THISDAY

In Keeping Tradition Alive, China Remembers Its Ancestors in New Ways

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Solomon Elusoji in Beijing

Last week, Chinese people across the world celebrated the Qing Ming, a traditiona­l festival that literally translates to ‘Tomb-Sweeping Day’; observers usually visit the tombs of their ancestors to offer prayers after the burning of incense, sweeping the tombs and offering all sorts of food and gifts.

This year the festival fell on April 5 and observers are expected to clean the tombs and pay respects either 10 days before or 10 days after the fixed date.

The Chinese believe that burning things, valuable things, honours the dead and transmits money and other goods to their loved ones in the afterlife.

This year, the Borneo Post, a newspaper in the third largest island in the world, reported that bungalows, banks, courtyard houses and gold bars were some of the hottest items for this year’s festival. According to local retailer Thian Siew Foong, who specialise­s in selling ornaments, people are willing to purchase these items for their dearly departed.

“I realise that the older, more conservati­ve generation prefer to buy clothes, food, ghost money, josssticks and candles,” she said,

“Young people, on the other hand, prefer ‘upmarket’ stuff like gadgets, sports or luxury cars, banks, gold bars as well as skincare products and health supplement­s – to name a few.”

In recent times, the festival, which has been in existence for more than 2,500 years, has seen its observers take bold steps to adapt to a fast changing world.

For instance, in 2017, the BBC reported that one cemetery in Nanjing, a Province in Eastern China, launched a special service for “time-starved mourners”. The idea was simple: for mourners who could not get to the grave in person, personnel at the cemetery would clean tombs and place bouquets, while the paying clients watch the ritual via a live-stream on the Wechat app, China’s biggest social networking platform.

Meanwhile, since it was announced as a public holiday in Mainland China in 2008, the Qing Ming has also become a day where Chinese people reflect on the timelessne­ss of their culture.

This year, the streets of Beijing, usually busy with traffic and pedestrian­s, was relatively empty.

While some Chinese used the holiday period to take vacations, others attended cultural programs to boost the understand­ing of their own culture. At the Liuyin Park, scores of locals and foreigners attended the 8th edition of the ‘Liu’ Cultural Festival. It was spring but the morning cold was biting as attendees gathered in a courtyard-like space surrounded by willow trees and colourful costumes.

At the Liu Festival, there were several poetry, dance and music performanc­es that held the crowd’s attention, even as some foreign journalist­s were dressed up in traditiona­l Chinese attires.

Although there have been criticisms in some quarters that China is losing its traditiona­l values and culture due to its fast paced globalizat­ion, urbanizati­on and commercial­ization. But traditiona­l markers such as the Qing Ming, which affords

 ??  ?? Chinese women prepare to sprinkle holy water on visitors to Liu Park in Beijing
Chinese women prepare to sprinkle holy water on visitors to Liu Park in Beijing
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