The Sun (Malaysia)

Restoring the Great Wall

> Using simple tools and bricks of old, workers are repairing one of the most treacherou­s and neglected stretches of China’s pride

- THOMAS SUEN AND DAMIR SAGOLJ

UPON China’s Great Wall, a line of pack mules halted upon emerging from the gloom of a dense forest draped in mist and dew.

For more than a decade, mules have been crucial in the effort to restore Jiankou ( top and right), a serpentine 20km section of the wall north of central Beijing that is notorious for its ridges and perilous slopes.

“The path is too steep and the mountains are too high, so the bricks can only be transporte­d by mules,” said local mule owner Cao Xinhua, who has worked on Great Wall restoratio­n projects in the mountains north of Beijing for 10 years.

Where they could, workers used the original bricks that had broken off the wall over the centuries.

“We have to stick to the original format, the original material and the original craftsmans­hip, so that we can better preserve the historical and cultural values,” said Cheng Yongmao, the engineer leading Jiankou’s restoratio­n.

Cheng, 61, who has repaired 17km of the Great Wall since 2003, belongs to the 16th generation in a long line of traditiona­l brick makers.

A government clampdown on pollution has forced the closure of almost all brick-making factories in Beijing and nearby provinces, Cheng said.

If he ran out of bricks, Cheng added, he would have to look for bricks left elsewhere, or request the central government to reopen some brick factories.

Famed for its rugged beauty, Jiankou was built in the twilight years of the Ming dynasty in the 1600s, but is young compared with other sections dating back two millennia.

Intensive repairs on the Jiankou section in the past year have been led by the district government keen to preserve the wall’s natural beauty and shore up its disintegra­ting steps.

The restoratio­n began in 2005 and is now in its third phase, making slow progress because the uneven terrain allows use only of basic tools such as chisels, hammers, pickaxes and shovels.

Authoritie­s’ meticulous approach followed widespread outrage last year sparked by botched restoratio­n efforts on some stretches.

Authoritie­s in the northeaste­rn province of Liaoning, home to a 700-year-old section of the wall, paved its ramparts with sand and cement, resulting in what looked more like a pedestrian pavement, critics said.

Soon after, the State Administra­tion of Cultural Heritage said it would investigat­e any improperly­executed wall preservati­on projects.

Just a 10th of the wall built during the Ming dynasty has been repaired, said Dong Yaohui, vice president of the China Great Wall Associatio­n.

“In the past, we would restore the walls so that they would be visited as tourist hot spots,” he said, in contrast to today’s objective of repairing and preserving them for future generation­s, which he added is progress. –Reuters

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