Shanghai Daily

Let villagers decide what they want

- Wang Yong

AS many cities busy themselves with building “beautiful villages,” a question arises as to what really makes a village beautiful.

I have been to many villages and found they are indeed no longer as muddy as they were, say, ten years ago, given the now prevailing paved paths and painted walls.

At the entrance to some villages, you will probably see an erected stone on which are carved: meili xiangcun (beautiful village).

I love these villages because a paved path for walking or jogging flanked by trees and rivers is quite a luxury in city proper.

But as I go deeper into these villages, I feel something is lacking that makes a village authentic: chicken, ducks, geese, pigs, sheep and cattle.

Only a few cats and dogs can be seen here and there.

“Scattered raising of poultry and livestock is largely forbidden in many villages for the sake of sprucing up the environmen­t,” writes Liu Qi, vice chairman of China Agricultur­al Economics Associatio­n and a researcher at the Counselors’ Office of the State Council, in an article released by Xinhua news agency on Tuesday.

The title of his article is: “Don’t leave farmers high and dry above the land off which they live.”

In plain language, the author reminisces about what he calls a bygone era of rural life abundant in freerange livestock and poultry.

Standardiz­ed fencing

“It’s a natural law that men and animals eat plants and nourish the land with their night soil,” he explains. “In centralize­d raising of poultry and livestock, however, animals’ excrement can hardly come back to feed the soil, leading to an increase in the use of fertilizer and a decrease in land quality.”

In some villages, he notices, farmers are even barred from fencing their homes with wood, bamboo or straw, because these materials “are not beautiful enough.” In their stead, plastic fences are used to “standardiz­e” what a fenced life should look like.

Examples abound in the author’s article that illustrate an urbanite policymake­r’s ultimate failure to understand the difference between urban and rural life. “Let farmers decide what they want,” he appeals.

Without beautiful villages, there will be no beautiful China.

But superficia­l gentrifica­tion effort does little in gratifying a farmer’ longing for a better life.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China