers dry tea leaves under the sun in Changning, Hunan province, in September last year.

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